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Bank of England cuts interest rates as it warns food costs could push inflation to 4%

about 7 hours ago
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The Bank of England has warned that rising food prices could drive inflation to 4% as it voted for a fifth cut in interest rates in a year, amid mounting concerns about the strength of the UK economy.In one of its closest decisions since its independence more than 25 years ago, the Bank’s monetary policy committee (MPC) voted by 5-4 to cut its key base rate by a quarter- point to 4%.The cut, taking borrowing costs to the lowest level since March 2023, was widely expected in financial markets.However, the decision was a close call, with the rate-setting panel for the first time in history holding two votes before reaching its verdict.Andrew Bailey, the Bank’s governor, said: “We’ve cut interest rates today, but it was a finely balanced decision.

Interest rates are still on a downward path, but any future rate cuts will need to be made gradually and carefully.”City investors reacted to the decision by sending the pound higher on foreign exchanges, after Bailey warned that mounting inflation risks could delay further rate cuts.“I do think the path continues to be down … [But] the path has become more uncertain because of what we’re seeing,” he said.The chancellor, Rachel Reeves, welcomed the cut, which will ease some of the financial pressure on borrowers.Pressure is also mounting on the government over its management of the economy, and speculation is swirling about tax rises in her autumn budget.

Ministers have sought to claim credit for the Bank’s rate cuts since its first reduction last August, with borrowing costs now down from a peak of 5.25%.“The stability we have brought to the public finances through our plan for change has helped make this [rate cut] possible,” Reeves said on Thursday.However, critics say the chancellor’s tax-raising autumn budget has added to the pressure on businesses and households amid global uncertainty from Donald Trump’s trade war.In a blow to the government, Threadneedle Street said tax rises were contributing to rising inflation and unemployment as it sounded the alarm over the country’s weak growth prospects.

Publishing updated forecasts, the MPC singled out fast-rising food prices as it warned that food price inflation was on track to reach 5.5% before the end of the year.It attributed much of the rise to global factors, including increasingly extreme weather events hitting cocoa and coffee harvests, highlighting the dangers from the climate emergency.However, it also pointed to “material” rises in employment costs and new charges for recycling packaging, both driven by the government, that were being passed on to shoppers by UK supermarkets.“In addition to global agricultural commodity prices, domestic labour costs are currently an important driver of food price inflation,” the Bank said.

Sign up to Business TodayGet set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morningafter newsletter promotionBusiness leaders had warned that Reeves’s £25bn increase in employer national insurance contributions (NICs) and a 6.7% rise in the “national living wage” from April would force them to cut jobs and put up prices.Official figures show unemployment has crept higher in recent months, while the economy shrank in April and May.Inflation has also risen by more than expected, reaching 3.6% in June.

Facing double-sided risk to the UK economy from weak growth yet mounting inflationary pressures, the split MPC decision in favour of cutting rates was swung by the external economist Alan Taylor.The independent MPC member, who has repeatedly backed deeper cuts in borrowing costs, had first voted for a half-point reduction before joining the narrow majority – including Bailey – supporting a quarter-point cut.Exposing tensions at the heart of Threadneedle Street, the four other members – including the Bank’s chief economist, Huw Pill, and one of its deputy governors, Clare Lombardelli – voted to keep rates unchanged.Inflation has fallen back substantially in the past two and a half years from a peak of more than 11% in late 2022 after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.That progress has allowed the Bank to cut rates.

However, it said lingering inflationary pressures could delay future rate cuts,“The MPC judges that the upside risks around medium-term inflationary pressures have moved slightly higher since May,” it said,
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UK interest rate cut: what does it mean for mortgages and savings?

The Bank of England has cut interest rates from 4.25% to 4%. It is the fifth reduction in a year and takes rates back to where they were in March 2023.For the vast majority of borrowers the answer is no: more than 7.1m (85%) of Britain’s 8

about 11 hours ago
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WPP profits dive 71% as clients cut ad spending amid Trump’s tariffs rollout

Clients including carmakers and consumer goods companies are cutting their advertising spending amid Donald Trump’s tariffs rollout, WPP has said as it reported a 71% slump in profits and a strategic review.The advertising agency, formerly the largest in the world, cut its global workforce from 111,000 last year to 104,000 as of the end of June as it struggles with weak spending and the rise of artificial intelligence.WPP’s pre-tax profit dropped by 71% to £98m in the first half of its financial year. It has also halved its interim dividend to 7.5p a share before a strategic review that will be led by its incoming chief executive, Cindy Rose

about 11 hours ago
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Workplace gender segregation ‘a handbrake’ on Australia’s economy, major new pay gap report reveals

Major new research has found that men are paid more than women in 98% of occupations, with female workers in Australia typically paid 70 cents for every $1 earned by their male colleague after a decade in work.The 30% average pay gap across workplaces identified in Jobs and Skills Australia’s new report stretches to nearly 40% for First Nations women.Megan Lilly, a JSA deputy commissioner, said the fact that men were paid more than women on average in almost all of the 688 occupations analysed in the landmark report was even more remarkable when considering the substantial range of workplaces where women dominate.Experts blame the persistent gender pay gap in large part on the “motherhood penalty” – the phenomenon where Australian women’s earnings drop by 55% in the five years after having their first child.A higher likelihood of returning to part-time rather than full-time work, and missed opportunities for promotion during time away, mean that penalty is only slightly improved 10 years after giving birth

about 12 hours ago
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Toyota warns of £7.1bn hit from Trump tariffs as it cuts profit forecast

Toyota has warned it faces a 1.4tn yen (£7.1bn) hit from Donald Trump’s trade tariffs, as the Japanese company reported a drop in net profit and cut its guidance for next year.The biggest carmaker in the world said it expected to make an operating profit of 3.2tn yen in its financial year to March 2026, down 16% on previous guidance of 3

about 14 hours ago
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Bank of England poised to cut interest rates

The Bank of England is poised to cut interest rates on Thursday despite a growing divide between its policymakers over the dangers to the economy from high inflation and rising unemployment.In a development that will ease pressure on households and businesses, City forecasters expect the central bank to announce a quarter-point cut, its fifth rate reduction in a year.Financial markets predict an almost 100% chance of a quarter-point cut from 4.25%, the same as the last reduction in May.The chancellor, Rachel Reeves, will welcome the cut as Labour comes under pressure over its economic management and growing questions about potential tax rises at her autumn budget

about 17 hours ago
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United Airlines says issue that forced grounding of hundreds of US flights resolved

United Airlines has said a technology issue that led to the grounding of flights for a few hours and major delays across its network in the US has been resolved.“While we expect residual delays, our team is working to restore our normal operations,” the airline said in a statement late on Wednesday.The issue prompted ground stops at several major United hub airports including Newark, Denver, Houston and Chicago, according to the US Federal Aviation Administration’s (FAA) website.United said the problem related to its Unimatic system that housed information about each flight that was then fed to other systems, including those that calculated weight and balance and tracked flight times.The US transportation secretary, Sean Duffy, said on X that the issue was specific to United’s operations and was unrelated to the broader air traffic control system

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‘The pain was unbearable’: the agonising cost of England’s ‘cowboy’ cosmetic clinics

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Liquid butt lifts targeted in clampdown on England’s cosmetic ‘wild west’

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Scientists find link between genes and ME/chronic fatigue syndrome

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Despite RFK’s funding block, mRNA vaccines are too impressive to ignore

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Verbally abused children more likely to have poor mental health as adults, study finds

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