Categories: Economics / Markets
Topics: Bank of England| MPC| Inflation| interest rate| quantitative easing
Members of the Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) voted unanimously to hold rates at their historic low and maintain the quantitative easing (QE) programme at £275bn - but they indicated more QE could be on the way.
Minutes from the December meeting show all nine members voted to hold interest rates at 0.5% and keep its asset purchase programme at the current level.
In October, the Bank ramped up its QE scheme by £75bn amid turbulent economic conditions.
Although members resisted a new round of stimulus this month, the minutes noted a further expansion of QE may be warranted soon.
"Some members continued to note that the balance of risks to inflation in the November inflation report projections meant that a further expansion of the asset purchases programme might well become warranted in due course," the minutes said.
Economists have pencilled in a further round of QE in February.
Meanwhile, whilst the MPC expects inflation - currently 4.8% on the CPI index - to fall sharply next year, members are divided over how quickly prices will fall.
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