Kate Andrews Kate Andrews

Can the Bank of England inspire confidence?

Its track record is slightly unsettling

Credit: Getty Images

It has dawned on the government that last week’s mini-Budget might have been a bit too one-sided: £70 billion worth of extra borrowing and not a single mention of spending cuts or efficiency gains has seen borrowing costs spike (up by 0.3 per cent just today).

As James Forsyth reports on Coffee House, this afternoon’s announcement that a ‘medium term fiscal plan’ will be announced next month is an attempt by the Treasury to reassure markets – and convince them that fiscal responsibility has not totally disappeared from this government’s agenda. Emphasis is being placed on previous promises to make sure debt falls as a percentage of GDP in the coming years.

But what about the other side of the coin? The Bank of England should (in theory) have a lot of power to settle market concerns by indicating its thinking on interest rates.

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