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Unexpectedly high interest rate rise puts more pressure on mortgage holders

Unexpectedly high interest rate rise puts more pressure on mortgage holders

The Bank of England has unexpectedly pushed up interest rates to 5%, the highest rate in almost 15 years, as policymakers and the UK Government come under mounting pressure to control the cost-of-living crisis.

The move is set to deepen the mortgage crisis as borrowing costs are hiked up for the 13th time in a row.

The 0.5 percentage point increase was the sharpest increase since February, surprising economists who had been expecting a smaller hike of 0.25 percentage points.

It follows a higher-than-expected inflation reading in May as continued price rises forced policymakers into action in a bid to bring inflation down to the 2% target.It is the 13th time in a row interest rates have risen, with calls mounting for the Government to do more to help amid a deepening mortgage crisis.

Wednesday’s shock inflation figures showed the Consumer Prices Index remained unchanged at 8.7% in May against hopes for a sharp fall. With the Government and Bank of England under rising pressure over their failure to rein in inflation, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak insists he feels a “deep moral responsibility” to deliver on his pledge to halve inflation by the end of the year.

Chancellor Jeremy Hunt has also said the Government will “stick to its guns” and urged patience for the Bank’s rate rises to curb inflation. But as inflation remains stubbornly high, there are fears this may be increasingly out of reach and the finger of blame is pointing at the Government and Bank for failing to get the cost of living crisis under control.

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Rishi Sunak, due to speak after the rates announcement on Thursday at an economy-focused PM Connect event in the south-east of England, will tell business figures that halving inflation is his administration’s “number one priority” and that he wants to “get back” to the target of inflation being at 2%, less than a quarter of what it stood at last month.

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  • June 22, 2023