LONDON (MNI) – The Bank of England Monetary Policy Committee’s best
judgement is that inflation will fall to around its 2.0% target by the
end of this year, BOE Governor Mervyn King said in a letter published
ahead of Wednesday’s Inflation Report.

King said the pace and extent of the CPI fall was “highly uncertain”
and he highlighted some of the key uncertainties surrounding the
outlook. These included developments in the euro area along with
developments in the labour market and firms attempts to rebuild profit
margins.

The latest inflation data showed CPI fell to 3.6% on the year in
January having peaked at 5.2% in September. The BOE Governor set out the
reasons why further declines are likely to push CPI back to its
2.0% target.

“In coming months, that further moderation is likely to reflect the
declining contributions from petrol prices and any remaining VAT impact,
together with recently announced cuts to domestic energy prices,” King
said.

“The upward pressure from past rises in energy and import prices
should dissipate further over 2012, and the margin of spare capacity
that has built up in the economy is likely to continue to bear down on
wages and prices beyond that,” he said.

–London newsroom: tel+44 207 862 7491; email: drobinson@marketnews.com

[TOPICS: M$$BE$,MST$$]