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Bank of England’s Mann says she is ready to raise rates if inflation outlook darkens

By Thomson Reuters Jul 2, 2026 | 9:39 AM

By David Milliken

LONDON, July 2 (Reuters) – Bank of England policymaker Catherine Mann said on Thursday that she would be ready to vote for a rate rise if higher inflation expectations in the wake ​of the U.S.-Iran war make it less likely that inflation will ‌return to its 2% target.

A BoE survey of the public’s expectations for inflation hit a record high in May, but last month the BoE trimmed its own forecast for later this year to a little above 3.25% compared with 3.6%-3.7% it predicted in April.

“If ‌outturns – ​especially in expectations – are unfavourable to the underlying inflation ⁠process, an activist move ⁠can bring inflation expectations and outcomes toward the 2% target,” Mann said in a speech text released by the BoE before an event hosted by French bank Natixis.

Mann said she had held off voting for a ​BoE rate rise so far because the Iran war had pushed up market interest rates in Britain, offsetting inflation pressures, but will look at how ⁠rising inflation affects early discussions for 2027 ⁠wage deals.

“Given the seasonality of wage negotiations and their dependence ​on previous inflation and inflation expectations, data outturns — including the expectations for one-year-ahead — ​in the second half of this year are particularly important for ‌my future decisions,” she added.

Fine-grained labour market data suggested the picture was less weak than the headline unemployment rate of 4.9% implied, she added.

Fiscal surprises could also affect the outlook for rates, she noted. Prime Minister Keir Starmer ⁠said last month he would stand down and he is likely to be replaced by former Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham, who some investors think might pursue ⁠a looser budget policy.

Mann ‌voted to keep interest rates on hold at 3.75% last ⁠month as part of a 7-2 majority on the ​Monetary ‌Policy Committee but viewed upside inflation risks as more ​prominent than the ⁠other members who voted to keep rates on hold.

In minutes of the decision, she also said rates could need to rise in future if there was a “sporadic continuance” of conflict between the United States and Iran that led to a new increase in energy prices after the recent fall.

(Reporting by David Milliken; ​editing by Suban Abdulla)