U.K. Increases Interest Rates 0.5%, First Time Since 2007

The Bank of England annexed its key rate on Thursday, November 2,  from a record low of 0.25% to 0.5%, a shift that economists widely expected.

It’s the first time the central bank has increased the cost of borrowing since 2007, but many analysts fear the move may yet be premature. The pound was trading 1% lower against the dollar following the announcement.

Britain’s economy has struggled to move out of first gear following the Brexit referendum in June 2016. Unemployment has continued to fall, but a sharp drop in the value of the pound has hurt consumers by making imported goods more expensive.

Wages have also been squeezed and the housing market has slowed.

Higher interest rates will benefit savers, who have for years seen paltry returns on their deposits. But it will also make borrowing and mortgages more expensive for consumers who are already facing tighter household budgets.

“It has been a long 10 years since the base rate last went up, so today represents the first time many U.K. borrowers will have ever experienced an increase in their mortgage payments,” said Simon Gammon of Knight Frank Finance.

The worry is that hiking rates and putting consumers under more pressure could cause economic growth to slow further.

The rate hike is a sign, however, that rising prices outweigh other concerns inside the Bank of England. At 3%, inflation is firmly above the central bank’s official 2% target, and a rate hike would help cool things down.

The Bank of England said in a statement that it expects inflation to peak above 3% in November before diminishing over the next year.

“The bank is on a tightrope, it wants to dampen down inflation and consumer borrowing without knocking out the U.K. consumer,” said Ian Stewart, chief economist at Deloitte.

The central bank also noted that effective monetary policy won’t be enough to counteract the negative effects of Brexit.

“Monetary policy cannot prevent either the necessary real adjustment as the U.K. moves towards its new international trading arrangements or the weaker real income growth that is likely to accompany that adjustment over the next few years,” it said.

U.K. interest rates remain at very low levels despite the hike. As recently as 2007, the key rate had been set at 5.75%.

The central bank indicated that rates are likely to stay relatively low, saying that future increases “would be expected to be at a gradual pace and to a limited extent.”

David Cheetham, chief market analyst at trading firm XTB said the bank’s “cautious comments” suggest “that this is a case of one-and-done rather than the start of a sustained hiking cycle.”

This is the first rate hike from Governor Mark Carney. He joined the Bank of England in 2013 after a stint leading Canada’s central bank.