Winter blues: how much damage could Omicron do to the UK economy?

The chief worry may not be the necessity for another furlough, but big ‘inflationary pressures’

Bank of England and Royal Exchange in the City of London
The ‘slowdown’ in an empty City of London
(Image credit: Tolga Akmen/AFP via Getty Images)

“We’ve always acknowledged there could be bumps on our road to recovery,” observed the Chancellor, Rishi Sunak, last week. Omicron looks like a sizeable one, said Simon Duke in The Times. Before the variant struck, it seemed “all but certain” that the Bank of England would this week lift borrowing costs from a historic low of 0.1% to tackle rising prices. Indeed, ahead of the decision to increase the interest rate to 0.25%, some economists were still arguing that a raise would send the important message that policymakers are serious about tackling inflation, which jumped to a ten-year high of 5.1% in November. For most, however, “the pendulum has swung decisively in the other direction”. There are now real fears that the economy will contract, said Maike Currie of Fidelity on Sky News. “The BoE will be acutely aware that it’s harder to dig an economy out of recession than to cool rising inflation.”

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