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What we need from Bailey's Bank of the bleedin' obvious

The Independent

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April 25, 2025

The governor of the Bank of England saying we should "take very seriously" the global effects of Donald Trump's trade war might look like a statement of the bleedin' obvious - but make no mistake, it matters.

- JAMES MOORE

What we need from Bailey's Bank of the bleedin' obvious

Central bankers choose their words with great caution precisely because they are highly market-sensitive. A statement like that from someone like Andrew Bailey can, and will, be read as a clear signal not only that rates are coming down but that the Bank could be prepared to cut further and cut faster in response to the Trump-induced trade chaos.

Speaking in Washington, Bailey also said: “The UK is a very open economy. It’s not just the relationship between the US and the UK – it’s the relationship between the US and the rest of the world.”

In other words, even if the government does secure a trade deal with the US to bring down the 10 per cent tariffs most UK exports now face (and I have my doubts about that), there will still be an ongoing negative impact. A particularly unpleasant one for a “very open economy” like the UK’s, which is highly sensitive to shifts in global trading conditions – just look at the impact of Brexit.

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