With news just in that the Bank of England has decided to raise the base interest rate by a whopping half a percentage point, there is a definite air of economic crisis hanging over the UK today.
Commentators who are more comfortable discussing the waxing and waning of politicians’ careers have suddenly been compelled to bone up on what little economics they can remember in order to say something, anything, coherent about the complicated situation the British find themselves in.
Recently in Parliament, Sir Keir Starmer, the leader of the Labour Party, repeatedly referred to the government’s ‘mortgage penalty’. He was punching a bruise as he did so, though he may have been a little late with the wording of his attack line.
The Tory mortgage penalty means working families across the country are paying more.
Labour would act to help people now, with our five-point plan to support households with mortgages.
Labour will secure our economy and build a better Britain. pic.twitter.com/AULwzxGDQF
— Keir Starmer (@Keir_Starmer) June 22, 2023
As a widely predicted thirteenth rise in interest rates hits home, Britons are already accustomed to referring to the latest crisis as a mortgage ‘time bomb’ which threatens anyone needing to take out their first mortgage or to refinance an existing one.
This comes on top of high inflation, the reason for the bank’s action in the first place, and a ‘cost of living crisis’ that looks set to persist until the next general election at most 18 months away.
As pessimists in London predicted, the Bank of England has unleashed a half-point hike to 5%, a level not seen since April of a certain fateful year: 2008. The bank is hoping that tightening monetary policy will squeeze rising price pressures out of the system.