Mortgages, jobs and energy bills - how the Iran war will affect your money
The central bank kept interest rates on hold this week, but the rate-setting committee's report helped shed some light on what households can expect when it comes to things like mortgages, energy bills and the jobs market. Here are five key takeaways.
The Iran war changed that.
Although the Bank held rates this week, it has signalled that rises could come later this year.
Any rise in rates would increase the cost of borrowing and also the return on savings.
But it stresses that is an average and there could be considerable variation, and that estimate will depend partly on the outlook for energy prices, which have a wide economic impact.
The Bank paints a relatively bleak picture, even though uncertainty still dominates.
Energy regulator Ofgem's price cap affects the bills of millions of households in England, Scotland and Wales.
For a household using a typical amount of gas and electricity, the current annual bill is £1,641.
The Bank suggests this will rise "close to £1,900" in July and stay there for the rest of the year.
However, the peak will not be as high as it was following Russia's invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
These households will be protected from higher prices until their contracts end.
Those on prepayment meters can use less energy during the warmer summer months.
Low-income households will be less able to cope In every scenario outlined by the Bank, the rising cost of living – as measured by inflation – accelerates this year, with more uncertainty about what happens thereafter.
That is the result of rising energy prices which, in turn, push up the cost of people's food shop.
The Bank thinks food price inflation could rise to 4.
6% in September, and could go even higher later in the year.
Everyone needs to eat and heat.
The Bank points out that some people can use less energy, or they can dip into savings to pay higher bills.
That is a lot harder for lower-income families.
During Covid lockdowns some families had managed to save. But now, compared with when prices soared in 2022, a greater proportion of lower-income households have less than two weeks of income saved, the Bank says.
Opportunities to borrow are greater, but that comes with its own challenges.
Unemployment could rise further Despite a surprise drop in the most recent jobless rate, UK unemployment has been steadily rising over the last year. The Bank warned unemployment could rise further due to households erring on the side of caution and choosing to save more and spend less
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