LONDON (AP) Bank of England policymakers voted unanimously to keep monetary policy unchanged despite growing signs that Europe's third-largest economy is on the mend.
The minutes of the Nov. 6-7 Monetary Policy Committee minutes, published Wednesday, showed that the nine-member panel thought the economic recovery was gathering pace it grew a quarterly rate of 0.8 percent in the third quarter. However, they voiced "uncertainties over the durability of the recovery," particularly in regard to the economic outlook in Europe.
Given that backdrop, they voted to keep the Bank's key interest rate unchanged at the record low of 0.5 percent and not to increase the monetary stimulus. So far 375 billion pounds ($600 billion) has been pumped into the British economy in an attempt to keep market rates low and encourage lending.
"The U.K. economy remained vulnerable to disorderly adjustment in the euro area and in some emerging economies," the minutes said.
Though the 17-country eurozone has emerged from its longest-ever recession, growth is muted in the third quarter of 2013, it grew by only 0.1 percent from the previous three-month period.