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UK dealmakers expect UK inflation to hit 2% BoE target

The majority (95%) of UK dealmakers expect inflation to hit the 2% target set by the Bank of England, with an optimistic minority expecting it to happen within the next year and a more realistic majority predicting a two-year timescale, according to CIL’s Investment 360 Index.

A more pessimistic 40% see the target being reached in three to five years while 5% think that 2% will never be achieved.

The Index is based on research with 143 UK market stakeholders, including private equity investors, management teams, corporate finance providers and business advisors, and has been run by CIL, an independent international management consultancy, since 2017.

Satisfaction with the Bank of England is mixed (55%) with only 20% of respondents saying it is doing a good job, and 29% saying it is doing a poor job. However, there is support for the current monetary policy. Almost two thirds (61%) think that monetary policy should stay the same, 32% believe that it should loosen and just 8% say it should tighten – this compares to 54% last year.

Of the 29% of respondents who think the BoE is not doing a good job, some provided further commentary citing the slow pace of interest rate hikes and fears of overcorrection as reasons for their dissatisfaction.

Satisfaction with the Government remains low with respondents’ persistent pessimism improving only slightly from an all-time low last year. This year, 8% of respondents say it is doing a good job, 45% have a mixed view and 48% say it is doing a bad job, compared to the 70% majority who said it was doing a bad job in 2022 (largely because of the Truss/Kwarteng government). When asked about fiscal policy and the use of Government spending and tax to influence economic conditions, 49% said that it should stay the same, 38% said it should loosen and just 13% said it should tighten.

However, when it comes to the recent increases in corporation tax, it appears to have had limited impact on investment activity, with 73% saying there had been no change, 22% said their investment activity had decreased moderately and just 2% said it had decreased significantly.

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