Interest rates have been cut for the fourth time in the past year after the Bank of England reduced them to 4.25% from 4.5%.
Bank governor Andrew Bailey said the slowdown in inflation was behind the cut, but warned recent weeks had shown “how unpredictable the global economy can be” with the US introducing wide-ranging tariffs.
The Bank considered a bigger cut to 4%, as it assessed how the global trade war would hit economic growth, but also lower energy prices and so inflation.
The decision comes as details of a tariff deal between the UK and US are set to be announced later on Thursday.
Currently, most goods imported from the UK to the US face a blanket 10% tariff, with higher import taxes on steel and cars.
Speaking at a news conference following the Bank’s decision, Mr Bailey said it was “excellent that the UK is leading the way” with an expected deal with the US, which would “help to reduce uncertainty”.
Future UK rate cuts are likely to be “gradual and careful”, Mr Bailey said, as minutes of the Bank’s meeting showed that there was a three-way split among policymakers.
Of the nine members on the Bank’s rate-setting committee, five members voted to cut rates to 4.25%, two voted in favour of a larger reduction to 4% and two voted for no change.
The Bank gave its most through assessment of the impact of President Trump’s tariff wave, saying that it would slow the UK economy and lead to lower inflation than expected.
This slower inflation arises from lower oil and gas prices which should be felt by British households, and the likely diversion of cheap goods imports from Asia to Europe including the UK.
The most recent UK inflation figures show prices rose 2.6% in the year to March. However, the rate is expected to jump following a series of household bill increases at the start of April – including energy and water prices.
The Bank said it expected inflation to rise “temporarily” to 3.5% this year due to the bill increases before falling back, with lower oil and gas prices set to feed through in the coming months.
Employers were also hit with a rise in National Insurance last month, but the Bank said the effect of the tax increase “appears to have been fairly small to date”, though it added business confidence had taken a hit in recent months.
Chancellor Rachel Reeves said the latest rate cut was “welcome news”, but added: “There is more to do, and I know families are still facing cost of living pressures.”
Interest rates are the Bank’s main tool in try to maintain the annual rate of inflation at, or close to, its target of 2%.
The Bank’s base interest rate dictates the rates set by High Street banks and lenders. The higher level in recent years has meant people are paying more to borrow money for things like mortgages and credit cards, but savers have also received better returns.
About 600,000 homeowners have a mortgage that tracks the Bank’s rate, so rates being cut will have an impact on monthly repayments.
A typical tracker mortgage-holder is likely to see about £29 knocked off their monthly repayments following the latest cut, according to calculations by banking trade body UK Finance.
Homeowner Vanda says a drop in rates will be helpful
Homeowner Vanda, who has a tracker, told the BBC: “I had a really good rate, then all of a sudden it changed and I got caught out.
“A drop would help because I’ve just been made redundant, so that would help a wee bit. I don’t think it will ever go back to the way it was, though.”
More than eight in 10 customers have fixed-rate deals, but could continue to face higher repayment costs when renewing.
Mortgage rates have been edging down recently, primarily because the markets and lenders expect further rate cuts this year.
The theory behind increasing interest rates to tackle inflation is that by making borrowing more expensive, more people will cut back on spending and that leads to demand for goods falling and price rises easing.
But it is a balancing act as high interest rates can harm the economy as businesses hold off on investing in production and jobs.
However, the Bank has UK growth for the first three months of this year will be a stronger-than-expected 0.6%. The official figures are set to be released next week.
A boost in growth would be welcome news to the government, which has made growing the economy its main priority in order to boost living standards.
Earlier this year the Bank had halved its growth forecast for the UK for this year to 0.75%, down from its previous estimate of 1.5%.
More than £4m could be allocated to helping people meet their essential household living costs in Barnsley.
Councillors are due to discuss plans to provide millions of pounds of support to people in the district who are struggling with the cost of living.
If approved the money would be used to help residents with winter fuel payments, school meal vouchers, energy costs and provide debt and budgeting advice.
Barnsley Council said in previous years the funding, provided from the government’s Household Support Fund, had been used to help hundreds of people.
Robert Frost, cabinet spokesperson for core services, said: “Our work to deliver support through last year’s funding helped many residents through challenging times.
“I’m confident that this new round of funding will continue to make a significant impact on the lives of those who need it most.”
The funding was also used to help 1,322 households to claim pension credits who previously were not receiving anything, and 614 households to receive their correct entitlement.
Since 2020 the council has received £16.4m through the government’s Household Support Fund, but said it had been told the current round of funding would be the last with the scheme set to end in 2026.
Cabinet members are due to discuss the additional funding on Wednesday.
Deborah Grushkin says she felt panicked when she heard about the end of “de minimis”
Earlier this year, Deborah Grushkin, an enthusiastic online shopper from New Jersey, “freaked out”.
US President Donald Trump had signed an order to stop allowing packages from China worth less than $800 (£601) to enter the country free of import taxes and customs procedures.
It was a move, backed by traditional retailers, that had been discussed in Washington for years amid an explosion of packages slipping into the US under the limit.
Many countries, including the UK, are considering similar measures, spurred in part by the rapid ascent of Shein and Temu.
But in the US, Trump’s decision to end the carve-out while ordering a blitz of new trade tariffs, including import taxes of at least 145% on goods from China, has delivered a one-two punch that has left businesses and shoppers reeling.
US-based e-commerce brands, which were set up around the system, are warning the changes could spark failures of smaller firms, while shoppers like Deborah brace for price hikes and shortages.
With the 2 May deadline bearing down, the 36-year-old last month rushed in some $400 worth of items from Shein – including stickers, T-shirts, sweatshirts, Mother’s Days gifts and 20 tubes of liquid eyeliner.
“I felt like maybe it was my last sort of hurrah,” she says.
Use of rules known as “de minimis”, which allow low-value packages to avoid tariffs, customs inspections and other regulatory requirements, has surged over the last decade.
Take-up accelerated during Trump’s first term in office, when he raised tariffs on many Chinese goods.
By 2023, such shipments represented more than 7% of consumer imports, up from less than 0.01% a decade earlier. Last year, nearly 1.4 billion packages entered the country using the exemption – more than 3.7 million a day.
Advocates of the carve-out, which include shipping firms, say the system has streamlined trade, leading to lower prices and more options for customers.
Those in favour of change, a group that includes lawmakers from both parties, say businesses are abusing rules intended to ease gifts between family and friends, and the rise has made it easier to slip products that are illegal, counterfeit or violate safety standards and other rules into the country.
Trump recently called de minimis a “scam”, brushing off concerns about higher costs. “Maybe the children will have two dolls instead of 30 dolls,” he said.
However, polls suggest concerns about his economic policies are rising as the changes start to hit home.
Krystal DuFrene
Krystal DuFrene believes it’s the consumer who ends up paying the tariff
Krystal DuFrene, a retired 57-year-old from Mississippi who relies on disability payments for her income, says she has nervously been checking prices on Temu for weeks, recently cancelling an order for curtains after seeing the price more than triple.
Though she eventually found the same item for the original price in the platform’s US warehouse network, she says the cost of her husband’s fishing nets had more than doubled.
“I don’t know who pays the tariff except the customer,” she says. “Everywhere is selling cheap stuff from China so I actually prefer being able to order directly.”
When the rules around de minimis changed last week, Temu said it would stop selling goods imported from China in the US directly to customers from its platform, and that all sales would now be handled by “locally based sellers”, with orders fulfilled from within the US.
‘End of an era’
Even without the latest tariffs, economists Pablo Fajgelbaum and Amit Khandelwal had estimated that ending de minimis would lead to at least $10.9bn in new costs, which they found would be disproportionately borne by lower income and minority households.
“It does kind of feel like the end of an era,” says Gee Davis, a 40-year-old author from Missouri, who used Temu during a recent house move to buy small items such as an electric can opener and kitchen cabinet organisers.
Gee Davis
Gee Davis and her roommate used Temu to get new kitchen organisers as they moved house
She says it was a relief to be able to easily afford the extras and the new rules felt like a “money grab” by the government to benefit big, entrenched American retailers like Amazon and Walmart that sell similar products – but at a bigger mark-up.
“I don’t think it’s right or fair that little treats should be [restricted] to people who are richer.
“It just would be a real bummer if everyone who was under a certain household income threshold was just no longer able to afford anything for themselves.”
As with other Trump policy changes, questions remain about the significance of the shift.
The president was already forced to suspend the policy once before, as packages began piling up at the border.
Lori Wallach, director at Rethink Trade, which supports ending de minimis for consumer safety reasons, says the end of the exemption is significant “on paper”, but she fears the administration is taking steps that will weaken its implementation.
She points to a recent customs notice, which said products affected by many of the new tariffs could enter the country through the informal process, a move that eases some regulatory requirements.
“Practically, because all of this stuff can come though informal entry, it’s going to be extremely hard to collect tariffs or to be able to inspect really very much more than before the change happened,” she says.
‘An insurmountable shift’
Customs and Border Protection deny the move will undermine enforcement, noting that firms are still required to supply more information than before.
Businesses have indicated they are taking the changes seriously.
Washington Post/Getty Images
Custom suit company Indochino has said changes to de minimis pose a “significant threat” to its viability
Both Shein and Temu last month warned customers that prices would rise, while Temu says it is rapidly expanding its network of US-based sellers and warehouses to protect its low prices.
Other business groups say many smaller, less high-profile American brands that manufacture abroad for US customers are struggling – and may not survive.
“If the tariffs weren’t in place, it would be like taking a little bit of bitter medicine,” says Alex Beller, board member of the Ecommerce Innovation Alliance, a business lobby group and a co-founder of Postscript, which works with thousands of smaller businesses on text messaging marketing.
“But paired with the other tariffs, especially for brands that manufacture in China, it just becomes an insurmountable shift.”
In a letter to the government last month, men’s clothing company Indochino, known for its custom suits made-to-order in China, warned that ending de minimis posed a “significant threat to the viability” of its business and other mid-size American firms like it.
Steven Borelli is the chief executive of the athleisure clothing firm CUTS, which manufactures outside the US, shipping products to a warehouse in Mexico, from where packages are mailed to customers in the US.
His firm has been pushing to reduce its reliance on China, halting orders in the country months ago. Still, he says he is now considering price increases and job cuts.
He says his business has room to manoeuvre, since it caters to higher income customers, but he expects “thousands” of other brands to die without changes to the situation.
“We want more time,” he says. “The speed at which everything is happening is too fast for businesses to adjust.”
Ofcom has launched investigations into two pornographic websites it believes may be falling foul of the UK’s newly introduced child safety rules.
The regulator said Itai Tech Ltd – which operates a so-called “nudifying” site – and Score Internet Group LLC had failed to detail how they were preventing children from accessing their platforms.
Ofcom announced in January that, in order to comply with the Online Safety Act, all websites on which pornographic material could be found must introduce “robust” age-checking techniques from July.
It said the two services it was investigating did not appear to have any effective age checking mechanisms.
Firms found to be in breach of the Act face huge fines.
The regulator said on Friday that many services publishing their own porn content had, as required, provided details of “highly effective age assurance methods” they were planning to implement.
They added that this “reassuringly” included some of the largest services that fall under the rules.
It said a small number of services had also blocked UK users entirely to prevent children accessing them.
Itai Tech Ltd and Score Internet Group LLC did not respond to its request for information or show they had plans to introduce age checks, it added.
The “nudifying” technology that one of the company’s platforms features involves the use of artificial intelligence (AI) to create the impression of having removed a person’s clothing in an image or video.
Under the Online Safety Act, platforms that publish their own pornographic content were required to take steps to implement age checks from January.
These can include requiring UK users to provide photo ID or running credit card checks.
Butall websites where a user might encounter pornographic material are also required to demonstrate the robustness of the measures they are taking to verify the age of users.
These could even apply to some social media platforms, Ofcom told the BBC in January.
The rules are expected to change the way many UK adults will use or encounter some digital services, such as porn sites.
“As age checks start to roll out in the coming months, adults will start to notice a difference in how they access certain online services,” said Dame Melanie Dawes, Ofcom’s chief executive, in January.
Experts said it marked “the start of a bigger shift” for platforms as lawmakers worldwide look to impose strict internet safety rules.
Critics suggest such measures risk pushing young people to “darker corners” of the internet where there are smaller, less regulated sites hosting more violent or explicit material.