Why the Bank of England’s doom mongers are a thorn in Rishi Sunak’s side

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Rishi Sunak sought to pitch Britain to investment heavyweights such as JPMorgan’s Jamie Dimon and Goldman Sachs’ David Solomon at Hampton Court Palace this week at the Prime Minister’s flagship investment summit.

Yet it was another man who inadvertently stole the show: Andrew Bailey.

While the prime minister painted an optimistic picture of Britain, he was overshadowed by the Bank of England Governor’s far more downbeat view of the economy.

The Bank chief told a local Newcastle publication that Britain’s growth potential was the worst he’d seen in his lifetime – a far cry from the image Sunak was trying to project.

The Governor later admitted during a lunch at the event where he was seated on the same table as City Minister Bim Afolami that his comments did little to help Sunak’s pitch to businesses.

But, Bailey was heard questioning, why should he not draw attention to the UK’s dismal record of improving productivity, given how poor it is?

It is the latest example of the growing tensions between two of the country’s most powerful institutions.

With growth undeniably in the doldrums, Sunak’s government is trying to drum up investment to improve the outlook and sell themselves to voters ahead of an election next year.

Yet at the Bank of England, Bailey and his colleagues are keen to talk down the economy as they battle to control inflation.

With optimism about potential rate cuts running high in financial markets, policymakers are keen to talk up the prospect of interest rates staying painfully high for longer and tamp down inflation-driving spending.

Deputy Governor Sir Dave Ramsden warned on Tuesday that price pressures are “becoming much more homegrown” and will force interest rates to stay high for longer.

Jonathan Haskel, another member of the Monetary Policy Committee, also warned on Tuesday that lacklustre improvements in productivity and workers playing “catch up” with wage increases risked pushing up inflation.

“We now see ourselves in a situation where the central bank is trying to slow the economy and bring inflation down and the Government is trying to boost growth,” says Jack Meaning, chief UK economist at Barclays and a former Bank of England economist.

“That means that the two are working in opposite directions.”

The growing division spells trouble for Sunak who is gearing up for a difficult election against the backdrop of a stagnating economy, the highest tax burden since the 1940s and persistent inflation.

The Government is keen to talk up the potential for all this to change. When Chancellor Jeremy Hunt last week delivered what will probably be his last Autumn Statement before an election, he said Britain was a “country that has turned a corner”.