CHECK YOUR ENGLISH VOCABULARY FOR BANKING AND FINANCE
17. National central banks (NCBs)
Bank of England raises interest rate to 5 %
|
Mortgage repayments, along
with the cost of overdrafts and credit card debts, are set to rise after the
Bank of England surprised the City yesterday by announcing its first rise
in interest rates for more than a year.
|
News of the quarter-point rise
to 5% was cautiously welcomed by some financial institutions, but was
largely condemned by industry and trades unions.
|
A statement from the Bank of
England’s monetary policy committee said that strong growth, a recent
recovery in consumer spending, buoyant export markets and signs of a
pick-up in investments meant that action was necessary in order to meet the
government’s 2.5% inflation target.
|
The statement said: “With
inflation likely to remain above target for some while, it was judged necessary
to bring consumer prices inflation back to target in the medium term.”
|
A response from the London
Board of Businesses and Exporters described the move as premature, and
likely to damage businesses, especially those dependent on export earnings.
|
Many homeowners will face
higher monthly bills through increased mortgage costs, especially those with
variable rate and base-rate tracker mortgages. If mortgage lenders pass on
the rise in full, it will add around £20 to the monthly repayments on a £100,000
mortgage. According to Sarah Parker of the Family Income Monitoring Unit,
the average family will need to find around another £40 a month.
|
Few analysts predicted a rate
increase, and some had even been expecting a decrease to help boost a subdued
housing market. Many were talking about the increase being a pre-emptive
strike, with the small increase in borrowing costs now intended to ward off
the need for a more painful rise later
|
In the City’s money markets, however,
there were expectations of a further tightening of the Bank’s policy and
further interest rate rises - perhaps up to 5.75% – unfolding over the next
twelve months. Fears that further rate increases would affect consumer
spending wiped £17bn off the value of the London stock market.
|
A. Choose the definition which is
closest to the meaning in the article.
1
|
the City (paragraph 1)
|
A
|
the people of London
|
B
|
financial professionals
working in London
|
2
|
a quarter-point rise
(paragraph 2)
|
A
|
a 0.25% rise
|
B
|
a 2.5% rise
|
3
|
consumer spending (paragraph
3)
|
A
|
money spent by businesses
|
B
|
money spent by ordinary people
|
4
|
a pick-up in investments (paragraph
3)
|
A
|
an increase in share prices
|
B
|
a drop in share prices
|
5
|
in the medium term (paragraph
4)
|
A
|
over the next few months
|
B
|
over the next few years
|
6
|
a pre-emptive strike (paragraph
7)
|
A
|
an action taken before it
becomes necessary
|
B
|
an action taken after it
becomes necessary
|
B. Find words in the article with the
same meaning as the following.
7
|
steady economic expansion
(paragraph 3)
|
s______________
g______________
|
8
|
higher than desired (paragraph
4)
|
a______________
t______________
|
9
|
too soon (paragraph 5)
|
p______________
|
10
|
avoid (paragraph 7)
|
w______________
o______________
|
11
|
occurring (paragraph 8)
|
u______________
|
C. Complete the definitions.
12
|
The move was
condemned by industry means businesspeople thought the
action was ____________
|
A
|
a good thing
|
B
|
a bad thing
|
C
|
neither good nor bad
|
13
|
Most banks
passed on the 0.25% rise in full means that most banks
increased their lending rates by…
|
A
|
less than 0.25%
|
B
|
0.25%
|
C
|
more than 0.25%
|
14
|
Base-rate
tracker mortgages are ____________ the Bank of England's interest
rate.
|
A
|
lower than
|
B
|
the same as
|
C
|
linked to
|
15
|
I'll need to
find an extra £40 a month means that I'll have to ____________
another £40 a month.
|
A
|
pay
|
B
|
earn
|
C
|
save
|
16
|
A further
tightening of policy is another ____________
|
A
|
review of targets
|
B
|
policy reversal
|
C
|
unpopular implementation of
policy
|
17
|
£17bn was
wiped off the value of the London stock market means that
|
A
|
fewer shares were traded in
the UK
|
B
|
UK share prices mostly went
down
|
C
|
a lot of UK companies went
bankrupt
|
D. Which of the following are not
usually done by the NCBs of Developed Economies?
a
|
Implement the government's
monetary policy
Decide monetary policy
Hold reserves of foreign
currency
Hold reserves of gold
Hold reserves of jewels and
valuable paintings
|
b
|
c
|
d
|
e
|
f
|
Set exchange rates
Help the government manage the
exchange rate if necessary
Manage the government's
accounts
Provide current accounts for
businesses
Issue banknotes
|
g
|
h
|
i
|
j
|
k
|
Control the money supply
Control banks' lending rates
Manage share issues
|
l
|
m
|
|
ANSWER
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