KEY POINTS
  • Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey said in a Wednesday speech that U.K. inflation was being fueled by "second-round effects" that would prove sticky.
  • He noted that the central bank's monetary policy committee was paying close attention to "indicators of inflation persistence, including labour market tightness and wage growth, and services price inflation."
  • The BoE will continue to adjust its bank rate "as necessary" to reach its 2% inflation target, he added.
A sign displays the price in pound sterling of food goods, including cucumbers, at a a fruit and vegetable market in stall east London on March 31, 2023.

LONDON — After more than a year of warnings, Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey says the U.K. is now experiencing a wage-price spiral despite 12 consecutive central bank interest rate hikes.

"Some of the strength in core inflation [in the U.K.] reflects the indirect effects of higher energy prices," Bailey said in a Wednesday speech. "But it also reflects second-round effects as the external shocks we have seen interact with the state of the domestic economy."