Bank of England raises interest rates to highest level in 14 years
    
The Bank of England (BoE) has raised the base  rate of interest to the highest level in 14 years.
The BoE raised interest rates for the tenth  consecutive time on 2 February with a half point increase taking the base rate  from 3.5% to 4%.
The decision was taken after the Monetary  Policy Committee (MPC) voted by a majority of seven to two to increase the base  rate by 0.5%.
The MPC said it is confident that inflation  has peaked and its approach is the right route to get it back under the 2%  target.
David Bharier, Head of Research at the British  Chambers of Commerce (BCC), said:
'The  Bank's decision to raise interest rates for a tenth consecutive time continues  its hard-line approach to inflation, but this is not without serious  side-effects.
'Our  research shows that while inflation remains by far and away the top concern for  businesses with 80% citing this in Q4 2022, concern about interest rates has  risen sharply with 43% now citing this.
'With  the Bank expecting inflation to slow to around 4% by the end of the year,  further rate rises could now simply add to the risk of a deeper recession,  outweighing the benefits.'
Internet  link: Bank of England website BCC website