In a speech at the International Monetary Fund in Washington, Mark Carney said Brexit is already prompting households to rein back on their spending and businesses to invest less than usual in what otherwise is a favorable environment linked to low interest rates, firm global growth and relatively high profit levels.
"The balance of these effects has lead overall UK growth to slow in the first half of 2017, even as growth in the rest of the G-7 was picking up, and UK growth looks set to remain weaker than the G-7 average until mid-2018," Carney said.
But in 2017, it's been the slowest-growing amid uncertainty over what Brexit means. The British government triggered the two-year exit process but discussions with the EU have made little headway, stoking fears that the country could end up crashing out of the EU in March 2019 without a trade deal.
Carney said Britain's current weakness is a rare experience over the past three decades, noting that the only other times it's trailed the pack were in the depths of the global financial crisis around 2008-9, and following the collapse of an economic boom in the late 1980s that had been fueled by tax cuts and deregulation in financial markets.
Last week's big hint from the bank's rate-setting panel that it could raise its main interest rate from the current record low of 0.25 per cent as soon as November gave the pound a big lift.
In his speech, Carney said that any increases would be "gradual" and "limited." As a result, the pound gave up some of last week's gains, and was trading 0.6 per cent lower at USD 1.3511.
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