BoE slashes lending rate to 2 per cent

The Bank of England has slashed its key lending rate by 100 basis points to two per cent.

LONDON - SEPTEMBER 02:  (EDITOR'S NOTE: A TILT AND SHIFT LENS WAS USED IN THE CREATION OF THIS IMAGE) A man looks out of the bus as it passes the Bank Of England on September 2, 2008 in central London, England. The Paris-based Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) has predicted that the UK economy will fall into recession during the second half of this year.  (Photo by Daniel Berehulak/Getty Images) *** Local Caption ***  GYI0055607148.jpg
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London // The Bank of England slashed its key lending rate by 100 basis points to 2.0 per cent on Thursday, the lowest level since 1939, amid mounting evidence that Britain faces a deep recession. "In the United Kingdom, business surveys have weakened further and suggest that the downturn has gathered pace," the BoE said in a statement following its latest two-day monthly policy meeting. "Consumer spending and business investment have stalled, while residential investment has continued to fall," it added.

The British central bank had already chopped a record 150 basis points, or 1.5 percentage points, off interest rates in November as the country faced a sharp drop in inflation and appeared set for a sharp economic slowdown. Central banks around the world have been slashing interest rates as the impact of the global financial crisis puts the brakes on economic growth. This week, Australia, New Zealand, Sweden and Thailand have delivered steep interest rate cuts in a bid to fight the sharp worldwide economic downturn.

The BoE rate call comes ahead of a rate decision from the European Central Bank due on Thursday. The ECB was widely forecast to lower eurozone rates by at least half a percentage point from the current level of 3.25 per cent with the 15-nation economic bloc already mired in recession. *AFP