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LONDON — Nigel Farage’s second-in-command called for a rethink of the U.K.’s interest rate-setting committee in a fresh sign that a Reform UK government could intervene in Britain’s independent central bank.
Richard Tice, the deputy leader of the populist-right party that’s surging in U.K. polls, told POLITICO in an interview that there should be a debate over potentially sweeping changes to the make-up and role of the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC).
“It’s not unreasonable to check whether or not we’ve got the membership of the MPC right. I mean, it’s almost 30 years,” he said, referencing the 1997 establishment of the MPC. “So you could say, well, have we got the membership right? Have we got the number of government representatives right? Should they or shouldn’t they have a vote? Have we got the mandate right?”
He added: “Should it have a growth mandate? We should have that debate.”
The BoE’s rate-setting committee is made up of nine members, including Governor Andrew Bailey, four senior central bank executives, and four independent external members appointed by the chancellor. A representative from the U.K. Treasury joins MPC meetings but is not allowed to vote.
Monetary policy has become increasingly politicized since the Covid-19 pandemic, after which inflation soared to double digits and the BoE raised rates to their highest levels in 15 years. The International Monetary Fund has warned the U.K. faces the highest inflation in the G7 this year and next.
Tice’s comments come ahead of a speech in the City of London Wednesday, where he is expected to set out a wide-ranging aspiration for financial services deregulation should Reform UK enter government in Britain’s 2029 general election.
The deputy leader said the U.K. needs a “complete sea change” in how risk is approached in the City, and called for further red tape cutting on banks, hedge funds and other City giants. “No one’s stepping back and asking big, philosophical questions,” he said.
Tice told POLITICO his party is “happy” with the BoE’s independence, but said it is “ridiculous” that “no one dares to” question the performance of the central bank despite the U.K. “outsourcing all responsibility for massive issues that affect ordinary people.”
He argued the BoE had “failed” under Conservative Liz Truss, who was forced out as prime minister after bond yields spiked in the wake of a tax-cutting budget, leading banks to increase their lending rates. Tice accused City regulators of “missing” the issue of liability-driven investments (LDIs), which increased the strain on pension funds during that period, and said the Bank of England “could have actually stepped in and prevented the carnage.”
Truss has repeatedly blamed the Bank of England for failing to anticipate the market consequences of her budget. The central bank intervened after her mini-budget to calm the markets by implementing an emergency bond buying scheme.
Wider reform
Reform leader Farage, who is set to give a speech in the City Monday on his broader vision for the economy, has gone further, saying Bailey has “had a good run” and he “might find someone new” if the party wins the next election.
Bailey’s term is due to end in 2028, before the election. Tice did not rule out the prospect of a Reform government forcing out an underperforming central bank governor in future, saying: “At the end of the day, any public official has to be accountable for their performance.”
However, he declined to liken Reform’s stance to Donald Trump’s approach to the Federal Reserve, after the U.S. president repeatedly attempted to get rid of chair Jerome Powell.
Reform UK is currently ahead in the polls, as Britain’s Labour government continues to struggle with its messaging on the economy, immigration and frustration within Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s top ranks.
Reform leader Nigel Farage, who is set to give a speech in the City Monday on his broader vision for the economy. |  Mark Kerrison/Getty IMages Tice argued Labour — which has made growth its primary objective by rolling back 2008 financial crisis legislation — is adding rather than removing regulation, and accused it and the opposition Conservatives of “tinkering around the edges.”
“We’re not going to create any form of meaningful growth under the current trajectory of this government, or under the trajectory of any Conservative plans,” he said. “We are heading towards impoverishment and growth has relentlessly declined as borrowing has relentlessly increased, particularly if you look per head. And it requires a complete sea change in the way that we think about risk and reward.”
Asked whether a Reform government would go further than Labour on deregulation, Tice said: “Yes. We want to ask some very big questions about how we do things.”
Tice also argued that regulators such as the Financial Conduct Authority — which Farage hopes to strip of its role regulating banks — have “utterly failed to do their job.”
Asked if he believes Britain has now moved on enough since the 2008 financial crisis to strip away “protections,” he replied: “There are all sorts of different reasons why the ’08 crash happened. But we supposedly had all the mechanisms of protection there, and they failed. No one was properly held to account.”
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