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Tight borders after vaccines will have negative economic impacts, Bank of England says

Ben Broadbent, the Bank of England’s deputy governor of monetary policy, told CNBC that tight borders following the rollout of vaccines would likely be detrimental to the U.K.’s economic recovery.

Speaking to CNBC Friday, Broadbent said the possibility of tight external borders but an internal opening once coronavirus vaccines had become ubiquitous would weigh on the economy.

“One of the downside risks we flagged is the possible emergence of new variants that are less susceptible to the vaccines. We haven’t examined precisely the effects of the different sorts of restrictions,” he said.

“My instinct would be that if you close borders, that would be negative for both the demand and the supply side of the economy.”

Broadbent cited the emergence of new variants of Covid-19 in recent months as a key consideration in the Bank’s outlook.

“That is one of the reasons why as I say, one shouldn’t be too misled by the strength of the growth rate of spending and GDP (gross domestic product) in this forecast, and it is why the level of both of those things is actually below our expectations and new forecasts for the second half of this year than they were three months ago,” Broadbent said.

The BOE on Thursday reduced its GDP growth forecast for 2021 to 5% from the 7.25% projected in its November Monetary Policy Report, and now sees a 4% decline for the first quarter as the country remains under strict nationwide lockdown measures.

Broadbent said the public might be “fearful” to spend on things that expose them to the risk of infection and that these concerns may linger even after vaccinations have been broadly administered, but suggested this could be offset.

“One of the things we have seen throughout this episode is a fair bit of substitution away from things that do expose people to infection risk but towards things that do not,” he said.

“Finally I should say that the evidence from last summer was, not just in the U.K. but throughout the world and particularly that part of the world that endured lockdowns, that spending does come back pretty quickly once you remove those caps, at least initially.”

Broadbent said the BOE had allowed for some lingering concerns about virus exposure and their impact on consumer spending but suggested this does not mean consumption overall will fail to recover after the easing of restrictions.

This is a breaking news story, please check back later for more.

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