Central Bank Policy Rate
Primary interest rate set by the Central Bank.
Pound sterling — one of the oldest continuously circulating currencies in the world.
The British pound sterling (GBP) is the official currency of the United Kingdom and one of the oldest continuously circulating currencies in the world, with roots tracing back to Anglo-Saxon England. It ranks as the fourth-most-traded currency in global FX markets, appearing in roughly 13% of all daily transactions, and holds third place among global reserve currencies. GBP/USD — known in the market as 'cable' — and EUR/GBP are the two benchmark sterling pairs, while sterling also trades actively against the Japanese yen, Australian dollar, Canadian dollar, and Swiss franc. London's position as the world's largest FX trading hub gives sterling exceptional market depth and liquidity, particularly during the European session. The UK's open capital account and large financial services sector mean GBP is sensitive to global risk sentiment as well as domestic macro data.
The highest-signal pages for United Kingdom include Central Bank Policy Rate, Inflation Rate (CPI/HICP), Core Inflation, Gross Domestic Product (GDP) Growth, with each page linking back to the source metadata, release history, and API endpoint.
The Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) sets Bank Rate — the benchmark interest rate that anchors borrowing costs, mortgage rates, and savings returns across the UK economy — at eight scheduled meetings per year. The MPC has nine voting members: five Bank insiders (the Governor and four Deputy Governors) and four external economists appointed by HM Treasury, and their individual votes are published simultaneously with the rate decision. The Bank's primary statutory objective is to maintain 2% CPI inflation, as defined by a remit letter from HM Treasury; a secondary objective of supporting economic growth and employment applies when consistent with the price stability goal. Four times a year — in February, May, August, and November — the MPC meeting is accompanied by a full Monetary Policy Report containing fan-chart forecasts for inflation, GDP, and unemployment, plus a press conference by the Governor that markets treat as a major rate-guidance event. When conventional rate policy reaches its limits the Bank can deploy quantitative easing (QE) or quantitative tightening (QT) through its Asset Purchase Facility, buying or selling UK gilts and corporate bonds to influence longer-term yields and financial conditions.
The pages below are organized by indicator rather than API route. That keeps the public website useful for research while still preserving direct links into the versioned API documentation for developers.
The highest-signal country pages for rates, inflation, growth, labour markets, and external balances.
Primary interest rate set by the Central Bank.
Headline inflation: the year-over-year percentage change in the Consumer Price Index (CPI), the standard measure central banks target.
CPI excluding volatile items like food and energy.
GDP growth: the quarterly change in the inflation-adjusted value of all goods and services produced in the economy.
Percentage of the labor force that is unemployed.
The difference between the value of a country's exports and imports.
Measures change in the total value of sales at the retail level.
Measures the average change over time in the selling prices received by domestic producers for their output.
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Survey-based measure of consumers' confidence in economic conditions, employment prospects, and personal finances.
CPI excluding volatile items like food and energy.
Measures trade in goods and services and income flows.
Total exports reported by ABS (AUD millions), quarterly based on national accounts.
GDP growth: the quarterly change in the inflation-adjusted value of all goods and services produced in the economy.
Total imports reported by ABS (AUD millions), quarterly based on national accounts.
Headline inflation: the year-over-year percentage change in the Consumer Price Index (CPI), the standard measure central banks target.
Month-over-month change in the consumer price index, measuring short-term inflationary momentum.
Measures the average change over time in the selling prices received by domestic producers for their output.
Measures change in the total value of sales at the retail level.
The difference between the value of a country's exports and imports.
Nominal Effective Exchange Rate (NEER) measuring the value of a currency relative to a basket of trading partners' currencies, weighted by trade volumes. Published monthly by the BIS.
Total number of employed persons.
Number of persons employed full-time.
Number of persons employed part-time.
Ratio of the labor force to the working-age population.
Percentage of the labor force that is unemployed.
Total money supply including cash, deposits and other liquid assets.
Currency in circulation + transaction deposits. RBNZ column A.
M1 + savings deposits (on-call). RBNZ derived: column A + B1.
M1 + savings + term deposits. RBNZ column A+B (broadest aggregate).
Primary interest rate set by the Central Bank.
Overnight lending rate between banks.
Evergreen macro forces to keep beside the country data table.
Bank of England Bank Rate decisions and MPC vote splits — a hawkish majority (more votes for hikes than cuts) typically supports sterling; a dovish tilt weighs on it.
UK CPI and services CPI — services inflation is the stickiest domestic price component and the one the MPC monitors most closely when gauging whether underlying price pressures are cooling.
UK wage growth (ONS Average Earnings) — strong earnings raise the risk of second-round inflation, typically supporting a tighter Bank Rate path and a firmer pound.
Gilt yields and spreads — 10-year gilt yields relative to German Bunds and US Treasuries are a real-time signal of the rate differential that anchors GBP/USD and EUR/GBP direction.
UK labour-market data: payrolled employees, unemployment rate, claimant count, and ONS earnings — together the most comprehensive monthly picture of labour-market slack and cost pressures.
UK GDP — monthly GDP surprises and quarterly growth rates shape expectations for the Bank Rate path and the broader UK growth narrative.
Move laterally into another country hub while keeping the same indicator-first structure.