Search AP News:
Jun 6, 7:17 AM EDT

BoE keeps interest rates, stimulus program steady

Business Video
Latest Business News
Oil prices stay steady before 2-day US Fed meeting

Chrysler expected to formally refuse Jeep recall

Tribune ends bankruptcy stint with lower earnings

Elan holders OK buyback, vote down 3 deals

Lowe's offers to buy Orchard Supply for $205M

Multimedia
A district summary of the Beige Book
Measuring economic stress by county nationwide
Mall malaise: shoppers browse, but don't buy
Unemployment by the numbers
Family struggles with father's unemployment
Saying an affordable goodbye
Hard times hit small car dealer
Latest Economic News
Investors guess Fed's actions, push stocks higher

News Summary: On trading floor, a wait-and-see day

How the Dow Jones industrial average fared

Netflix, AK Steel, AMD are big movers

US stocks rise ahead of Fed policy meeting

Stocks open higher on Wall Street ahead of Fed

Futures rising ahead of Fed's 2-day policy meeting

Where to invest in an uncertain market

G8 faces uncertain recoveries, turbulent markets

Iran market welcomes partial election results

Buy AP Photo Reprints
Interactives
Greece's Debt Threatens to Spread
State budget
gaps map
Auto industry problems trickle down, punish Tennessee county
Women give old Derby hats a makeover in tough economy
S.C. town deals with highest unemployment in South
How mortgages were bundled and sold as securities
Tracking the $700 billion financial bailout
Tracking the year's job losses
State-by-state foreclosures since 2007
Credit crisis explained
Presidents and their economic legacies
Lexicon of the financial crisis
Americans' addiction to debt

LONDON (AP) -- The Bank of England has opted not to pump more money into the British economy.

The decision Thursday came after the final Monetary Policy Committee meeting to be chaired by outgoing governor Mervyn King.

The policymakers approved keeping the base interest rate at 0.5 percent and declined to inject more money into the economy. The bank has pumped 375 billion pounds ($579 billion) into Britain's economy since 2009.

The stimulus plan - known as quantitative easing - is a program in which the government buys bonds from financial institutions, hoping they will lend.

King has voted in the past pushed for an increase, but has been outvoted.

Vicki Redwood, an analyst for Capital Economics, says policymakers are stuck in a state of limbo ahead of Mark Carney's arrival as governor.

© 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Learn more about our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.