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A man passes a doorway at the Bank of England in the City of London.TOBY MELVILLE/Reuters

The Bank of England voted on Thursday to buy £75-billion more in assets to shield Britain's economy from the euro zone debt crisis and keep the faltering recovery going.

Thursday's decision to expand its asset purchase program to a total of £275-billion highlights the precarious state of Britain's economy as global growth slows, government spending cuts and tax hikes bite and consumers face high inflation and slow wage rises.

The bank kept interest rates on hold at a record-low 0.5 per cent.

Analysts in a Reuters poll had reckoned there was a 40 per cent chance the central bank would restart its asset purchase program, or quantitative easing, this month.

A number of policy makers had flagged their readiness to join arch-dove Adam Posen and vote for more quantitative easing after many had already seen the case for more easing strengthening at the September meeting.

Britain's economy has basically flat-lined over the past 12 months. With the government's hands tied by its pledge to erase a budget deficit of some 10 per cent, pressure has been mounting on the bank over the last couple of months to do more to support the economy.

All eyes will now be on the European Central Bank later this session to see if it primes markets for pre-Christmas interest rate cuts.

The Bank has kept interest rates at 0.5 per cent for more than 2-1/2 years – already its longest period of inaction since the Second World War. The Bank had kept its stock of asset purchases at £200-billion since February 2010, when the economy was picking up after a deep recession.

But the momentum shifted over the summer from a bias to hike rates to more easing, even though inflation is set to hit 5 per cent soon, as equity markets slumped and the euro crisis triggered fears of bank collapses and a renewed recession.

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