The Late Payment of Commercial Debts (Rate of Interest) (No. 2) Order 1998
Citation and commencement1.
This Order may be cited as the Late Payment of Commercial Debts (Rate of Interest) (No. 2) Order 1998 and shall come into force on 13th November 1998.
Revocation2.
Interpretation3.
Rate of statutory interest4.
The rate of statutory interest for the purposes of the Late Payment of Commercial Debts (Interest) Act 1998 shall be 8 per cent over the official dealing rate per annum.
We consent,
This Order replaces the Late Payment of Commercial Debts (Rate of Interest) Order 1998 (S.I. 1998/2480), which is revoked by article 2. There was a defect in S.I. 1998/2480 in that the consent of the Treasury had not been obtained.
The Late Payment of Commercial Debts (Interest) Act 1998 (“the Act”) provides qualifying creditors with a statutory right to claim interest on qualifying debts from qualifying debtors. This Order, made under section 6 of the Act, sets the rate of statutory interest which may be claimed.
The variable rate is set at the Official Dealing Rate of the Bank of England + 8 per cent (article 4). The Official Dealing Rate of the Bank of England is announced from time to time by the Bank’s Monetary Policy Committee. The rate is sometimes called the “repo” rate, since repos or sale and repurchase agreements are one type of monetary policy instrument used by the Bank. At the time of making this Order, the official dealing rate is published daily in the “Financial Times” (except on Sundays), together with the date on which the rate was last announced. It is referred to as the “UK clearing bank base lending rate” and can be found in the section entitled “London Money Rates”.