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January 28, 2013 1:35 PM EST

Chancellor George Osborne is cooling to the idea of changing the Bank of England's inflation target to one focussed on the amount of spending, the Financial Times reported on Monday, citing unnamed officials at the Treasury.

According to the FT, Osborne still wants the new governor of the Bank, Mark Carney, to be more active in trying to put an end to Britain's economic woes, but there would be no need to target nominal gross domestic product.

Britain's economy shrank 0.3 percent in the final quarter of 2012, prompting fears of a triple dip recession.

Osborne met Carney, who will take over as the Bank's governor later this year, at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland on Thursday amid concerns that Carney, a Canadian, had set up unrealistic expectations of a change in monetary policy in a speech he made in December, the FT reported.

On Saturday, Carney took a coordinated stance with Osborne to support doing more with the tools that the Bank already has at its disposal.

The Bank aims to maintain inflation at 2 percent plus or minus 1 percentage point.

(Reporting By Costas Pitas; editing by Christopher Wilson)

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