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Bank drives another £25bn of new cash into economy

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Published Date: 06 November 2009
THE Bank of England has decided to pump an extra £25 billion directly into the economy through its scheme of quantitative easing (QE) in a bid to end the longest British recession since records began.
The monetary boost, announced yesterday, came after shock official figures showed Britain was still in recession, declining by 0.4 per cent in a quarter.

The Bank's monetary policy committee also left interest rates on hold at 0.5 per cent for the
eighth month in a row.

So far, the Bank of England has injected £200bn as part of its quantitative easing strategy.

This is where it literally prints money and uses it to buy bonds from banks and other companies, to encourage spending and lending.

But Vince Cable, the Liberal Democrat's Treasury spokesman, warned the Bank of England's decision risked simply "throwing more and more money at a problem".

Read Bill Jamieson's analysis of this story here

Mr Cable said that while he supported the policy of quantitative easing, only financial institutions seemed to be benefiting, and the wider economy was still "a long way from recovery".

Bank of England Governor Mervyn King had to write to Chancellor Alistair Darling for permission to inject the £25bn.

"Households have reduced their spending substantially and business investment has fallen especially sharply," Mr King wrote to Mr Darling. "A number of indicators of spending and confidence, however, suggest that a pickup in economic activity may soon be evident."

The Bank said it would keep its asset purchase programme under review and this round of spending would take three months to complete.

It added that banks' funding conditions had improved, but said "financial conditions remain fragile".

The additional expenditure marks the smallest increase in the policy since it was launched in March and was less than the £50bn predicted by many economists in the wake of third-quarter figures showing the UK remained in recession.

Other comparable economies, including France, Germany and the United States, have already emerged from recession.

Stephen Boyle, head of RBS Group Economics, said there was "no plan B".

"The UK economy is still in the high dependency unit, but without QE it might have been in intensive care, or worse," he said.

"The extension of the Bank's asset purchase scheme today reminds us that the risks of doing too little considerably outweigh the risks of doing too much."

But other commentators questioned the strategy.

SNP Treasury spokesman Stewart Hosie said: "These eye-watering sums underline the fragility of the economy, and the real failure of the UK government to get a grip.

"Quantitative easing was intended to boost lending to business but the MPC still warn that UK banks are failing to provide enough credit to businesses and households."

Ian McCafferty, CBI chief economic adviser, said he welcomed the decision.

"Extending quantitative easing ought to provide an extra degree of support for business and consumer confidence," he said.

"Although it is difficult to know the extent of the impact of QE, its effects appear to have been positive so far."

The increased money supply could eventually lead to a rise in inflation and many analysts expect interest rates to rise next year.







Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 06 November 2009 1:37 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Economic indicators
 
1

truthsleuth,

06/11/2009 00:43:02
It seems to me all QE does is print money to buy the banks out of a problem they created. In effect we pay them so they can loan us our own money.

Far better this money be used to bypass the banks and loan it to the real assett producers - industry and business' or invest in 'national assetts for the future' this way the nation gets real assets
2

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 06/11/2009 01:46:38

Another £25bn, pulled out the hat!, the Children's Story,,
,,"The Magic Porridge Pot", must be true!




3

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 06/11/2009 02:18:15

Or it could be the Children's story, "The Cat in the Hat"


4

Incandescent,

06/11/2009 02:34:46
Er, where is Rufus?

Rufus! Yoo Hoo!

Tube
5

Ewan Randall,

06/11/2009 06:09:48
Will Christmas sales be enough to bring the UK out of recession?
6

yockel,

06/11/2009 08:07:41
Unfortunately cash is the fluid that dilutes value.

The fact that the government, who couldn't organise the proverbial in a brewery has imposed control on every sector of financial life (both private and commercial) and continues to pontificate, guarantees a very slow recovery.

Who knows perhaps it is the end to boom and bust. The economy may now be stable, in the bust condition.
7

Ben Thehoose,

06/11/2009 08:24:26
The quantity of money equation is MV=PT. Do what you will with M (even quantitative easing), but if V doesn't alter then you are stuffed. It really is this simple. Shame Gordon never learned any economics.
8

carrottop,

06/11/2009 09:36:22

I hope this 'easing' is going to be tapered down slowly in the later stages or we are going to be left on the edge of precipice with a long drop down.

2&3# Please dont feel you have to post even when you have nothing to say as silence is better than enforcing drivel on others.
9

yockel,

06/11/2009 09:45:31
Ben Thehoose 7:- It's worse than that. Paying off debt increases T while reducing V. It also assumes all money circulates within a period (not specified in the equation)which is a bit naive when folk are buying and hanging on to gold or can't sell houses within the "period". The thing that must give is P, price.

You can see where the deluded get the idea of spending your way out of a recession by increasing T though.
10

Jo Public,

06/11/2009 12:34:27
"Quantitative easing was intended to boost lending to business but the MPC still warn that UK banks are failing to provide enough credit to businesses and households."

Exactly. British taxpayers have bailed out the banks and they are using the cash to shore up their balance sheet and protect their own pension fund (remember - at least £800 million of taxpayers' money was transferred into the RBS pension fund to ensure the pensions of the already rich and greedy).

It's a dreadful state of affairs when Joe Public has to subsidise an organisation full of rich people who ballsed it up.

11

Ben Thehoose,

06/11/2009 13:06:26
#9 Yockel.

I suspect that V (velocity of circulation) is today's sticking point. Plenty of money, but it's not getting about. In theory M needs be only 1, if V was slick enough!

With a GDP of £1700bn and a QE total now of £200bn suggests national debt of 12%. Talk about debt bubbles ready to pop! Get out of Sterling NOW!
12

TomPullings,

Clydebank 06/11/2009 14:09:35
I keep a close eye on the money markets and it is very telling that the pound is stuck at around the 151-154 yen value. Japan is having a tough time, not because they don't have a strong industrial base or anything like that but because their main customer bases in the US and Europe are bloody skint and can't afford their goods. What the Scottish government should be doing is getting their tourist gurus over to the land of the strong yen to entice all those wee folk over here to spend their valuable dosh in our tacky wee tourist shops, (and our lovely shops too of course).
13

Its Time For Us,

Edinburgh 06/11/2009 14:46:27
Am I ever glad i got out of this London incompetence two years ago....

TomPullings is quite correct about exploiting the run on the pound..Its such a pity that Scotland hasnt thrown out London yet...We may have had a few years of income generated out of manufacturing and natural resources...producing substantial income for the Scottish Nation...

Lets just hope that the SNP start negotiations with the European Commission..on the seperation of the Scottish Nation from the dying UK...Its Time Now
14

It's life but not as we know it,

The Oort Clouds 06/11/2009 17:16:12
Robert Mugabe eat your heart out. We got this printing money business sussed.
15

david wayne osedach,

San Diego 06/11/2009 20:02:05
Twenty five billion is a big chunk of change! Where did they borrow it from?
16

TomPullings,

the banks of the Clyde 10/11/2009 10:13:30
david osedach, oh, they didn't borrow it, they just invented it out of this air, you can do that with a worthless fiat currency you know. Since the money isn't backed by a gold or silver standard, you can make as much of the stuff as you want, thus rapidly causing brutal inflations and penurising the workforce whos wages will no longer be worth enough to buy life's necessities. Nice folk these banksters, (Rothschilds especially, total scum).

 

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