Thursday, January 8, 2009

The Bank of England statement in full

Where do you start criticising this kind of short term thinking? One thought comes to mind; reports concerning the demise of inflation are almost certainly premature.

Just in case anyone has forgotten this awkward little fact, the UK CPI increased by 4.1 percent during the last twelve months. That is still some distance from the 2 percent target.

The Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee today voted to reduce the official Bank Rate paid on commercial bank reserves by 0.5 percentage points to 1.5%.

The world economy appears to be undergoing an unusually sharp and synchronised downturn. Measures of business and consumer confidence have fallen markedly. World trade growth this year is likely to be the weakest for some considerable time.

In the United Kingdom, business surveys suggest that the pace of contraction in activity increased during the fourth quarter of 2008 and that output is likely to continue to fall sharply during the first part of this year. Surveys of retailers and reports from the Bank’s regional Agents imply that consumer spending has weakened. The outlook for business and residential investment has deteriorated. And the availability of credit to both households and businesses has tightened further, pointing to the need for further measures to increase the flow of lending to the non-financial sector. But the substantial depreciation in sterling over recent months may help to moderate the impact on UK net exports of the slowdown in global growth.

CPI inflation fell to 4.1% in November. Inflation is expected to fall further, reflecting waning contributions from retail energy and food prices and the direct impact of the temporary reduction in Value Added Tax. Measures of inflation expectations have come down. And pay growth remains subdued. But the depreciation in sterling will boost the cost of imports.

At its January meeting, the Committee noted that the recent easing in monetary and fiscal policy, the substantial fall in sterling and the prospective decline in inflation would together provide a considerable stimulus to activity as the year progressed. Nevertheless, the Committee judged that, looking through the volatility in inflation associated with the movements in Value Added Tax, there remained a significant risk of undershooting the 2% CPI inflation target in the medium term at the existing level of Bank Rate. Accordingly, the Committee concluded that a further reduction in Bank Rate of 0.5 percentage points to 1.5% was necessary to meet the target in the medium term.

2 comments:

  1. Deflation is the cover for a low interest rate policy designed to bail out new labour's banker mates.

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  2. When will these people start to realise that you can't continue to spend what you haven't got - no amount of rate reductions will change that.
    The boom of the last decade or so was NOT REAL - we were kidding ourselves that we were wealthy 'cos our houses were worth more.
    Gordon Brown went along with the flow of easy money and then took credit for a miracle economy...
    Time for a reality check... the UK depends on foreigners for products, sevices, energy, food etc... the standard of living we ACTUALLY EARN (as a country overall)is akin to a Third World one.
    Expect a rapid spiral into the abyss... I don't know how it will end, but I do know that it won't be Gordon Brown that will get us out of it!!!

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