Quantitative Easing - Bank of England Increases Size of Asset Purchase Programme by £50 Billion to £125 Billion and Maintains Bank Rate at 0.5%

The Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee today voted to maintain the official Bank Rate paid on commercial bank reserves at 0.5%. The Committee also voted to continue with its programme of asset purchases financed by the issuance of central bank reserves and to increase its size by £50 billion to a total of £125 billion.

The world economy remains in deep recession. Output has continued to contract and international trade has fallen precipitously. The global banking and financial system remains fragile despite further significant intervention by the authorities. In the United Kingdom, GDP fell sharply in the first quarter of 2009. But surveys at home and abroad show promising signs that the pace of decline has begun to moderate.

CPI inflation was 2.9% in March, significantly higher than the 2% inflation target. Past falls in sterling have continued to put upwards pressure on inflation. But the degree of spare capacity in the economy has increased and the loosening in the labour market has contributed to a sharp easing in pay pressures. CPI inflation is likely to drop below the 2% target later this year, driven in part by diminishing contributions from food and energy prices. The substantial margin of spare capacity in the economy should continue to bear down on inflation thereafter.

The Committee noted that the outlook for economic activity was dominated by two countervailing forces. The process of adjustment in train in the UK economy, as private saving rises and banks restructure their balance sheets, combined with weak global demand, will continue to act as a significant drag on economic activity. But pushing in the opposite direction, there is considerable economic stimulus stemming from the easing in monetary and fiscal policy, at home and abroad, the substantial depreciation in sterling, past falls in commodity prices, and actions by authorities internationally to improve the availability of credit. That stimulus should in due course lead to a recovery in economic growth, bringing inflation back towards the 2% target. But the timing and strength of that recovery is highly uncertain.

In the light of that outlook and in order to keep CPI inflation on track to meet the 2% inflation target over the medium term, the Committee judged that maintaining Bank Rate at 0.5% was appropriate. The Committee also agreed to continue with its programme of purchases of government and corporate debt financed by the issuance of central bank reserves and to increase its size by £50 billion to a total of £125 billion. The Committee expected that it would take another three months to complete that programme, and it will keep the scale of the programme under review.

The Committee’s latest inflation and output projections will appear in the Inflation Report to be published on Wednesday 13 May.

The minutes of the meeting will be published at 9.30am on Wednesday 20 May.

Notes

The previous change in Bank Rate was a reduction of 0.5 percentage points to 0.5% on 5 March 2009.

Information on the Asset Purchase Facility can be found on the Bank of England website at http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/monetarypolicy/assetpurchases.htm
Purchases of a little over £52 billion have been made under this facility since its use for monetary policy purposes was first announced after the Committee’s March meeting.

News Source: www.bankofengland.co.uk

Leave a Reply

Advertising

RSS World Business News

  • WBNews: Future bank bailouts? 02 Sep 10 September 2, 2010
    The head of the US Federal Reserve, Ben Bernanke says banks must never again be allowed to become "too big to fail". Appearing before a US Congressional inquiry Mr Bernanke said new financial reforms would make government bailouts less likely in future. However, Doug Elliott, of the Brookings Institution think tank says there will always be times w […]

RSS Peter Day's World of Business

  • InBiz: Hidden Depths: 02 Sept 10 September 2, 2010
    London-born Graham Hawkes is the man who has created a submersible vessel that flies through the deepest ocean like a plane. Peter Day reports from his workshop in California, where he wonders why space exploration makes decades of headlines while it is so hard to get backers for deep sea travel into a world no-one has ever seen. Producer: Sandra Kanthal E […]
  • GlobalBiz: Developing the Developing World : 31 Aug 10 August 31, 2010
    Peter Day brings together senior staff working in development agencies that have engaged, or attempted to engage, directly with social entrepreneurs working in emerging markets. He asks to what degree have these respective agencies facilitated the work of innovative social change agents working directly with the poor? And what can be done to enhance the imp […]

RSS Money Box

  • MoneyBox: Bank merger IT 28 Aug 10 August 28, 2010
    Former Alliance and Leicester customers experience problems as their accounts transfer to Santander's IT system. Plus: websites charging for free services and taking out money abroad.