As the Monetary Policy Committee begins its monthly meeting, an influential think-tank has said there was "not very much point" to the last cut. Martin Weale of the National Institute of Economic and Social Research said that other measures such as the Bank buying corporate bonds would be better. It is not the cost of credit that is deterring borrowers but that credit is not available. The think tank warned that the contraction of credit meant that rate cuts by the Bank of England were now ineffective in stemming the downturn. The NIESR predicted the UK economy would shrink by 2.7% in 2009, its worst performance for 60 years. Link to BBC News
With regard to the lack of available credit, see the video posted on the tutor2u blog. It concerns Leyland Daf trucks, explaining that whilst demand for vehicles is high, many smaller companies cannot get loans in order to puchase trucks whose price is around £100,000. It shows how this affects company production and employment, and its knock-on effects to suppliers and the local/national economy. Link
As the Monetary Policy Committee meets, the Bank of England announced that it has lent £185bn to financial institutions since April under its special liquidity scheme (SLS), set up to allow banks to temporarily swap assets that were difficult to trade, such as mortgage-backed debt, for UK Treasury Bills. It was designed to help encourage banks to resume normal lending practices by reducing the uncertainty that having illiquid assets on balance sheets was creating. Link to BBC News
2 comments:
Irony perhaps - new cut to 1% today...
I agree with Martin Weale, there's not much point of cutting interest even though they have because they're just not working. The bond idea seems like it may work..
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