Wednesday, October 29, 2008

"the Bank of England was free to cut interest rates without fear of breaching its inflation targets"

Via Alphaville, signs of a credit slowdown in Britain:

"Meanwhile, in the latest sign that the financial crisis has spread to become a major economic issue, the Bank's figures showed that the amount of money passing through the hands of UK non-financial businesses slumped sharply in the wake of the Lehmans crisis.

The broadest measure of the amount of cash available to companies excluding banks - M4 - is shrinking at the fastest rate since 1980. Meanwhile, the amount of cash in peoples' hands and in instant access bank accounts rose by only 0.1pc in the year to September - the weakest annual increase since 1969."

Here's something you don't see everyday, someone admitting to making a mistake:

"In a speech at the University of Kent, Prof Blanchflower said: "With hindsight, monetary policy has not been sufficiently forward looking. Changes in monetary policy only affect the real economy with a substantial lag... It is not sufficient to consider the data month by month until it emerges that the UK is in recession. I believe the trend has been apparent for some time. The synchronized downturn in so many business surveys should have led us to realise sooner that the UK economy was entering a recession."

He dismissed the MPC's August inflation report, which forecast flat growth for the next year and a recovery shortly afterwards, as "an optimistic view."

In comments which will underline expectations that the Bank will cut borrowing costs at its meeting next week - if not before - he added: "My view remains that interest rates do need to come down significantly – and quickly. If rates are not cut aggressively we do face the prospect of a relatively deep and long-lasting recession."

How low will rates go in Britain:

"Capital Economics predicted that the Bank will have to reduce borrowing costs all the way down to 1pc.

Chief economist Jonathan Loynes said: "Extraordinary circumstances require extraordinary actions. With the current recession likely to be deeper than that in the early 1990s and the credit crunch impairing the effectiveness of monetary policy, we now expect UK interest rates to fall to an all-time low of just 1pc."

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