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Quantitative easing rise expected

posted : THURSDAY, 5TH NOVEMBER 2009 11:11:38 GMT comments : 3

- Search: economy quanititative easing

UK borrowing has hit 11.4 billion pounds in October, figures show
UK borrowing has hit 11.4 billion pounds in October, figures show

The Bank of England could set off fiscal "fireworks" amid expectations that up to another £50 billion will be pumped into the economy.

While other countries have begun to emerge from recession, recent shock figures showed a decline in the UK economy between July and September, leading experts to expect the Bank's quantitative easing (QE) programme will be increased.

Interest rates are almost certain to stay at their record low for some time, but the QE scheme to boost the money supply could be extended from its current £175 billion level to reach up to £225 billion, according to economists.

The prediction is partly based on the disappointing 0.4% third-quarter fall in UK output, which surprised markets expecting a technical end to the recession and was the sixth consecutive quarter of contraction.

Uncertainty over the impact of QE also grew recently after the latest figures showed a 0.9% decline in the Bank's preferred measure of money growth last month.

Other major economies - including the US, France and Germany - have left the UK behind as they shrugged off their economic slumps, putting further pressure on officials to come up with additional measures.

An indication that the Bank may boost QE comes from the meeting of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) three months ago in which some members - including Bank of England governor Mervyn King - called for the programme to be extended.

Howard Archer, of IHS Global Insight, said: "It is a stone dead certainty that interest rates will stay at 0.5%, but there could well be fireworks amid significant divisions within the MPC over whether or not to further extend the Bank of England's QE programme - and if so, by how much?"

He said the contraction in the economy "tips the odds in favour" of an extension by at least £25 billion, but possibly up to £50 billion.

David Kern, chief economist at the British Chambers of Commerce (BCC), said: "Disappointing economic developments reinforce the case for immediately raising the QE stimulus to at least £200 billion, with the option of an additional increase to £225 billion next month. Every effort must be made to bring the recession to an end. The current situation - in which our economy is still declining while other countries are already growing - entails serious dangers and must not be allowed to continue."

    BLP
    Thursday, 5 November 2009 17:01:41 GMT

    I agree with Phil. Quantitative easing helps keep prices up by reducing the sterling exchange rate. It also has a substantial impact on the inflation by pushing it to an unrealistically high level. The only people who benefit from this are the one who put that son of ...B in the bank of England. We have already seen car prices are up by an qverage of 30 to 40 percent.

    Dan
    Thursday, 5 November 2009 09:14:23 GMT

    I agree with PhilD, Quantitive Easing is just the banks versian of a protection racket, and everybody knows ounce you have been foolish enough to make the first payement on a protection racket they will always be back for more and more. The banks also realise that Gordon Brown can be blackmailed for more and more right up to the election as " saving the world through quantitive easing " is his last shot. if Brown stops paying before the election he will have publicly admitted all the money pumped into the banks has been was lost and along with it will go his election chances.

    PhilD
    Thursday, 5 November 2009 08:27:46 GMT

    It is the quantitative easing that is causing the problems in the first place because it is their way of putting off the inevitable instead of letting the economy take its natural course and in the process getting the tax payer even more into debt by pumping money into a bottomless pit. The banks prefer things the way they are because the only thing they can make money on at the moment is property because we have not got a strong manufacturing base. so where is the money coming from to afford these overpriced properties then because the average income out there is minimum wage.

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