Posted in Banks, Ben Bernanke, Credit Crunch, finance, Macroeconomics, Money on March 12th, 2009
On Tuesday, the Bank of England began the arcane process of printing money by buying back the government’s debt.
The decision has had mixed reviews from the press.
The potential inflationary effects are the main are of concern. Others take the line that the Bank could do little else to boost the money supply, while a few politicians have pointed out that broad money (M4) is already rising by 20+ percent.
A good primer on the pros and cons is given by the BBC’s Business Editor, Robert Peston on his blog:
Will QE work?
Not to be outdone the BBC’s Economics Editor, Stephanie Flanders, also weighs in with an informative piece on how the Americans are doing it — mainly by buying corporate bonds, not Treasuries:
Ahead of the curve
My favourite is by the Daily Mail’s City Editor, Alex Brummer, who today gives an emphatic thumbs down to the whole operation.
Bank’s great experiment may prove gamble too far
Syntagma also greeted the “new dawn” of lumpen monetarism with incredulity:
Watch out for the mashed potato machine
Food for thought.
Posted in Banks, Capitalism, Credit Crunch, Gordon Brown, Great Depression 2.0, Mervyn King, Royal Bank of Scotland on March 2nd, 2009
Gordon Brown, former British Chancellor, now Prime Minister, has come in for weighty criticism in recent days for his failure to spot and stop the runaway disaster that is the British economy.
Lord Turner, new head of the Financial Services Authority (FSA), blames Brown when Chancellor for the failure of regulation which led to catastrophic losses at Northern Rock, HBOS and RBS.
“They existed within a political philosophy where all the pressure on the FSA was not to say ‘why aren’t you looking at these business models?’, but ‘why are you being so heavy and intrusive, can’t you make your regulation a bit more light touch?’,” he said.
“We were supervising people like HBOS within a particular philosophy of the way you do regulation, which I think in retrospect was wrong. I think (the FSA’s actions were) a competent execution of a style of regulation and a philosophy in regulation which was, in retrospect, mistaken.”
Similarly, Bank of England Governor Mervyn King claims he has been shouting warnings for years about risky lending without any response from Brown.
It is on the record that Brown delivered a speech in the City urging them to take even greater risks.
The Prime Minister is now trying to cover the mess up by throwing the kitchen sink at sacked RBS boss Fred Goodwin’s enormous pension. Significantly this was done as the Treasury unveiled its third bank bailout in the form of a £325 billion insurance scheme for desperate RBS.
Meanwhile the head of the Audit Commission, Steve Bundred, warned that public debt is at “Armageddon levels” and will exceed two-thirds of the entire annual economic output of the country.
As Brown heads for Washington to try to convince the new adminstration to set up a “global regulatory system” the rest of us should ask why we should believe him now when he failed so spectacularly for 12 years.