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Moneyizor

Bank of England cuts interest rate

Bank of England It was hardly a well-kept secret. The Bank of England had received a raft of appalling numbers from the real economy this week. It was bound to cut rates deep today.

An hour ago, the Old Lady of Threadneedle Street duly obliged and cut by 100 basis points to two percent, the lowest figure since 1951.

It is clear that this is going to be a steeper and longer slump than most forecasters would own to until very recently. Next year will see the deepest of economic winters across the world.

Reflecting the gloomy forecasts, other central banks are slashing rates too.

Sweden’s central bank today cut its key rate by a record 175 basis points, to two percent, the largest since 1992 when the country famously nationalized its major banks.

New Zealand also announced a cut of 150 basis points to a five-year low of five percent. Further cuts are on the cards.

Indonesia made a surprise 25 basis-point cut to its rate, to 9.25 percent.

Yesterday, the Bank of Thailand cut rates by 100 basis points to 2.75 percent, some of which may have been due to recent political turmoil in the country.

On Tuesday, the Reserve Bank of Australia surprised markets with a 100 basis-point cut to 4.25 percent.

The European Central Bank is expected to cut again today, but signals are mixed. The Shadow ECB has called for swift, deep cuts from its current rate of 3.25 percent. However, voices close to the ECB warned not to expect them. The lack of a strategy is a major criticism of the “Bank without a Treasury”.

All bank authorities are aware that 2010 is the year when inflation will return with a vengeance if a prolonged deflation can be avoided. Most are fighting the latter tooth and nail, while making noises about having the medium term under control.

We shall see.

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Deflation looms in Britain and worldwide

Bubble Deflation is now the biggest, persistent threat to Western economies. Inflation, recently the major enemy, has swiftly retreated, as widely predicted.

In Britain, many are now waking up to the gravity of the situation. Former Chancellor of the Exchequer, Ken Clarke, has dismissed comparisons with the 1970s, ’80s and ’90s, likening current conditions explicitly with 1929/30.

Normally cautious Bank of England Governor, Mervyn King, forecasts a 2 percent contraction in the British economy next year, with interest rates falling rapidly to nought percent for the first time in history.

Deflation is now the enemy we must all factor in to our expectations in the near-to-medium terms. So why is deflation necessarily worse than inflation?

In an era of massive indebtedness, both private and public, deflation increases the burden. As incomes decline, debts remain the same — at levels signed for in better times. It’s the exact opposite of the apparent wealth created during periods of rapidly rising house prices.

Professor Peter Spencer of York University says, “It is going to be absolute murder in Britain if inflation turns negative. The big difference with past episodes is that we are now much more heavily indebted. Few people owned their own houses in 1930s. Debts were miniscule.”

Another symptom of deflation is that consumers wait for lower prices before shopping, causing job-losses in the High Street and yet more bad economic news. Japan’s “lost decade” of the 1990s is the technically-perfect example of this psychology of fear taking hold. It is still suffering.

So what can be done either to pre-empt or cure the curse of falling prices across the board?

Curiously, Keynesianism which, in its misinterpreted version is disastrous in normal times, does hold out some hope in depressive conditions. Expect central banks to start printing money soon and dropping it from helicopters, if they haven’t started already. Want to buy some rising stock? Buy helicopter shares. [This is not financial advice.]

If you’re one of those noble souls who saved assiduously during the asset bubbles, you will just have to stand by and watch the profligate oafs who caused the problem clean up, while your own responsible hoard of value drains away.

It’s just not fair, but it will probably have to happen “for the greater good”.

You have only one consolation: you can give the politicians who presided over the madness a good kicking at the next electoral opportunity.

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What do you know about Keynesianism?

John Maynard Keynes John Maynard Keynes has never been so popular. The name of this world famous British economist, who died in 1946, is on everyone’s lips these days, including Gordon Brown’s.

However, Keynes’s ideas are often misrepresented, or misunderstood, by both Left and Right in politics.

The Left believes his economic strictures are for all occasions, when they were proposed for slump conditions only. The Right thinks his views were Marxist and should never soil their delicate monetarist palette.

In fact Keynes had a lot to say about monetary policy. His flaw is that he was too broad brush on inflation, even appearing to brush it away.

Roger Bootle of Capital Economics has written an excellent summary-for-dummies on Keynes and Keynesianism in the UK’s Daily Telegraph.

Read it here

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Free markets or government regulation?

Pendulum That seems to be a choice that has to be made by each succeeding generation, depending on the business cycle and/or the severity of downturns.

In the current recessionary period the situation is so bad it’s become a crisis in both the financial markets and the real economy. Already many governments are having to nationalize part or all of their banking system. Financial services never seemed so brittle.

Is that really the case though? In a carefully-argued article, The world needs Up-To-A-Pointism, John Evans suggests that by staying within the boundaries where governments and free markets work best, the world would be a much more stable place to live and do business.

Although mostly mutually-exclusive, the interface between regulation and free markets could be made to operate more efficiently, to the benefit of both.

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