Economists urge Bank of England to postpone interest rate rise
City A.M.’s panel of economists urged the UK’s rate-setters to keep interest rates at their record low of 0.5 per cent this month, as the global economy slows and inflation remains well below its two per cent target.
Professor Steve Keen, head of the school of economics, history and politics at London’s Kingston University, wants the Bank of England (BoE) to consider further easing until debt levels fall to more manageable levels.
Another concern was a weakening in the UK’s growth over the past three months, as shown in business surveys. Henderson’s Simon Ward said long-run prospects for inflation are strong given broad liquidity growth.
This counts cash and bank deposits as measured by the BoE’s M4x plus deposits at the National Savings and Investments bank, which have grown strongly this year on the introduction of George Osborne’s pensioner bonds.
STEVE KEEN | KINGSTON UNIVERSITY
Hold rates. The private sector continues to de-lever from peak debt of 200 per cent of GDP in 2009 to 160 per cent now, and demand will remain subdued while this continues. Interest rate policy is ineffective in this debt-deflationary environment. People’s Quantitative Easing should be considered to reduce private debt levels without causing a recession.
JAMES SPROULE | INSTITUTE OF DIRECTORS
Raise. Too loose monetary policy is leading to capital misallocation. Time to normalise – the economy can take it.
SIMON WARD | HENDERSON
Raise. Broad liquidity growth is up to over six per cent, the fastest since 2008 and incompatible with the inflation target.
GEORGE BUCKLEY | DEUTSCHE BANK
Hold. Weaker economic news from the UK and abroad alongside continued market uncertainty suggest no need to change policy this month.
VICKY PRYCE | BIS AND CEBR ADVISER
Hold. The world economy is slowing down. Manufacturing and services are weakening and the Eurozone is seeing deflation.
VICKY REDWOOD | CAPITAL ECONOMICS
Hold. The economy’s recovery is faltering, deflation is imminent and even the US Federal Reserve isn’t tightening yet.
TREVOR WILLIAMS | LLOYDS BANK
Hold. Despite continued UK growth, price inflation is zero and global risks are high. Economic conditions do not warrant a rate hike.
KALLUM PICKERING | BERENBERG BANK
Hold. As anticipated, UK data softened in the third quarter due to global weakness. Wait for a fourth quarter pick-up before considering a rise.
ROSS WALKER | RBS
Hold. Signs of a further loss of momentum in the domestic economy, alongside the deteriorating global backdrop, warrants unchanged policy.