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BOEâs Gieve Sees Risk of Decade-Long Depression Like Japan
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By Jennifer Ryan and Brian Swint
Feb. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Bank of England Deputy Governor John Gieve said policy makers are fighting to protect Britain from the threat of a decade-long depression similar to that suffered by Japan in the 1990s.
âThat is a risk,â he said late yesterday during questions after a speech at the London School of Economics. âItâs a serious risk but we are addressing it. Thereâs a huge amount of policy easing in the pipeline. I donât think itâs inevitable.â
The Bank of England this month cut the benchmark interest rate to 1 percent, the lowest ever, and sought permission from the government to buy securities to create money. Japanese policy makers hesitated in addressing a banking crisis in the 1990s and then struggled to revive economic growth and fight deflation in what is known as the âLost Decade.â
Gieve said that the Bank of England will probably start so- called quantitative easing in the next few weeks. Policy makers are currently debating what the âeffectiveâ zero rate is after limiting this monthâs reduction on concerns about banksâ willingness to lend at low rates of interest, he said.
The Bank of England began buying commercial paper a week ago when its asset purchase facility became operational using money allocated by the Treasury. It will release data today showing the value of transactions conducted so far.
âWe donât know how deep and prolonged this recession will be or how soon and how completely financial markets will recover,â he said in his prepared remarks. âSo it is too early to reach settled conclusions on causes or cures.â
Last Speech
The speech was Gieveâs last as a policy maker at the U.K. central bank. He will leave his post at the end of the month after serving on the interest-rate setting Monetary Policy Committee since January 2006.
Gieve will take up a position at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, LSE Director Howard Davies said. On the MPC, he will be replaced by Paul Fisher, who was previously the bankâs executive director of foreign exchange.
There are several lessons to be learned from the financial crisis, Gieve said. Targeting inflation may not be enough for policy makers to steer the economy.
âIf inflation targeting by an independent central bank is an essential foundation of policy, it is pretty clearly not sufficient on its own,â he said. âHaving a large arsenal of policy instruments, which vary in their point of influence, provides some welcome flexibility.â
âCautious Skepticismâ
Policy makers must âbe willing to back their judgments, whether in identifying asset bubbles or identifying firms or markets which threaten financial stability, and to take preemptive action,â Gieve said. âOur default position should be one of cautious skepticism.â
Gieve said that authorities need the power to enforce âdynamic provisioningâ for financial institutions to reduce the tendency of some accounting rules to inflate a boom and exacerbate a bust in the economic cycle. Authorities could also introduce restraints on lending terms, he said.
For now, the economy may slump further. Data on U.K. retail sales and mortgage repossessions will be released today. The next interest-rate decision is March 5.
To contact the reporters on this story: Jennifer Ryan in London at jryan13@bloomberg.net; Brian Swint in London at bswint@bloomberg.net.
Last Updated: February 19, 2009 19:01 EST
BOEâs Gieve Sees Risk of Decade-Long Depression Like Japan
Email | Print | A A A
By Jennifer Ryan and Brian Swint
Feb. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Bank of England Deputy Governor John Gieve said policy makers are fighting to protect Britain from the threat of a decade-long depression similar to that suffered by Japan in the 1990s.
âThat is a risk,â he said late yesterday during questions after a speech at the London School of Economics. âItâs a serious risk but we are addressing it. Thereâs a huge amount of policy easing in the pipeline. I donât think itâs inevitable.â
The Bank of England this month cut the benchmark interest rate to 1 percent, the lowest ever, and sought permission from the government to buy securities to create money. Japanese policy makers hesitated in addressing a banking crisis in the 1990s and then struggled to revive economic growth and fight deflation in what is known as the âLost Decade.â
Gieve said that the Bank of England will probably start so- called quantitative easing in the next few weeks. Policy makers are currently debating what the âeffectiveâ zero rate is after limiting this monthâs reduction on concerns about banksâ willingness to lend at low rates of interest, he said.
The Bank of England began buying commercial paper a week ago when its asset purchase facility became operational using money allocated by the Treasury. It will release data today showing the value of transactions conducted so far.
âWe donât know how deep and prolonged this recession will be or how soon and how completely financial markets will recover,â he said in his prepared remarks. âSo it is too early to reach settled conclusions on causes or cures.â
Last Speech
The speech was Gieveâs last as a policy maker at the U.K. central bank. He will leave his post at the end of the month after serving on the interest-rate setting Monetary Policy Committee since January 2006.
Gieve will take up a position at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, LSE Director Howard Davies said. On the MPC, he will be replaced by Paul Fisher, who was previously the bankâs executive director of foreign exchange.
There are several lessons to be learned from the financial crisis, Gieve said. Targeting inflation may not be enough for policy makers to steer the economy.
âIf inflation targeting by an independent central bank is an essential foundation of policy, it is pretty clearly not sufficient on its own,â he said. âHaving a large arsenal of policy instruments, which vary in their point of influence, provides some welcome flexibility.â
âCautious Skepticismâ
Policy makers must âbe willing to back their judgments, whether in identifying asset bubbles or identifying firms or markets which threaten financial stability, and to take preemptive action,â Gieve said. âOur default position should be one of cautious skepticism.â
Gieve said that authorities need the power to enforce âdynamic provisioningâ for financial institutions to reduce the tendency of some accounting rules to inflate a boom and exacerbate a bust in the economic cycle. Authorities could also introduce restraints on lending terms, he said.
For now, the economy may slump further. Data on U.K. retail sales and mortgage repossessions will be released today. The next interest-rate decision is March 5.
To contact the reporters on this story: Jennifer Ryan in London at jryan13@bloomberg.net; Brian Swint in London at bswint@bloomberg.net.
Last Updated: February 19, 2009 19:01 EST