The Bank of England and inflation
The Bank of England and inflation
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Discussion

Mazinbrum

Original Poster:

1,246 posts

203 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Andrew Bailey unsurprisingly has been hinting that interest rates will rise in the near future thanks to the Orange turds campaign in the Middle East.
Raising interest rates curbs demand but the problem now is supply, surely raising interest rates too is going to really hurt the UK, possibly more than necessary?

fido

18,635 posts

280 months

Saturday
quotequote all
It’s been tad too low for savers! I’d take lower inflation and higher rates over the alternative.

Sport_Turismo_GTS

3,808 posts

54 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Mazinbrum said:
Andrew Bailey unsurprisingly has been hinting that interest rates will rise in the near future thanks to the Orange turds campaign in the Middle East.
Raising interest rates curbs demand but the problem now is supply, surely raising interest rates too is going to really hurt the UK, possibly more than necessary?
Core inflation is more than 50% above target, and that ignores the impact of the current energy situation.

JoshSm

3,884 posts

62 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Bailey and Co have little clue. They have one hammer, see nails everywhere, and have little idea which end to hold let alone how to wield it with precision.

If they do something it'll probably be the wrong thing, will have negligible beneficial effect on the actual underlying problem, and their timing will be wildly off.

fflump

3,152 posts

63 months

Saturday
quotequote all
The BoE's problem is that IRs are a very poor tool for combatting imported inflation, compared to demand-led inflation. It can exacerbate cost of living and hurt the economy leading to stagflation, ultimately weakening the £ or cancelling out any intended rise of the £ due to higher IRs.

Terminator X

19,879 posts

229 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Mazinbrum said:
Andrew Bailey unsurprisingly has been hinting that interest rates will rise in the near future thanks to the Orange turds campaign in the Middle East.
Raising interest rates curbs demand but the problem now is supply, surely raising interest rates too is going to really hurt the UK, possibly more than necessary?
It's not caused by your man in the street though so raising interest rates will only "hurt" people whilst doing nothing to curb rising prices. Haven't we been here before ...

TX.

Earthdweller

18,261 posts

151 months

Saturday
quotequote all
The economy is stagnating if not contracting, prices are rising

Increasing interest rates will only compound the problem

If I can see that why can't the BOE ?

JagLover

46,261 posts

260 months

Saturday
quotequote all
A significant issue is inflationary expectations and a rise in interest rates might help tackle those. Also, as mentioned, core inflation is above target anyway.

Sway

33,939 posts

219 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Earthdweller said:
The economy is stagnating if not contracting, prices are rising

Increasing interest rates will only compound the problem

If I can see that why can't the BOE ?
Because they have one target, and one tool with which to try and hit that target.

What absolutely does not come into that target is the source of the inflation.

g4ry13

20,970 posts

280 months

Saturday
quotequote all
The Bank is toothless against the causes of inflation.

It will just be an utter mess if they go down the path of hiking rates due to political pressures in an attempt to lower inflation rates.

Gargamel

16,181 posts

286 months

Saturday
quotequote all

Squeezing the demand side of the money supply when all the inflation is coming from upstream supply costs is kind of pointless behavior.

We already see substantial business closures due to high costs. Adding more pressure via the cost of money is not going to help.

BunkMoreland

3,927 posts

32 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Mazinbrum said:
Andrew Bailey unsurprisingly has been hinting that interest rates will rise in the near future thanks to the Orange turds campaign in the Middle East.
I like that you blame Trump for the Iranians mining the Straight of Hormuz, and firing on any vessel that sails through it. Also the same Iranians that threw missiles at civilian targets at neighbouring states who have never attacked it.



I suppose you think it best we just ignore the evil dictatorship in Iran, that is actively trying to build nuclear weapons, and just this year has executed 10s of thousands of its citizens, since it might cause some financial problems for a while rolleyes


Sway

33,939 posts

219 months

Saturday
quotequote all
BunkMoreland said:
Mazinbrum said:
Andrew Bailey unsurprisingly has been hinting that interest rates will rise in the near future thanks to the Orange turds campaign in the Middle East.
I like that you blame Trump for the Iranians mining the Straight of Hormuz, and firing on any vessel that sails through it. Also the same Iranians that threw missiles at civilian targets at neighbouring states who have never attacked it.



I suppose you think it best we just ignore the evil dictatorship in Iran, that is actively trying to build nuclear weapons, and just this year has executed 10s of thousands of its citizens, since it might cause some financial problems for a while rolleyes
You seem to be reading a lot in the OP that isn't actually written.

For me, I'm in support of the Iranian regime being removed - however, to do so would require proper planning and crucially the will to see it through fully with the Iranian/Persian people.

What Trump did, wasn't any of those things. The regime is still in place, the disruption isn't worth it - and there's now no longer term goals or plans.

That doesn't mean I think the BoE should do it's hammer thing and increase interest rates. If anything, I think we still need stimulus through cuts!

princeperch

8,227 posts

272 months

Yesterday (15:29)
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Can someone with more intelligence than me explain why we didn't get a period of high inflation after the global financial crisis and the dropping of rates thereafter? I appreciate things might not be as bad as they were in 2008-2012 but from what I see and read things are not great at all on a number of fronts and disposable income for the average Joe seems to be at an all time low.

Increasing rates won't make things much different for the average man on the street given the inflationary events are external. It will only make people poorer. I appreciate raising rates might strengthen the £ against the $ but so what? If you try and tell that to a shop worker in hull they'll look at you like youre an alien- all they'll know is they cannot afford their mortgage on their 2 up 2 down which by all accounts they should really be expected to afford.

OutInTheShed

13,462 posts

51 months

Yesterday (19:00)
quotequote all
UK interest rates need to be whatever it takes to sell bonds.

That's how it is when your economy is a loss-making dog pile.
Government deficit and the trade gap need foreign money flowing in.

The UK is not self-contained, it has to operate in the context of the US, euroland and other financial markets.

Murph7355

41,023 posts

281 months

Yesterday (19:37)
quotequote all
fflump said:
The BoE's problem is that IRs are a very poor tool for combatting imported inflation, compared to demand-led inflation. It can exacerbate cost of living and hurt the economy leading to stagflation, ultimately weakening the £ or cancelling out any intended rise of the £ due to higher IRs.
Exactly.

It's circumstances like these where govt policy needs to take more of a front seat and where a link between the BoE's powers and govt policy would be preferable. IF no11 wasn't full of fkwits. Ergo that would still be a terrible idea even now.

fido

18,635 posts

280 months

Yesterday (20:04)
quotequote all
princeperch said:
Can someone with more intelligence than me explain why we didn't get a period of high inflation after the global financial crisis and the dropping of rates thereafter?
It did cause massive asset price inflation - bailing out those with big mortgages but making it harder for generation rent and those living off cash savings e.g. pensioners but not asset wealthy (their main home aside).

Cheib

25,169 posts

200 months

Yesterday (21:30)
quotequote all
princeperch said:
Can someone with more intelligence than me explain why we didn't get a period of high inflation after the global financial crisis and the dropping of rates thereafter? I appreciate things might not be as bad as they were in 2008-2012 but from what I see and read things are not great at all on a number of fronts and disposable income for the average Joe seems to be at an all time low.
Cutting rates didn t feed through to the real economy because the transmission mechanism was broken.

Banks balance sheets were impaired so they were unable to lend in any meaningful or competive way to the real economy. The rate cuts from the BofE were designed to increase bank revenues so they could repair their balance sheets and be able to lend at competitive rates again (over years not weeks or months) Companies that had access to the financial markets directly eg multi nationals and larger corporates could access the cheaper rates but SME’s and individuals couldn t. They borrow from banks.

Pretty much every UK bank except HSBC had a huge hole in its balance sheet .RBS was technically insolvent and spent several years after the GFC writing down the losses it couldn t take at the time of the bailout. If it had taken them it would have been nationalised which would have been a whole different level of calamity.

Similar story repeated across Europe many European banks had serious problems.


Edited by Cheib on Monday 4th May 22:09

gotoPzero

20,138 posts

214 months

Yesterday (23:12)
quotequote all
OutInTheShed said:
UK interest rates need to be whatever it takes to sell bonds.

That's how it is when your economy is a loss-making dog pile.
Government deficit and the trade gap need foreign money flowing in.

The UK is not self-contained, it has to operate in the context of the US, euroland and other financial markets.
Ahh, someone gets it. Its all a sham.

Mrr T

14,958 posts

290 months

OutInTheShed said:
UK interest rates need to be whatever it takes to sell bonds.

That's how it is when your economy is a loss-making dog pile.
Government deficit and the trade gap need foreign money flowing in.

The UK is not self-contained, it has to operate in the context of the US, euroland and other financial markets.
The BOE only sets short term rates. Bond rates are set by the market.