What might the Bank of England do to wean the UK economy off stimulus?
Send a link to a friend
[July 16, 2021] LONDON
(Reuters) - Two top Bank of England officials surprised investors this
week by saying the time might be nearing for the British central bank to
rein in the huge stimulus programme it has used to steer the economy
through the coronavirus crisis.
With activity bouncing back strongly, and inflation rising faster than
expected, Deputy Governor Dave Ramsden said on Wednesday that the BoE
might start to consider tightening monetary policy sooner than he
previously thought.
On Thursday, Monetary Policy Committee member Michael Saunders went
further, warning that sticking with the BoE's full 895 billion pound
($1.24 trillion) bond purchase programme risked entrenching higher
inflation expectations if the recovery continued apace.
On Friday, a group of lawmakers told the BoE to explain why it was not
winding down its stimulus.
But the way ahead is far from clear.
The BoE does not know how many jobs will be lost when the government
ends its wage subsidies programme in September, so MPC members remain
cautious about removing stimulus.
And the central bank is acutely aware of how talk by the U.S. Federal
Reserve of merely slowing bond purchases in 2013 caused a "taper
tantrum" which pushed up borrowing costs in financial markets sharply
and forced the Fed to stress it was in no rush.
Below is a summary of the ways the BoE could choose to take its foot off
the stimulus accelerator.
CUT SHORT THE CURRENT BOND-BUYING PROGRAMME
The BoE decided in November to buy a further 150 billion pounds of
British government bonds. That proved to be just a few days before the
announcement of a major breakthrough on COVID-19 vaccine development
that suddenly raised recovery hopes.
The BoE still has about another 60 billion pounds' worth of gilts to buy
until it completes the programme.
MPC member Saunders said curtailing the programme would be discussed at
the next meetings of the committee, which is due to announce its latest
policy decisions on Aug. 5, and that it could be curtailed in the next
month or two.
Economists at bank HSBC said they did not think a majority of the MPC's
members would vote to reduce the programme in August although it was
likely to slow the pace of buying to make the programme last until the
end of 2021 as planned.
BUY ALL THE BONDS AND THEN LET THEM RUN DOWN
Another option for the BoE is to complete its bond-purchase programme and then
let the size of its stockpile run down by not reinvesting the receipts from
maturing debt in more bonds.
[to top of second column] |
The Bank of England and
Royal Exchange are reflected in a puddle as a pedestrian walks past,
amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in London, Britain,
November 19, 2020. REUTERS/Simon Dawson/File Photo
Deputy Governor Ramsden said this week that the BoE could decide to reinvest
none of the maturing debt or do a partial reinvestment.
The BoE might similarly allow its 20 billion pound corporate bond portfolio,
which has already hit its target size, to run down.
SELL BONDS
A faster way to put the brakes on the economy would be for the BoE to sell some
of the bonds it has amassed.
Given the size of the BoE's presence in the bond market - its holdings of
British government bonds, or gilts, now amount to 40% of Britain's annual
economic output - outright sales of gilts would be a big step. It is considered
an option for further ahead in the economic recovery, probably once the BoE has
begun to raise interest rates.
RAISE INTEREST RATES
The BoE cut Bank Rate to an all-time low of 0.1% in March 2020 at the onset of
the coronavirus crisis.
As recently as early this year, before the recovery took off, its policymakers
were talking about the pros and cons of cutting the benchmark rate below zero
for the first time.
Now, with the economy growing quickly, investors are pricing in a rise in Bank
Rate to 0.25% by around August of next year.
BoE officials have stressed that when the time comes to raise borrowing costs
they expect to move gradually and Bank Rate is likely to remain a long way below
the 4-5% levels that were common before the global financial crisis of 2008-09.
The BoE is due to announce later this year how it might sequence rate hikes with
moves to reduce the size of its balance sheet. Previously, the BoE has said it
would wait until Bank Rate reaches 1.5% before shedding bonds.
($1 = 0.7217 pounds)
(Writing by William Schomberg; Editing by Catherine Evans)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |