The Guardian Australia

Jacob Rees-Mogg accuses Bank of England of ‘miserable incompeten­ce’ over inflation

- Kiran Stacey Political correspond­ent

Jacob Rees-Mogg has accused the Bank of England of “miserable incompeten­ce” over its failure to reduce inflation more quickly and its bond-selling strategy, as rightwing Tories prepare to renew their attacks on the Bank’s independen­ce.

The former business secretary accused the Bank of damaging the economy with its interest rate decisions and costing the taxpayer tens of billions of pounds by selling off government debt too quickly in an attempt to reduce its balance sheet – a policy known as quantitati­ve tightening (QT).

His comments came as members of Conservati­ve Way Forward, a Thatcherit­e group of Tory MPs, prepared to launch a report that once more called into question the Bank’s independen­ce, echoing criticism levied at the bank by the former prime minister Liz Truss.

Rees-Mogg said: “Quantitati­ve tightening is not part of the Bank’s independen­t monetary strategy. It is a joint policy between it and the government funded by tax. This year it could cost £46bn because the Bank has failed again.

“Its miserable incompeten­ce allowed inflation to peak at almost six times its target rate and now it is demanding higher taxes because of its hopeless bond trading strategy. It makes Nick Leeson, who bankrupted [the London-based bank] Barings, look clever.”

The Bank of England has been contacted for comment.

Relations between the Bank and the right of the Tory party have been fractious since Liz Truss’s short tenure in Downing Street, during which she considered sacking its top bosses, she later admitted.

Many Conservati­ves have criticised the Bank for not raising interest rates more quickly, a decision they said had led to monetary policymake­rs having to keep them higher for longer than in other countries. The Bank decided last week to keep the base rate at 5.25%.

Truss’s allies have since called for decisions on interest rates to be handed back to ministers, more than 25 years after they were taken out of the reach of government by Gordon Brown.

On Tuesday members of Conservati­ve Way Forward will call for a review into the Bank’s independen­ce as part of a report that focuses on the losses made by the Bank’s quantitati­ve tightening policy.

Like other central banks, the Bank of England began buying up government debt in the wake of the 2008 crash in an attempt to stimulate the economy. It is now seeking to undo those purchases, in part to give it more room to repeat them in the event of another financial crisis.

Unlike other central banks, however, the Bank has decided not to let the bonds it holds expire naturally, but instead to sell them into the private market more quickly, with any losses incurred being footed by the taxpayer. Earlier this year, Harriett Baldwin, the chair of the cross-party Treasury select committee, called the policy a “leap in the dark for the British economy”.

Tuesday’s report will deepen the pressure on the Bank to change course. The report’s authors highlight a recent forecast by the Bank that it will make a cashflow loss in 2024 of £46bn, pointing out such an amount of money would cover the daily budgets of the five of the government’s biggest department­s combined.

Greg Smith, the chair of Conservati­ve Way Forward, said: “The Bank of England is pursuing a QT policy that is out of step with what the world’s major central banks are doing, and this is causing huge losses to the taxpayer.”

 ?? Photograph: Tolga Akmen/EPA ?? The Bank of England ‘allowed inflation to peak at almost six times its target rate’, said Jacob Rees-Mogg.
Photograph: Tolga Akmen/EPA The Bank of England ‘allowed inflation to peak at almost six times its target rate’, said Jacob Rees-Mogg.

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