Toronto Star

Bank of England expected to unveil stimulus

After country’s Brexit vote, Central Bank to cut rates to boost flagging economy

- DANICA KIRKA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LONDON— With the British economy in its deepest trouble since the global financial crisis in the wake of the vote to leave the European Union, the Bank of England is expected to unveil Thursday stimulus measures including a rate cut and, possibly, the creation of billions in new money.

Early indicators since the June 23 vote suggest that the economy is contractin­g at its sharpest rate since 2009.

Manufactur­ing, services and consumer spending are falling, the pound is down 10 per cent and questions linger over what trade relations the country will have with the rest of the EU in coming years.

As a result, the Bank of England is expected to cut its key interest rate from a record-low 0.5 per cent on Thursday, diverging from policymake­rs at the U.S. Federal Reserve who in December raised their benchmark for the first time in seven years.

The bank may also expand its stimulus program, called quantitati­ve easing, under which it buys government bonds from banks with newly created money, effectivel­y pumping extra money into the economy. “The Bank of England should throw the kitchen sink at the prob- lem,” wrote Robert Wood, an economist at Bank of America/Merrill Lynch. “The worst thing that could happen now is the stimulus does not work, so better to do too much.” The Bank of America/Merrill Lynch analysts forecast a 0.25-percentage-point rate cut, an additional £50 billion ($87 billion Canadian) of bond-buying and other efforts to stimulate lending.

The expectatio­ns of such action grew after a gauge of business activ- ity published last week.

The survey of 1,200 company executives covers manufactur­ing and services and showed a broad-based decline in production, orders and hiring intentions.

Another study released last month raised concern that the impact of leaving the EU may be felt for 10 years or more — longer than previously expected.

Some 71 per cent of leading academic economists surveyed by the University of Chicago said inflationa­djusted incomes in the U.K. will likely be lower a decade from now than they are today because of the British EU exit, or Brexit.

“A post-Brexit agreement between the U.K. and the EU is likely to involve trade barriers,” said Oliver Hart, a British-born economist at Harvard University. “This will reduce gains from trade. The U.K. will suffer.”

One of the main concerns is that the immediate drop in confidence caused by the vote could become ingrained, with employers delaying expansion — and hiring — and consumers putting off purchases of big-ticket items such as cars and appliances.

Bank of England governor Mark Carney foreshadow­ed a response by the bank’s Monetary Policy Committee in a June 30 speech.

“In my view, and I am not prejudging the views of the other independen­t MPC members, the economic outlook has deteriorat­ed and some monetary policy easing will likely be required over the summer,” Carney said.

He noted that some of the risks to the economy predicted before the referendum are taking hold.

Even though the potential rate cut is small, it may be seen as another confidence-building move to ease worries in the markets and among the general public about credit drying up.

Some experts say there is only so much the central bank can do to help the economy — that even with lower interest rates, businesses and households will remain worried about the future so long as the Brexit talks with EU drag on.

With that uncertaint­y lingering, Britain is possibly heading toward recession, defined as two consecutiv­e quarters of economic contractio­n.

The National Institute of Economic and Social Research estimated there is a 50-50 chance of recession over the next 18 months. The influentia­l think-tank said growth would hit1.7 per cent overall this year with a decline of 0.2 per cent in the third quarter and risk of “further deteriorat­ion.”

A few economists think the central bank will wait for more data before acting, as the surveys that have been published so far are reacting to the first weeks of shock in the wake of the vote, when uncertaint­y was exacerbate­d by political chaos in the country’s main parties.

UniCredit economist Daniel Vernazza argues that is not a risk worth taking.

“Given the evidence of a significan­t shock to confidence, subdued current and expected inflation, and the lags with which monetary policy works, the risks of not easing policy greatly exceed the risks of stimulatin­g too much,” said Vernazza.

“Therefore, on Thursday we expect the Bank of England to act pre-emptively and announce a package of easing measures.”

 ?? DYLAN MARTINEZ/REUTERS ?? Mark Carney says the outlook for the British economy has deteriorat­ed.
DYLAN MARTINEZ/REUTERS Mark Carney says the outlook for the British economy has deteriorat­ed.

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