Western Mail

Another £100bn in quantitati­ve easing set as economy reeling

- SION BARRY Business editor sion.barry@walesonlin­e.co.uk

THE Bank of England is set to fire up the money-printing presses once more on Thursday as the coronaviru­s crisis continues to hammer Britain’s economy.

Economists expect the Bank to announce at least another £100bn of quantitati­ve easing (QE) after official figures on Friday laid bare the economic toll taken by lockdown, with gross domestic product (GDP) plunging a record 20.4% in April.

But policy-makers are seen holding interest rates at the all-time low of 0.1%, despite mounting speculatio­n that the Bank may seek to take UK rates below zero for the first time ever to pull the economy out of its nosedive.

The Bank has already warned Britain is facing the worst recession for 300 years and governor Andrew Bailey has revealed policy-makers are actively considerin­g further economy-boosting tools, including negative interest rates.

But while he has said it would be “foolish” to rule out any action, the Bank has repeatedly shied away from the idea of cutting official interest rates to below zero for the first time in its 326-year history.

Mr Bailey has said more economic support is likely to come initially in the form of QE in which the Bank buys government bonds from investors, pumping money into the economy in the process.

The Bank has already unleashed £200bn of QE, in March, as the Covid-19 crisis took hold, taking its total to £645bn.

Two of the nine members of the Bank’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) voted for another £100 billion of QE in May and experts believe the call will be backed unanimousl­y at this month’s meeting.

Samuel Tombs, at Pantheon Macroecono­mics, said more QE was “inevitable” on Thursday.

He said: “A key question, however, is whether the MPC will keep repeatedly authorisin­g fairly small sums of extra QE, or whether it will announce a lengthy programme stretching beyond the third quarter, like the European Central Bank.

“In other words, will it opt for a machine gun or a bazooka?”

He believes the Bank will opt for another £100bn of QE in June, followed by £50 billion in September and another £50bn in December.

But experts at Rabobank predict another £100bn could follow as soon as August, though they said it was possible the Bank could go “all in” with a full £200bn on Thursday.

On the prospect of sub-zero rates, they added: “There has been plenty of market chatter and official talk about negative interest rates.

“This option is ‘under review’, but we don’t think that the MPC is ready to explore this avenue.”

Britain’s economy will be the hardest hit among all the developing countries this year, according to this month’s grim report from the Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t (OECD).

It said UK GDP was likely to slump by 11.5% in 2020 – but could contract by 14% if there is a second wave of Covid-19 later this year.

This was less gloomy than the Bank’s own analysis in May, when it said coronaviru­s could see the economy plunge by 14% this year even before factoring in a second peak of the pandemic.

Recent closely watched sector surveys have given a glimmer of hope, with the pace of contractio­n slowing as lockdown restrictio­ns are gradually eased.

But the purchasing managers’ index reports still showed the economy firmly in contractio­n, with worries the recovery will be far slower than first hoped.

 ??  ?? > Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey
> Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey

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