King's statement on Bank of England Inflation Report

Wed Nov 12, 2008 11:13am GMT
 
Email | Print | | Single Page
[-] Text [+]

(Reuters) - Following is the text of a statement by Bank of England Governor Mervyn King on the bank's quarterly Inflation Report on Wednesday.

OPENING REMARKS BY THE GOVERNOR

"Since the August Report, the economic landscape has changed. As a result, the downward revision to the inflation outlook in today's Report is the largest in any one quarter since the Monetary Policy Committee was set up.

It is very likely that the UK economy entered a recession in the second half of this year. The preliminary estimate of the fall in output in the third quarter was 0.5%, a little more than the fall in the Committee's central projection in August. But since then three factors have transformed the outlook.

First, the short-run indicators for activity declined markedly. Surveys and reports from the Bank's Agents suggest that in September and October there was a sharp fall off in demand, both at home and abroad. Growth in the fourth quarter is likely to be materially weaker than the Committee expected in August. And, as we saw this morning, unemployment in the UK has risen at the fastest rate for seventeen years.

"Second, following the failure of Lehman Brothers, the most serious banking crisis since the outbreak of the First World War reduced the supply of credit to the real economy, and, in some cases, led to a cessation of lending altogether. Confidence has been badly affected. All this will restrain demand looking into next year.

Third, although CPI inflation did rise above 5% in September, its expected future path has fallen very significantly. Oil and other commodity prices have more than halved since their peak. In August, the projections were conditioned on a starting level for the oil price of around $124 a barrel, whereas today's Report assumes a level of $64 a barrel. In the space of a few months, we have gone from the highest rate of manufacturing input price inflation in nearly thirty years to the lowest monthly rate on record. And measures of short-run inflation expectations have fallen back sharply.

In response to those three factors, there have been significant policy actions. On 8th October, the UK authorities announced a plan to recapitalise the banks in order to repair banks' balance sheets and thereby restore confidence in the UK financial system. Other countries have taken similar measures. Central banks around the world cut interest rates in a coordinated move in early October. And the MPC cut Bank Rate again last week.

The Committee's latest projection for GDP growth is shown in Chart 1 (GREEN CHART) on page 7 of today's Report. The projection is based on the assumption that Bank Rate moves in line with market expectations prevailing prior to the Committee's November decision. Those were for Bank Rate to fall from an average of 4% in the fourth quarter of this year to a little below 3% over the next year or so, before rising back to around 4%. I will return to this assumption in a minute. The central projection is for output to decline over the next year, so that four-quarter growth falls further in the near term. That is markedly lower than the projection in August, reflecting the impact of the banking crisis on credit supply and the sharp falls in confidence in the real economy. Further ahead, domestic demand should gradually start to recover as the impact of lower interest rates, the effects of the bank recapitalisation programme on credit availability, and some recovery in real take-home pay take hold. And that, together with a pickup in exports following the fall in sterling's effective exchange rate, should support a recovery in output growth to slightly above its long-run average. The risks shown in Chart 1 are broadly balanced.  Continued...

 
A client counts his money at Al-Rafidain bank in Baghdad June 21, 2009. Picture taken June 21, 2009.
Banking on security

Bankers might be prime kidnap targets in Iraq, but the banking sector is experiencing a surge in deposits and loans, while banks are among the top picks on the country's nascent bourse.  Full Article 

Market Update

  • UKUK
  • USUS
  • Europe
  • Asia
  • UK Most Actives
Currency
US $ inGBP =0.6103
Euro inGBP =0.8538
¥en inGBP =0.0064

Most Popular on Reuters UK

  • Articles
  • Videos