Originally posted by AtW
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Reply to: Merv
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Previously on "Merv"
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Originally posted by Freamon View Postas opposed to the overnight interbank rate
Since that does not depend on BoE, they might as well jack up their rates without any problems.
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Originally posted by AtW View PostThey vote in MPC meeting and set BoE rates. Previously that was enough on its own, now they have to resort to money printing to actually buy gilts directly from Govt (and thus control interest rates paid by UK Govt on gilts and this has got effect on many other things linked to it), or indirectly via banks who'd buy gilts and then sell them back (at an immediate profit) to BoE.
There are other way such as using massive shareholding at banks that were nationalised and using other unwritten leverages on banks that did not (Barclays).
In a country that lives by unwritten constitution such things are to be expected.
In a way BoE put rates so far down that they no longer work as well as before - banks still need to make billions of profits to pay for all those bonuses, but you can bet that as soon as BoE raises rates (next century probably) then everyone will jack up their rates too, apart from savings accounts maybe.
HTH
There's no helping some people.
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Originally posted by Freamon View PostBut none of this explains how the BoE (or government, if you prefer) controls rates.
There are other way such as using massive shareholding at banks that were nationalised and using other unwritten leverages on banks that did not (Barclays).
In a country that lives by unwritten constitution such things are to be expected.
In a way BoE put rates so far down that they no longer work as well as before - banks still need to make billions of profits to pay for all those bonuses, but you can bet that as soon as BoE raises rates (next century probably) then everyone will jack up their rates too, apart from savings accounts maybe.
HTH
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Originally posted by AtW View PostA better question would be how Govt who has made BoE "independent" manages to keep rates low to suit their own needs.
The answer to this is hidden in how Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) members who are technically setting the rates are appointed in the first place, don't take my words for it:
"The Bank's Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) is made up of nine members – the Governor, the two Deputy Governors, the Bank's Chief Economist, the Executive Director for Markets and four external members appointed directly by the Chancellor. The appointment of external members is designed to ensure that the MPC benefits from thinking and expertise in addition to that gained inside the Bank of England."
Source: Bank of England | Monetary Policy | Monetary Policy Committee (MPC)
I've seen more independent Soviet Parliament elected directly by the people
Hint: Open market operations - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Originally posted by Freamon View PostPlease explain the mechanism by which the BoE controls interest rates.
The answer to this is hidden in how Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) members who are technically setting the rates are appointed in the first place, don't take my words for it:
"The Bank's Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) is made up of nine members – the Governor, the two Deputy Governors, the Bank's Chief Economist, the Executive Director for Markets and four external members appointed directly by the Chancellor. The appointment of external members is designed to ensure that the MPC benefits from thinking and expertise in addition to that gained inside the Bank of England."
Source: Bank of England | Monetary Policy | Monetary Policy Committee (MPC)
I've seen more independent Soviet Parliament elected directly by the people
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Originally posted by AtW View PostNo - rates are low because BoE keeps them low _AND_ prepared to print money to back it up.
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Another example of Merv acting on behalf of his Govt puppetmasters (that's my opinion anyway):
Bank of England governor Mervyn King 'out of touch' , says City - Telegraph
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Originally posted by AtW View PostBoE's job is to ensure inflation is in check - they've got very specific target in this respect. The tools that are available to them is interest rates: even if you accept that prior to crisis they could not technically raise rates because Govt excluded cost of rent/mortgages from inflation figures, but later when even official inflation gone through the roof they MUST have done their job: raise rates instead of dropping them.
Now that would certainly be against Govts wishes - both old Labour and new Conservative. I don't think Merv is incompetent - he is just obeying orders (who cares if they are unwritten - this country lives by unwritten constitution) and his actions speak louder than his words.
0.5% base rates are a symptom of a sick economy, and this is entirely against the govt's wishes. They'd much rather have rates at 5% and have a good economic recovery - govts are much more popular in those circumstances.
Meanwhile, the BoE continues a massive power-grab in the form of QE, and now owns 25% of the uk govt debt market. Think for a second about the power this gives them over the idiots in Westminster.
And behind the scenes, they continue to lobby on behalf of the banks and the corporation of London.
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Originally posted by Freamon View PostAny evidence to support this at all? Thought not.
Now that would certainly be against Govts wishes - both old Labour and new Conservative. I don't think Merv is incompetent - he is just obeying orders (who cares if they are unwritten - this country lives by unwritten constitution) and his actions speak louder than his words.
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Originally posted by AtW View PostB0llox. Just most of other stuff on economics that you post.
BoE has got exclusive rights to print money, so what? That's common in most countries.
What's more important is who calls the shots, ie who really makes decision whether to change rates, or to print money - until some time recently there was an illusion that BoE was doing it because it was supposedly "independent", I always thought it was a steaming pile of bulltulip - it is obvious now even to andyW that BoE is anything but independent: they are a puppet of the Govt like they used to be before their supposed "independence".
Why? Because nobody gives independence just like this - it has to be earned in blood just like Americans did, only after that freedom is truly valued.
HTH
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