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Printing more money won't help

Ed Bowsher
by Lovemoney Staff Ed Bowsher on 06 October 2011  |  Comments 19 comments

The Bank of England is going to create a further £75 billion in fresh money to try and boost our sluggish economy.

Printing more money won't help

The boffins at the Bank of England are clearly very worried about the outlook for the UK economy. 

In fact, they’re so worried they’ve decided to create £75 billion in fresh money to try and boost the economy. This is known as ‘Quantitative Easing’ (QE).  This move is on top of the £200 billion the Bank had already created – or ‘printed’ – in 2009. 

I share the Bank’s concern about the economic outlook, but sadly, I’m not convinced that this latest round of money creation is going to help. 

The Bank of England first resorted to QE in spring 2009, and I think the move probably did help at that point. You could almost feel a boost to business confidence as soon as the policy was announced. Share prices rose and it became easier for large companies to raise cash. 

However, after that initial boost to confidence, QE’s impact seems to have lessened. A lot of the extra money has stayed in the vaults of the big banks and not spread out into the wider economy. So QE has helped to strengthen bank balance sheets, but it hasn’t prompted banks to lend more aggressively. 

Given that background, is there anything else that can be done? 

Well, I must stress there is no easy solution to our problems. Recovering from a major financial crash was always going to take a long time. 

That said, I do think that policymakers could do one thing that would improve the situation. 

The government needs to boost demand in the economy. If consumers spent a little more, some businesses would expand and recruit more staff. Those new staff would then spend more and some further businesses would expand. You’d then get a nice virtual circle of economic expansion – often known as the ‘multiplier.’ 

Critics of this approach normally say that it’s inflationary, but when you look at how sluggish the economy currently is, I doubt that a modest rise in spending is going to push up prices. 

The government could either boost the economy by cutting taxes or increasing spending. One measure that would make a quick impact would be a temporary rise in the state pension. I like this measure because I suspect that most pensioners would quickly spend their extra cash and not stick it in a savings account. So a pension increase would make the biggest impact on the economy. 

You could argue that higher government spending/tax cuts aren’t appropriate when the government’s deficit is already so high. That’s an understandable argument, but, in reality, the best way to cut the deficit is to boost economic growth. If the economy grows at a decent rate, the government will automatically receive more tax revenue and the deficit will start to fall. 

Don’t get me wrong, I’m not saying that a modest fiscal stimulus would solve all our problems, but I do think it would make a difference. It's just a shame that George Osborne didn't take this approach when he first became Chancellor in summer 2010.

Anyway, it's all rather depressing. Whatever they do, there's no way that policymakers can cure the patient's disease in the short term. At best, they can reduce the fever, and if they make the wrong moves, the fever will only get worse.

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Comments (19)

  • oldhenry
    Love rating 175
    oldhenry said

    There are no fixes for the economy because the whole model is bust. Successive UK governments thought they could remove manufacturing and replace it with cheap Far Eastern imports. The economy would survive of the 'Financial Markets'. So we have an economy based of leding each other money on fictious house prices ans selling each other endliss mobile phone deals.

    Quite easy to spot the flaw really isn't it? There is no wealth creation in the country , how the chancellor cannot see that is beyond me, but he cannot and thinks growth is buying yet mmore mobile phones and other far eastern goods. Great for the Chinese capitalists and a few shilling owners who get paid for moving the stuff about. Useless for us in the UK.

    My advice is to stop buying anything you do not need to survive. Just show teh government what teh public can do to force them to stimulate the economy. We did it with Brown and cars , ne brought in teh scrapage schemt o make us buy again. It does work but we need to do it cordinatedly.

    Report on 12 October 2011  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • bungalow bob
    Love rating 0
    bungalow bob said

    Some good points from 'old Henry'.Successive goverments have let manufacturing go down the pan and relied on financial services to balance the books. We can now see what a busted flush this has become!

    The only answer, as in the past, is to invest again in manufacturing to increase jobs and exports. If the Germans and Japanese can produce quality goods at a competitive price that sell in overseas markets,why can't British companies?

    One unfortunate reason is that they tend to concentrate on quantity not quality!

    Report on 02 December 2011  |  Love thisLove  0 loves

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