Follow this topicFollow this topic Knowledge » The economy

Bank of England: two new stimulus schemes launched

John Fitzsimons
by Lovemoney Staff John Fitzsimons on 15 June 2012  |  Comments 10 comments

The Bank of England has unveiled details of two new schemes aimed at helping banks to increase their lending.

Bank of England: two new stimulus schemes launched

The Bank of England has announced two new stimulus schemes designed to get banks lending and the economy moving.

Speaking at last night’s Mansion House dinner, the bank’s Governor, Sir Mervyn King, outlined plans to provide banks with cheap credit.

Loans to boost lending

In an admission that the extensive quantitative easing programmes have not been successful, the Bank of England will now offer cheap loans to banks with one proviso – they must be used to increase the bank’s lending.

The biggest criticism of the quantitative easing programme had been that banks had used the cash generated to improve their balance sheet, rather than lend.

King said: “The Bank and the Treasury are working together on a ‘funding for lending’ scheme that would provide funding to banks for an extended period of several years, at rates below current market rates and linked to the performance of banks in sustaining or expanding their lending to the UK non-financial sector.”

The scheme will allow banks to effectively ‘swap’ certain assets they hold which they may not be able to shift – a mortgage book, for example – for money from the Bank of England. It’s understood this will lead to up to £80 billion in new loans.

Boosting liquidity

A second scheme will see the launch of the snappily-named Extended Collateral Term Repo Facility, which will be aimed at improving banks’ liquidity.

Banks will be offered six-month loans of at least £5 billion in monthly auctions.

More on the economy

European Commission: Taxpayers to avoid bailing out banks in future

Savers get priority in Government plans to reform banks

Should we scrap the minimum wage?

Who owns your bank or building society?

Enjoyed this? Show it some love

Twitter
General

Comments (10)

  • Mike10613
    Love rating 599
    Mike10613 said

    It seems the government has a great idea to improve the economy with this new money going into new house building. Who will buy them if affordable mortgages aren't available? Let everyone have confidence and take out a mortgage and a new credit cards; personal debts will work won't it. We need more social housing to be built for rent, but it won't happen.

    Report on 21 June 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • worlduser
    Love rating 4
    worlduser said

    New stimulus schemes designed to get banks lending and the economy moving!

    Well perhaps if the BoE lends directly to industry instead of giving yet more of taxpayers money to the banks to lock away, we may start the economy moving. This would bring confidence not only to industry but also start growth in the markets.

    So, such a simplistic idea! Would it work? Banks wouldn't like it, they would start whinging throwing all sorts of threats (along with their rattles) out of their fortified doors!

    Can BoE bypass the banks legally? (Anyone)!????

    Report on 16 August 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves

Post a comment

Sign in or register to post a reply.

Our top deals

Credit card
company
Balance transfers rate and period Representative
APR
Apply
now

Barclaycard 26Mth Platinum Visa

0% for 26 months (3.5% fee) Representative 18.9% APR (variable) Apply
Representative example: assumed borrowing of £1,200, representative 18.9% APR (variable). Purchase rate 18.9% PA (variable)

Barclaycard 25Mth Platinum Visa

0% for 25 months (2.4% fee) Representative 18.9% APR (variable) Apply
Representative example: assumed borrowing of £1,200, representative 18.9% APR (variable). Purchase rate 18.9% PA (variable). BT fee is reduced from 3.5% to 2.4% (T&Cs apply)

Halifax BT 25 Month MasterCard

0% for 25 months (2.5% fee) Representative 18.9% APR (variable) Apply
Representative example: assumed borrowing of £1,200, representative 18.9% APR (variable). Purchase rate 19.0% PA (variable).
W3C  Thank you for using CGWEBLIV1