by millionairemind » Wed Nov 12, 2008 10:14 pm
Bank of England Governor warns economy may shrink 2pc next year
Bank of England Governor Mervyn King has predicted that the economy may contract as much as 2pc next year and signalled the Bank is prepared to drive interest rates to zero to prevent the deepening recession turning into a slump.
By Angela Monaghan
Last Updated: 12:55PM GMT 12 Nov 2008
In its Quartely Inflation Report, the Bank projects the economy will shrink by 2pc in the second quarter of next year as the credit and house-price boom of the last decade unravels.
The sharp contraction in growth will push inflation below 1pc next year, the Bank said in its widely-watched report.
"The forecasts for the real economy have also been revised down sharply, with GDP expected to contract throughout next year," said Jonathan Loynes of Capital Economics. "1pc (or below) here we come!"
Widely criticised for keeping rates too high for too long, the Bank last week slashed rates an unprecedented 1.5 percentage points to 3pc as the news from all parts of the economy deteriorates.
Inflation is now widely believed to have peaked as crude oil rapidly reverses its rise to a record $147 a barrel and the price of many commodities used in food eases.
Governor Mervyn King's predictions come as the Government and the Conservatives trade salvos on how best to tackle the deepening recession. After pledging as much as £500bn of taxpayers' money to prevent a collapse of the banking system, Gordon Brown has indicated the Government is prepared to try to spend its way out of the slowdown.
The UK economy contracted 0.5pc in the third quarter and is expected to shrink further this quarter as falling house prices and battered banks pile the pressure on households' finances.
Sushil Wadhwani and Willem Buiter, two former MPC members, have both argued that rates need to be taken down to 2pc quickly.
The inflation report - which is published every quarter - comes as figures today showed that unemployment jumped at the fastest rate in sixteen years in October.
Virgin Media, Taylor Wimpey and GlaxoSmithKline have all announced plans to cut staff in the last 24 hours, showing that the impact of the crisis that began in financial markets is now being felt far beyond the banking world.
"We're in four four or five quarters of negative growth," said Amit Kara, an economist at UBS. "We won't get hiring again until 2010."
Sterling remained lower against the dollar after the report at $1.5375, while it was slightly weaker against the euro at 81.50p.
Granted independence in one of Gordon Brown's first acts as Chancellor, the Bank is charged with keeping inflation below a 2pc over a two-year horizon.
"If a speculator is correct half of the time, he is hitting a good average. Even being right 3 or 4 times out of 10 should yield a person a fortune if he has the sense to cut his losses quickly on the ventures where he has been wrong" - Bernard Baruch
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