Bank of England’s ‘nerves’ to be tested as inflation jumps most on record in December

The Bank of England and the government have created this mess:

Quantitative easing is creating money out of thin air or “printing money.”

Quantitative easing increases the money supply, creates inflation and devalues the currency.

Inflation is a hidden tax. Quantitative easing is nothing more than stealing from the people.

“By a continuing process of inflation, governments can confiscate, secretly and unobserved, an important part of the wealth of their citizens. There is no subtler, no surer means of overturning the existing basis of society than to debauch the currency. The process engages all the hidden forces of economic law on the side of destruction, and does it in a manner which not one man in a million is able to diagnose.“
– John Maynard Keynes

“In the absence of the gold standard, there is no way to protect savings from confiscation through inflation. … This is the shabby secret of the welfare statists’ tirades against gold. Deficit spending is simply a scheme for the confiscation of wealth. Gold stands in the way of this insidious process. It stands as a protector of property rights. If one grasps this, one has no difficulty in understanding the statists’ antagonism toward the gold standard.”
– Alan Greenspan

See also:

Bank of England extends quantitative easing to £200 billion (Guardian)

Bank of England calls unprecedented emergency meeting of economists (Telegraph)

Pound Falls to Five Month Low as Bank of England Says Declines ‘Helpful’ (Bloomberg)

Bank of England: Recession will be the worst in modern history (Telegraph)

Bank of England to print extra 50 billion pounds (Reuters)

Beware Bank of England’s monetary con trick (Financial Times):

Economists have another term to describe the monetization of government debt (=Quantitative easing). The history of “seigniorage” goes back to the debasement of the coinage under the Roman emperors. Seigniorage is really a tax on holders of money and government debt which is paid via inflation. When carried to excess, it leads to hyperinflation.

The dangers of printing money: four lessons from history (Times Business)

Bank of England wants to print more money (Telegraph)

Bank of England sees slowdown deepening, prepares to deploy quantative easing (Financial Times):

Quantitative easing is aimed at increasing the money supply, getting banks to lend more, lowering interest rates and raising the level of inflation. (…and destroying the pound.)

And the UK has Gordon Brown, the savior, also known as debt creator, who will make sure that the UK will default on its debt and/or has to go through a currency crisis:

“A weak currency arises from a weak economy, which in turn is the result of a weak government.” – Gordon Brown

“There are two ways to conquer and enslave a nation. One is by the sword. The other is by debt.” – John Adams

Britain Faces New Souvereign Debt Crisis As PIMCO Pulls Out

Fitch warns: Britain and France risk losing their AAA rating

Moody’s warns of ’social unrest’ as sovereign debt spirals … because of bankster bailouts

UK taxpayers face £2 trillion unfunded pensions liability, more than £80,000 for every household

Moody’s: Top US And UK Debt Ratings May ‘Test The Aaa Boundaries’

Treasury Pre-Budget Report Warning: UK ‘Faces Decades of Debt’

Morgan Stanley: Britain risks sovereign debt crisis in 2010

OECD warning: Britain risks ‘debt spiral’

Prepare for the worst, because it’s coming!

Remember? Jim Rogers: ‘Sell any sterling you might have; It’s finished’

Update:

For sheer gall, Brown posing as saviour of the middle classes takes the mouldy biscuit (Daily Mail):

There’s been nothing like it since the wolf dressed up as grandma in order to turn Little Red Riding Hood into pot-roast.

Gordon Brown now claims to be a champion of the middle classes. Apparently, only he can be trusted to look after their interests.

And there were millions of us thinking that he was, in fact, the unreconstructed arch-enemy of the middle classes and of everything they hold dear.

This is what the UK government and the BoE are doing:

“When a country embarks on deficit financing and inflationism you wipe out the middle class and wealth is transferred from the middle class and the poor to the rich.”
– Ron Paul

“Deficits mean future tax increases, pure and simple. Deficit spending should be viewed as a tax on future generations, and politicians who create deficits should be exposed as tax hikers.”
– Ron Paul


UK inflation jumped the most on record in December, fuelling fears that interest rates will have to rise sooner rather than later to keep prices in check.

quantitative-easing
Steve Bell, The Guardian

The sharp rise in the annual rate of consumer price inflation from 1.9pc to 2.9pc was driven by exceptional events in December 2008, as the VAT cut and high street discounting at that point were not repeated last month.

An increase in the price of petrol and new cars also drove the Consumer Prices Index (CPI) up last month, the Office for National Statistics said. Economists had expected a smaller rise in CPI to 2.6pc.

Howard Archer, chief UK economist at IHS Global Insight described the data as “a very nasty shock”.

It was the first time since May that inflation has risen above the Bank of England’s 2pc target, and economists predict inflation will rise above 3pc this month, reflecting the reversal of the VAT cut on January 1.

At that point Mervyn King, the Bank’s Governor, would be required to write a letter to the Chancellor, explaining why inflation was more than a percentage point above the target.

It comes at a difficult time for Britain’s consumers, who face the prospect of rising taxes, rising interest rates, and spending cuts as a fragile economic gets underway following the worst post-war recession.

The retail prices index (RPI) – which includes housing costs – rose even more sharply, to 2.4pc from 0.3pc in November.

Inflation in Britain has remained consistently higher than other countries during the recession, which economists partly attribute to the pound’s weakness, which has driven up the cost of foreign goods.

The staggering one percentage point jump in CPI in December was the biggest since monthly records began in 1997, and presents the Bank’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) with a dilemma, as it weighs up the need to maintain support for the economy with the threat of inflation.

“This morning’s release of December’s UK inflation numbers will have sent the Bank of England’s MPC and Governor Mervyn King, into something of an unseemly tailspin,” said Nick Beecroft, senior FX consultant at Saxo Bank.

A temporary spike in inflation has been expected, partly because of the VAT rate change, and the MPC has maintained that it would look beyond it to the prospects for medium-term inflation. In its November Inflation Report the Bank expected CPI to fall below the target later this year, as the effects of the VAT change are stripped out and wage inflation remains subdued.

However, economists pointed to the unexpectedly sharp rise inflation rise in December. “Today’s data will raise fears that the spare capacity in the economy will not tame inflation,” said Colin Ellis, European economist at Daiwa Capital Markets Europe.

Jonathan Loynes, chief European economist at Capital Economics, said the increase should not panic the MPC.

“We still think that the impact of the recession and the vast amount of spare capacity created will eventually bear down strongly on underlying price pressures – the lags are often very long. As such, we expect the MPC to look through the rise in inflation and leave policy unchanged,” he said.

He conceded however that “inflation nerves will be sorely tested in the next few months.”

Interest rates have been on hold at the historic low of 0.5pc since March, at which point the MPC also began its unprecedented £200bn programme of quantitative easing (QE) – pumping new money into the economy through the purchase of Government bonds and other assets.

The British Chambers of Commerce (BCC) argued that the higher-than-expected inflation rate did not justify a tightening of monetary policy, which could involve a rise in interest rates, a re-sale of some of the assets purchased by the Bank through QE, or a combination of both.

“The UK economy is still weak, businesses continue to face serious problems, and there is ample spare capacity out there. With this in mind, it would be a major error to start tightening policy too soon. It is important to focus on steps aimed at allowing businesses to drive the economic recovery,” said David Kern, chief economist at the BCC.

By Angela Monaghan
Published: 11:34AM GMT 19 Jan 2010

Source: The Telegraph

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