Edmund Conway of the Telegraph today.....
As Charlie Bean, deputy governor of the Bank, has said repeatedly on his tour of the UK to explain the unusual monetary medicine, it may take as many as nine months to show its full effects. But so far the results have hardly been encouraging. The fact is that the vast majority of this money is being funnelled into banks' reserves – the cash they keep with the Bank of England – and is not finding its way out again.
According to data from the British Bankers' Association, the level of reserves held by major banks rose to £110bn in June, compared with £27bn before quantitative easing began. Indeed, a full 3pc of total banks' assets are now sitting in reserves – a proportion not seen since comparable records began in 1987.
What is alarming is that something very similar happened in Japan, when it experimented with quantitative easing. The Bank of Japan poured cash into the system but it was merely soaked up by the zombified banks, where those who managed them were too scared of losses, under-capitalisation and the threat of collapse to do anything other than put it under the figurative mattress.
Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Quantitative easing - what next?
Labels:
credit crunch,
finance,
inflation,
insolvency,
UK,
UK house prices,
UK housing,
US economy
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