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Bank of England governor fears crisis is 'worst ever'

2011-10-07 12:12:26

Bank of England governor Mervyn King has said this financial crisis could be

the worst the UK has ever seen.

His comments came after the Bank authorised the injection of a further 75bn

into the economy through quantitative easing (QE).

"This is the most serious financial crisis we've seen at least since the 1930s,

if not ever," he said.

Despite criticising the use of QE in the past, Chancellor George Osborne said

it was now the right move to make.

The Bank has already pumped 200bn into the economy, under the previous Labour

government.

It has done this by buying assets such as government bonds, in an attempt to

boost lending by commercial banks.

Mr Osborne also said he endorsed Mr King's view on the severity of the crisis.

"I certainly think it's as serious as anything since the 1930s," he told the

BBC.

Slow money

Mr King told Sky News: "We're having to deal with very unusual circumstances

and to act calmly and do the right thing. The right thing at present is to

create some more money to inject into the economy."

Crisis jargon buster

Use the dropdown for easy-to-understand explanations of key financial terms:

Quantitative easing

Quantitative easing

Central banks increase the supply of money by "printing" more. In practice,

this may mean purchasing government bonds or other categories of assets, using

the new money. Rather than physically printing more notes, the new money is

typically issued in the form of a deposit at the central bank. The idea is to

add more money into the system, which depresses the value of the currency, and

to push up the value of the assets being bought and to lower longer-term

interest rates, which encourages more borrowing and investment. Some economists

fear that quantitative easing can lead to very high inflation in the long term.

Glossary in full

The Bank's Monetary Policy Committee has been split for months over whether the

UK needs a boost to the economy through QE, an increase in interest rates to

stave off inflation - which at 4.5% is well over double its target - or to

leave things as they are.

Only one member, Adam Posen, has consistently pushed for more QE.

Mr King said the economic landscape was unfamiliar - the world had changed in

the past three months and so had the policy response necessary.

He said the amount of money in the economy was not growing quickly enough, and

he could not rule out a further bout of QE.

On Wednesday, data showed the UK economy grew by 0.1% between April and June,

which was less than previously thought.

"The deterioration in the outlook has made it more likely that inflation will

undershoot the 2% target in the medium term," the Bank said in a statement

announcing its policy decision.

'All available tools'

Mr Osborne had said in 2009, when he had been in opposition, that "printing

money is the last resort of desperate governments when all other policies have

failed".

Start Quote

The message running through Mervyn King's answers was that the job of rescuing

the recovery couldn't be left to central banks alone - that's true of the UK,

and for the broader global economy

image of Stephanie Flanders Stephanie Flanders Economics editor, BBC News

Read Stephanie's blog in full

But speaking to BBC Radio 4's Today programme on Friday, the chancellor said:

"We inherited as a government a pretty desperate fiscal position and we had to

take action.

"I think the crucial difference this time is that you've got a credible

government plan to deal with our debt."

Mr Osborne added that the UK's authorities were using "all the tools available

to deal with the worsening global debt storm".

In his speech to the Conservative Party conference earlier in the week, Mr

Osborne said that the Treasury would look into "credit easing" - a way to

underwrite loans to small businesses who are struggling to get credit now.

He confirmed this in his letter to Mr King, authorising the QE expansion:

"Given evidence of continued impairment in the flow of credit to some parts of

the real economy, notably small and medium-sized businesses, the Treasury is

exploring further policy actions. Such interventions should complement the

MPC's asset purchases."