The former BOE governor contends central banks have been the victims of groupthink, and it’s led to some major policy mistakes.
(Bloomberg) — Subscribe to Merryn Talks Money on Apple PodcastsSubscribe to Merryn Talks Money on Spotify
Former Governor of the Bank of England Mervyn King says the central bank hasn’t been covering itself in glory of late, and that’s partly thanks to it falling victim to groupthink. The economics profession is jammed with brilliant people, he argues on this week’s episode of Merryn Talks Money, but unfortunately, they’ve all been taught the same thing: money has absolutely nothing to do with inflation.Believing that was a “big mistake,” King says it’s brought the UK economy to where it is: inflation at multi-decade highs and the BOE having its credibility questioned.
According to King, it’s likely that—despite all money supply indicators signaling the consumer price index will soon be falling fast—the BOE will keep raising rates and the UK will end up in a recession. The central bank will have made the misstep “in both directions over a period of three to four years.” He points out that whether rates go up or down a little over the next year won’t change the fact that they are likely to remain far above the historical lows to which people are accustomed. And that suggests all asset prices are going to have to come down relative to income.As for Brexit, King says it was such a divisive issue in the UK that “roughly one half of people who talk about this want to believe that anything bad is the consequence of Brexit, and the other half want to believe that if only Brexit were implemented appropriately, our economy would be better than all other economies,” he says. “I find it very hard to come up with any evidence really for either side.”
More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com
©2023 Bloomberg L.P.