The Monetary Policy Committee of the National Bank of Serbia (NBS) decided at today to keep the key interest rate unchanged at 9.5 percent. The next session of the Monetary Policy Committee will be held on February 19, the NBS stated.
Posts Tagged ‘monetary policy committee’
British Economists Send Apology To Queen
LONDON — Sorry Ma’am – we just didn’t see it coming.
A British newspaper reported Sunday that a group of eminent economists have apologized to Queen Elizabeth II for failing to predict the financial crisis.
The Observer ne…
This is how we let it happen, Ma’am …
A group of eminent economists has written to the Queen explaining why no one foresaw the timing, extent and severity of the recession.
The three-page missive, which blames “a failure of the collective imagination of many bright people”, was sent after the Queen asked, during a visit to the London School of Economics, why no one had predicted the credit crunch.
Signed by LSE professor Tim Besley, a member of the Bank of England monetary policy committee, and the eminent historian of government Peter Hennessy, the letter, a copy of which has been obtained by the Observer, tells of the “psychology of denial” that gripped the financial and political world in the run-up to the crisis.
The content was discussed at a seminar at the British Academy in June that was attended by economic heavyweights including Treasury permanent secretary Nick MacPherson, Goldman Sachs chief economist Jim O’Neill and Observer economics columnist William Keegan. The letter explains that as low interest rates made borrowing cheap, the “feelgood factor” masked how out-of-kilter the world economy had become beneath the surface, with some countries, such as the United States, running up enormous debts by borrowing from others, including China and the oil-rich Middle Eastern states, that were sitting on vast piles of cash.
Despite these yawning imbalances, they say, “financial wizards” managed to convince themselves and the world’s politicians that they had found clever ways to spread risk throughout financial markets – whereas “it is difficult to recall a greater example of wishful thinking combined with hubris”.
“Everyone seemed to be doing their own job properly on its own merit. And according to standard measures of success, they were often doing it well,” they say. “The failure was to see how collectively this added up to a series of interconnected imbalances over which no single authority had jurisdiction.”
That meant when the reckoning came it was extreme, starting in summer 2007 and culminating in the near-collapse of the entire world financial system after the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers last autumn.
“In summary, Your Majesty,” they conclude, “the failure to foresee the timing, extent and severity of the crisis and to head it off, while it had many causes, was principally a failure of the collective imagination of many bright people, both in this country and internationally, to understand the risks to the system as a whole.”
Besley stressed that the experts had not been in “finger-wagging mode” and had agreed that the causes of the credit crunch were extremely complex. “There was a very complicated, interconnected set of issues, rather than one particular person or one particular institution.”
Other experts at the seminar last month included Paul Tucker, deputy governor of the Bank of England, Vernon Bogdanor, the constitutional expert from Oxford University, and HSBC’s chief economist, Stephen King.
A spokesman for Buckingham Palace said the Queen has displayed a particular interest in the causes of the recession, summoning Bank of England governor Mervyn King to a private audience earlier this year to explain what he was doing to tackle it.
Official figures published on Friday revealed that Britain’s economy has now been contracting for 15 months, and the recession is deeper than any since the 1930s, outside of wartime.
Robin Jackson, chief executive and secretary of the British Academy, said: “The global recession is a huge development, and it is reasonable to ask to what extent it could have been foreseen. What’s more, we can’t say ‘never again’ if we don’t fully understand what occurred. The academy forum was an opportunity to get an exceptional range of experts, participants and commentators in one room, sifting fact from fiction and shedding light on what had gone on. We hope Her Majesty – and indeed others – will find our letter informative.”
The academy plans to hold a second seminar later in the year to ask how best to prevent another such crisis occurring. Besley denied that economics as a profession had been discredited by the scale of the crisis, but admitted that unconventional ideas – about how herd psychology and bouts of irrationality can grip financial markets, for example – had sometimes received “less play” during the boom years.
He said the academy hopes to provide a forum for airing economic differences: “What we need is a forum where people can come together on a very open basis, to provide challenges and have a debate.”
Professor Luis Garicano, to whom the Queen directed her question when she visited the LSE in November last year, said: “She seemed very interested, and she asked me: ‘How come nobody could foresee it?’ I think the main answer is that people were doing what they were paid to do, and behaved according to their incentives, but in many cases they were being paid to do the wrong things from society’s perspective.”
Guardian Daily: Revolution in green
Ed Miliband, the energy secretary, has set out the government’s plans to move Britain towards a low-carbon economy and meet the UK’s ambitious climate change targets. The environment editor, John Vidal, says it is a historic shift away from fossil fuels, but may not be enough to avert the ravages of global warming.
The jobless total is at its highest since 1995, according to the latest official figures. David Blanchflower, until May a member of the Bank of England’s monetary policy committee, which sets interest rates, says the government must act to reduce unemployment and ignore calls to cut spending.
Robert Tait looks at evidence that the number of protesters killed in demonstrations over disputed election results in Iran may be much higher than authorities say.
France has passed a new law liberalising Sunday trading. Angelique Chrisafis reports from Paris on what it means for French shoppers, and for their country’s economy.
Lars Von Trier’s new film Antichrist, with its scenes of genital mutilation, has been vilified by critics as one of the sickest movies ever to get a general release. The Guardian’s Xan Brooks begs to differ.
Bank airs double-dip recession fears
• Deputy governor Charles Bean says base rate must not rise too soon
• US treasury secretary Tim Geithner warns of challenges ahead on road to recovery
The deputy governor of the Bank of England pledged tonight to remove Britain’s emergency economic policy boost slowly after a warning from the US treasury secretary, Tim Geithner, that the global economy was still at risk of a double-dip downturn.
Charles Bean, one of two deputies at Threadneedle Street, said a time would come when the Bank’s monetary policy committee would need to push up interest rates from 0.5% and reverse the programme of quantitative easing, which boosts the cash available for lenders.
“But we don’t want to do it too early and nip the recovery in the bud,” Bean said, speaking in Yorkshire as part of a nationwide tour to explain the Bank’s approach to monetary policy.
The deputy governor expressed optimism that the economy would be on the mend by early next year – sentiments echoed by the chancellor, Alistair Darling, and Geithner, after a meeting in London today today to discuss the next steps in fighting the two-year global crisis.
Geithner expressed confidence that President Obama’s $800bn (£500bn) stimulus package would boost recovery prospects in the second half of this year.
“We have a very powerful set of policies in place, coming on stream,” he said. “I think there is a very good chance we will see the US economy and the world economy get back to recovery, get growing again, over the next few quarters.”
Darling said: “In this country we are coming through the severest downturn in 60 years. The measures we have taken are having an effect. I am confident growth will return at the turn of the year.”
Geithner said measures adopted so far had helped provide a base for recovery: “Policy has been effective in arresting and mitigating the force of the storm.”
The US treasury secretary was speaking after meetings with Gordon Brown, Darling, Mervyn King, the governor of the Bank of England, and Lord Turner, the chairman of the Financial Services Authority, to discuss the agenda for the G20 summit in Pittsburgh in September.
Asked whether there was a possibility of a double-dip recession, Geithner added: “In my view there are still significant risks and challenges ahead.”
He said that reform of the financial sector had to ensure that institutions took a more conservative approach to risk-taking; that the regulatory framework was broadened to include sectors currently unregulated; and that consumers and investors were protected against “manipulation and fraud”.
Despite what Geithner called a “remarkably strong consensus” on elements of a reform package, the Pittsburgh summit is likely to outline broad principles rather than introduce specific new measures to tighten up regulation and supervision.
A report published by the British Retail Consortium (BRC), showing that spending in shops rose 1.4% on a like-for-like basis in the year to June, will come as welcome news to the chancellor.
“June’s sunshine gave overall sales a much-needed boost,” said Stephen Robertson, director general of the BRC. “The heatwave helped food retailers and got customers buying outdoor goods, such as garden furniture, pools and picnic ware.
“Clothing clearance sales coincided nicely with the upsurge in demand for summer wear. But the sun knocked sales of furniture and homewares, as people focused on the outdoors. Given the uncertainty about jobs, customers are still nervous about spending on non-essentials.”



