New | Bank of England readies new blast of stimulus for post-Brexit Britain
Hailed by investors as a weapon to fight off recession but slammed by critics for fuelling inequality, quantitative easing looks set for a comeback in Britain as the Bank of England tries to shield the economy from the fallout of Brexit.
The central bank is poised to cut interest rates as soon as Thursday and will probably follow up soon afterwards by reviving the massive bond-buying programme that it credits with helping to shore up the economy after the global financial crisis.
Economists are now asking how the BoE might tailor QE to meet the problems Britain faces in the aftermath of last month’s vote to leave the European Union - a result that threw the country into political chaos and has sparked fears of recession.
Most economists polled by Reuters expect the BoE will cut rates to a new record low of 0.25 per cent on Thursday, followed by an extension of the QE programme which it adopted as the financial crisis raged in early 2009, probably in August.
Following the lead of the central banks in Japan and the United States, the BoE created 375 billion pounds (US$496 billion) between 2009 and 2012 to buy government bonds to get money flowing through the economy.