The bank’s actions so far look like sensible support for the government in exceptional circumstances
is a modern term for one of the oldest taboos for central banks: printing money to fund government spending. On April 5th Andrew Bailey, governor of the Bank of England, insisted in thethat the bank would not directly fund the government since such action would damage its credibility. Four days later the bank announced that some monetary financing would in fact take place via an expansion of the so-called Ways and Means facility.
Mr Bailey had described the facility, which is as old as the bank itself, as a “historical feature”. It is a bit like an overdraft. The bank will create new money and transfer it to the government, which will later, it says, borrow in financial markets to pay the balance down. During the global financial crisis of 2007-09 some £20bn of borrowing was funded this way.
Monetary financing, with its echoes of Zimbabwe and Weimar Germany, raises fears that investors will lose confidence in a central bank seen to be under the thumb of a finance ministry—hence Mr Bailey’s earlier caution. But modest use of the Ways and Means facility is not likely to lead to inflation, let alone hyperinflation.
. Tax receipts are plummeting just as spending is rising to cushion the economic impact of covid-19. The Office for Budget Responsibility, a watchdog, reckons this year’s deficit could reach 14% of. Even with its new line of credit from the bank the government plans to issue £45bn of gilts in April alone, well above the previous monthly peak of £28bn in September 2009.
Mr Bailey’s volte-face is unlikely to do him much harm. During a crisis “being right is more important than being consistent,” argues a fund manager. Gilt investors are relaxed about the temporary use of the facility and confident about the bank’s independence; government bond yields barely budged on the news. Mr Bailey can afford to relax a little, too.
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