Britain's richest 5% gained most from quantitative easing – Bank of England
Bank
report to MPs reveals wealthiest boosted by QE and low base rate, but
insists policy spared UK from even deeper slump
23
August, 2012
The
richest 10% of households in Britain have seen the value of their
assets increase by up to £322,000 as a result of the Bank of
England's attempts to use electronic money creation to lift the
economy out of its deepest post-war slump.
Threadneedle
Street said that wealthy families had been the biggest beneficiaries
of its £375bn quantitative-easing (QE) programme, under which it has
been buying government gilts for cash since early 2009.
The
Bank of England calculated that the value of shares and bonds had
risen by 26% – or £600bn – as a result of the policy, equivalent
to £10,000 for each household in the UK. It added, however, that 40%
of the gains went to the richest 5% of households.
Although
the Bank said it could not come up with precise figures for the gains
from QE, estimates can be produced using wealth distribution data
from the Office for National Statistics. These show the average boost
to the holdings of financial assets and pensions of the richest 10%
of households would have been either £128,000 per household or
£322,000 depending on the methodology used.
However,
Threadneedle Street said that QE had helped all sections of the
population by sparing the country from a deeper slump. The rise in
asset prices after QE was announced in early 2009 followed sharp
falls in the two previous years.
"Without
the Bank's asset purchases, most people in the UK would have been
worse off," it said in a paper prepared in response to queries
from the Commons Treasury committee.
The
Bank's strategy has been criticised by groups representing savers and
pensioners because of its impact on interest rates, annuity rates and
gilt yields, which have all fallen since QE began, but Threadneedle
Street was unrepentant.
"Economic
growth would have been lower. Unemployment would have been higher.
Many more firms would have gone out of business. This would have had
a significant detrimental impact on savers and pensioners along with
every other group in our society. All assessments of asset purchases
must be seen in that light."
The
Bank paper admitted that the benefits of ultra-low borrowing costs
and asset purchases had not been shared equally.
"Some
individuals are likely to have been adversely affected by the direct
effects of QE. Many households have received lower interest income on
their deposits.
"But
changes in bank rate – not asset purchases – have been the
dominant influence on the interest households receive on bank
deposits and pay on bank loans.
"By
pushing up a range of asset prices [such as equities and bonds],
asset purchases have boosted the value of households' financial
wealth held outside pension funds, although holdings are heavily
skewed with the top 5% of households holding 40% of these assets."
After
announcing an initial £200bn tranche of asset purchases when the
economy was deep in recession in early 2009, the Bank has since
expanded QE on a further three occasions and by later this year it
will have bought £375bn of gilts – one third of all UK government
bonds.
"The
past few years have been extremely difficult for many households,
with weak growth and above-target inflation being the painful but
unavoidable consequences of the severe financial crisis and the
associated deep recession, as well as a sharp rise in oil and other
commodity prices. In response to these difficult circumstances,
monetary policy has been exceptionally expansionary for an unusually
long period of time.
"That
has supported nominal spending and incomes in the economy as a whole,
mitigating the adverse effects of the financial crisis and subsequent
recession. Without the loosening in monetary policy, it is likely
that the economic downturn would have been far more severe, to the
detriment of almost everyone in the economy, including savers and
pensioners."
The
Bank said the cut in bank rate to 0.5% – the lowest on record –
had been the dominant influence on the interest households receive on
bank deposits and pay on bank loans. It added that the pension income
of those already receiving a pension before asset purchases began had
not been affected by QE, and that the retirement incomes of people
coming up to retirement in a defined benefit pension scheme were also
unaffected.
However,
the Bank conceded that for a defined benefit pension scheme in
substantial deficit, asset prices were likely to have made the
shortfall bigger. "That is because although QE raised the value
of the assets and liabilities by a similar proportion, that
nonetheless implies a widening in the gap between the two," it
said.
Ros
Altmann, director general of Saga, said: "It is asserted, but
not proven, that pension savers are no worse off due to QE
gilt-buying, because the value of their pension savings has gone up
to offset the fall in the annuity income they will receive when
converting their pension fund into a pension income. This assertion
is simply not correct and the reality is very different for those
recently or soon-to-be-retired.
"The
fall in annuity rates since mid-2008 is over 24%. Cumulative
inflation for older age groups has risen by over 20%. The FTSE is
relatively unchanged and the average balanced pension fund has
performed poorly, so that for people with defined contribution
pensions, the impact of QE in reality has not been as the Bank of
England is assuming," she said.
The
paper said the main factor behind increased pension deficits and
falls in annuity incomes had not been the Bank's asset purchases, but
rather the fall in equity prices relative to government bond prices.
"This
fall in the relative price of equities was not caused by QE. It
happened in all the major economies, much of it occurred prior to the
start of asset purchases and stemmed in large part from the
reluctance of investors to hold risky assets, such as equities, given
the deterioration in the economic outlook as a result of the
financial crisis. Indeed, by boosting the economy, monetary policy
actions in the United Kingdom and overseas probably dampened this
effect."
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