The News
Saturday 23 of November 2024

Bank of England's Carney hints at stimulus in no-deal Brexit


AP Photo,FILE - In this May 2, 2019, file photo Mark Carney the Governor of the Bank of England speaks during an Inflation Report Press Conference at the Bank of England in the City of London. The Bank of England is open to the idea of letting new payment services such as Facebook's upcoming Libra hold funds with the central bank, Carney said Thursday, June 20. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham, Pool, File)
AP Photo,FILE - In this May 2, 2019, file photo Mark Carney the Governor of the Bank of England speaks during an Inflation Report Press Conference at the Bank of England in the City of London. The Bank of England is open to the idea of letting new payment services such as Facebook's upcoming Libra hold funds with the central bank, Carney said Thursday, June 20. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham, Pool, File)

LONDON (AP) — The governor of the Bank of England gave his biggest hint yet that he’d back a stimulus package for the British economy if the country crashes out of the European Union at the end of October with no deal.

In testimony to lawmakers on Wednesday, Mark Carney said the response from the bank’s rate-setting panel to a no-deal Brexit will “not be automatic” and will depend on the impacts on demand, supply and on the exchange rate. A fall in the pound, for example, could lead to a rise in inflation that could prompt some rate-setters to want higher rates.

“Some of us, myself included, not all of us, have said that on balance it’s not equally weighted, the outcomes. So it’s more likely that we will provide some stimulus in that event,” Carney said.

For Carney, dealing with the potential of a no-deal Brexit on Oct. 31 — Britain’s revised departure date — will not last long as he’s leaving the bank in January after nearly seven years at the helm. His successor has yet to be announced.

Carney said the risks of a no-deal Brexit have increased in recent weeks and that’s weighing on the economy, particularly on business investment and the housing market.

Under a no-deal scenario, tariffs and other restrictions would be imposed on trade between Britain and the EU. Most economists think that will lead to a deep recession in Britain that would likely prompt the central bank to slash rates and launch another monetary stimulus program.

However, if Britain secures a Brexit deal, “there would be a requirement for limited and gradual rate increases” to the main interest rate, which stands at 0.75%, Carney said.

The discussion over a no-deal Brexit is at the forefront of the battle for the leadership of the Conservative Party between Boris Johnson and Jeremy Hunt. The winner will become prime minister next month.

Johnson, a former mayor of London, has said Britain will leave on Oct. 31 “do or die” while Hunt, the current foreign secretary, says it’s an artificial deadline that could be extended again.

Brexit has already been delayed after Parliament rejected Prime Minister Theresa May’s Brexit deal three times. Both leadership candidates have said they will look to negotiate changes to the withdrawal agreement that deals with citizens’ rights post-Brexit, Britain’s financial obligations to the EU and making sure no hard border returns between EU member Ireland and Northern Ireland, which is part of the United Kingdom.

Johnson has said that a “standstill” agreement can be reached which would see a temporary continuation of the tariff-free economic relationship between Britain and the EU.

Carney and many others have said such an agreement is only possible if Britain and the EU are working toward a new trade deal. But there’s no guarantee the EU would agree to that if issues within the withdrawal agreement, like the Irish border, have not been dealt with. The other countries in the World Trade Organization would also have to give their backing.

Carney meanwhile warned that opting for a no-deal Brexit just to end the current economic uncertainty will be damaging.

“There’s a reason why in the 40-plus trade deals that have been stuck in the last quarter century between advanced economies that they’ve always had some form of transition from the status quo to the new arrangements,” he said. “I would underscore that whatever arrangement we’re coming to that it is highly desirable to give businesses enough time to adjust to that new reality.”