We write to express our concern about UK monetary developments (The Big Read, November 4). In April 2021 we signed a letter to you warning that the then rapid growth of the quantity of money — of more than 15 per cent in the previous 12 months — would result in well above-target inflation. The position today is very different. In the year to September the quantity of money fell by 4.2 per cent.
By “the quantity of money” we mean the M4x aggregate prepared by the Bank of England, with the series starting at the end of 1997. The 4.2 per cent fall is the largest to have been recorded in the subsequent 26 years of data. Indeed, until 2023 no annual decline in this measure of money had occurred at all, not even in the Great Recession of 2008 and 2009.
Whereas in early 2021 the worry was above-target inflation, now it is of a needlessly severe recession. If the quantity of money continues to slide, there is a possibility in 2025 or 2026 of beneath-target inflation or even deflation. It cannot be overlooked that the monetary contraction has already been accompanied by balance-sheet strain and asset price weakness. According to the Nationwide index, house prices dropped by 3.3 per cent in the year to October, while the FTSE 250 index of UK company shares is off by 30 per cent from its last peak in autumn 2021.
Large fluctuations in money growth are a menace to the British economy. In our view the Bank of England is again mismanaging monetary policy. Lurches in only a few years from much above target inflation to deflation are destructive and unnecessary, and can have tragic consequences for households and companies. We recommend stability in money growth at a low rate. Stability in money growth should prevent big swings in demand, output and employment, while an appropriately low increase in money contributes to on-target inflation.
Juan Castañeda
Director, The Vinson Centre, University of Buckingham
Professor Tim Congdon
University of Buckingham
John Greenwood
Chief Economist, International Monetary Monitor
Julian Jessop
Independent Economist
Andrew Lilico
Europe Economics
Professor Kent Matthews
Cardiff Business School
Professor Patrick Minford
Cardiff Business School
Professor Trevor Williams
St Mary’s University, London
Letter in response to this letter:
What changed first, prices or the money supply? / From JE Woods, Kingswood, Surrey, UK