Speaking in New York, Carney addressed challenges to the forecasts of a sustained recovery in the UK and US economies.
Speaking to the Economic Club of New York, Carney argued that a recovery was gaining pace in the UK, underpinned by a reduction in extreme uncertainty, significant progress in repairing the core of the financial system and a marked improvement in household balance sheets. But he said that the repeated over optimism of forecasts of advanced economy growth in the past five years meant it was unsurprising that pessimistic ideas of ‘secular stagnation’ or persistently weak growth had been revived.
However, the Governor stressed that, with the UK and US economies remaining far from a normal position, and with the scope for a revival in potential supply itself depending on the speed of recovery, central banks needed to address the risks of secular stagnation by deploying a range of policies in a coordinated fashion.
He said the Bank of England was alive and vigilant to the risk that this carried, of generating imbalanced growth or excessive debt. The Bank had demonstrated its flexibility to address such risks with its package of measures targeted at the housing market. Such measures would allow monetary policy to remain stimulative as long as needed. The Bank had also acted to repair the UK financial sector and implement better financial regulation and supervision, which would help to restore the supply of credit to the real economy and guard against the build-up of financial risks.
More generally, the Governor argued that these actions highlighted the fundamental importance of coordinating policy actions and exploited the considerable synergies of combining policy responsibilities in the Bank of England.
He concluded that, although central banks could be a catalyst for recovery, long-term prosperity across economies would depend on measures taken to increase the growth of supply capacity, particularly those that reinforced an open, global trading system.
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