Bank of England launches 15-point strategic plan

18 March 2014

BoE governor Mark Carney has devised a wide-ranging overhaul of the Bank's management and organisation. His strategic plan is designed to sweep away barriers between the Bank's various activities in pursuit of what he has dubbed "One Bank". (Includes comment from Simon Nixon.)

The Plan, to be implemented over the next three years, provides an ambitious agenda to transform the institution to take full advantage of the Bank's expanded policy responsibilities. It will create a single, unified institution – One Bank – that will maximise its impact by working together across all its functions.

Notable changes are:

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Writing in the WSJ, Simon Nixon says the Bank of England was long overdue a thorough shake-up. It is hard to overstate just how badly this institution has lost its way since the start of the global financial crisis. By the time former Governor Mervyn King retired last June, the UK central bank had lost the confidence of all its stakeholders, having found itself at odds with the government, the Treasury, Parliament, the banks, the markets and the public.  

This wasn’t a reflection of a robustly independent institution treading on a few toes as it exercised its onerous duties. It was the inevitable response to an organisation that had managed to be simultaneously intellectually arrogant and dangerously incompetent. The financial crisis had exposed deep deficiencies in the BoE’s understanding of how banks and markets operate and major shortcomings in its  understanding of the dynamics of the UK economy.

The appointment of Andrew Haldane as the BOE’s new chief economist at the head of an expanded macro-economic analysis unit is bold and imaginative. Although Mr Haldane became closely identified with Mr King’s ultra-conservative approach to financial reform and managed to ruffle many feathers both in the financial and policy world with his radicalism, he is widely admired as one of the most influential and provocative thinkers in global finance. Given the manifest deficiencies that have emerged in the mainstream macro-economic theories relied upon by the BoE and other central bankers, his brand of disruptive thinking is exactly what is required to shake up the complacent world of economic forecasting and monetary policy-making.

Despite the BoE’s failures before and during the crisis, it has emerged a vastly more powerful institution with new responsibilities and new tools—and these changes will concentrate even more power in Mr Carney’s hands: his four deputy governors will sit on all three of the BOE’s main policy-making committees—the MPC, the Financial Policy Committee and the Prudential Regulatory Authority—and these committee swill increasingly meet together, increasing the chances of a new groupthink dominated by Mr Carney’s own views.

That means even more is now riding on Mr Carney’s personal judgement. His challenge now is to navigate the UK economy out of its current crisis mode, exiting ultra-loose monetary policy without inflating new asset-price bubbles or triggering a new downturn or financial crisis. That is a daunting task. If he succeeds, he is entitled to claim the credit. But if he fails, he will not be able to duck the blame. 

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