Mark Carney's post-Brexit speech in full

Bank of England Governor Mark Carney has given a speech on uncertainty, the economy and policy. Here's what he had to say in full.

Bank of EnglandGovernorMark Carney has given a speech on uncertainty, the economy and policy. Here's what he had to say in full.

Today I want to discuss what uncertainty means for the UK’s economic performance, and how theBank of England can best respond to it.

The result of the referendum is clear. Its full implications for the economy are not.

The UK can handle change. It has one of the most flexible economies in the world and benefits from a deep reservoir of human capital, world-class infrastructure and the rule of law. Its people are admired the world over for their strength under adversity. The question is not whether the UK will adjust but rather how quickly and how well.

Nonetheless, the decision to leave the European Union marks a major regime shift. In the coming years, the UK will redefine its openness to the movement of goods, services, people and capital. In tandem, a potentially broad range of regulations might change.

Uncertainty over the pace, breadth and scale of these changes could weigh on our economic prospects for some time. While some of the necessary adjustments may prove difficult and many will take time, the transition from the initial shock to the restructuring and then building of the UK economy will be much easier because of our solid policy frameworks.

At times of great uncertainty, households, businesses and investors ask basic economic questions. Will inflation remain under control? Will the financial system do its job? Will I keep mine?

Such issues are why monetary and financial stability are fundamental pre-requisites for effective economic adjustment and sustained prosperity.

Discharging the Bank’s responsibilities for these public goods demands rigorous analysis, objective judgement, and effective transparency. We will not shirk from these obligations. The Bank and its independent policy committees will continue to provide analytically based, clear-eyed assessments of the economic and financial outlooks. And we will outline the risks to these forecasts so that we and others can prepare to manage them.

The near-term challenges facing the UK economy can’t be wished away. But they can be addressed. A clear plan is needed, and its measures must be implemented with resolute determination.

After briefly reviewing the relationship between uncertainty and the economy, I want to review how the Bank of England’s contribution to that plan will unfold over the coming weeks.

But at the outset, I want to re-emphasise that the Bank has taken all the necessary steps to prepare for these events. And we will not hesitate to take any additional measures required to meet our responsibilities as the United Kingdom moves forward.

Bad things come in threes: geopolitical, economic, and policy uncertainty

Before expanding on what the Bank can do, I would like to apply some rigour to the relationship between uncertainty and economic performance.

Science, including social science, begins with measurement. Although imperfect, there are at least three distinct types of uncertainty that influence economic performance.

The first is geopolitical uncertainty. It doubled after 9/11 and remained elevated and volatile for years afterwards. After settling in the wake of the global financial crisis, geopolitical risk spiked with the passing of the Arab Spring and the rise of tensions in Eastern Europe.

The second class of uncertainty – economic – is probably the most familiar.

In recent years, economic uncertainty has been elevated because of fragilities in the financial system and overhangs of public and private debt.

These challenges have been compounded by deeper forces that have radically altered the balance of saving and investment in the global economy. In the process, these have moved equilibrium interest rates into regions that monetary policy finds difficult to reach. Whether called ‘secular stagnation’ or a ‘global liquidity trap’, the drag on jobs, wages and growth is real.

Less visible, but more fundamental drivers of economic uncertainty are the powerful forces arising from technology and globalisation. The integration of 40% of humanity into the global economy has re-orientated production, eliminated jobs and may have depressed wages. These dynamics have been accompanied by the implications of technology for the automation of jobs and of trade for their location; and the consequences of bigger, more global markets for ‘winner takes all’ patterns of compensation.

The last of the uncertainty trinity is policy uncertainty. It is reduced when there are clear policy remits, frameworks, and institutional structures that empower and discipline fiscal, monetary and regulatory authorities. It is elevated when these are absent. And it is influenced by the effectiveness of the tools available to central banks, the clarity of their policy strategies and, crucially, the transparency of their communications.

In recent years, policy uncertainty has increased globally. In some jurisdictions, fiscal frameworks have been questioned; in others, exchange rate regimes. And with very low interest rates and expanding unconventional policies, the efficacy of monetary policy itself has been questioned. The charge that central banks are out of monetary ammunition is wrong, but the widespread absence of global price pressures demands that our firepower be well aimed.

Indices of policy uncertainty are about 1¼ times their pre-crisis averages in the US and Japan, and as high as three times in China. In the UK, progress since the financial crisis has been more than totally unwound this year with the measure having risen to five times its pre-crisis average by the start of the official referendum campaign.

While clearly these three uncertainty measures are related, distinct movements are visible. The heady days of the Great Moderation were restrained by geopolitical uncertainty. During the financial and euro crises, by contrast, economic uncertainty dominated. And from 2012 onwards, with the abatement of the acute phase of the euro-area crisis, economic uncertainty began to fall back, only to be replaced by renewed geopolitical tensions and now sharply higher policy uncertainty

What do the combined effects of uncertainty mean?

All this uncertainty has contributed to a form of economic post-traumatic stress disorder amongst households and businesses, as well as in financial markets – that is, a heightened sensitivity to downside tail risks, a growing caution about the future, and an aversion to assets or irreversible decisions that may be exposed to future ‘disaster risk’.

There may be an affect heuristic at work. Put simply, long after the original trigger becomes remote, perceptions endure. They become embedded in economic narratives and their salience persistently affects risk perceptions and economic behaviour.

This point is not trivial. Research has shown that people who have experienced low returns throughout their lives, like the ‘Depression Babies’ of the 1930s, report lower willingness to take financial risk, are less likely to participate in the stock market, invest a lower fraction of their assets in equities, and are more pessimistic about future returns.

Today, uncertainty has meant an inchoate sense of economic insecurity for many people despite generalised economic prosperity. Across the advanced economies, employment appears less secure, wages more subdued, and inequality more pronounced.

And its precautionary effects can mean spending is deferred because there is often a real option value to waiting. Firms delay investment decisions. Investors seek safe returns. Households put off buying durables. The common thread is that any economic decision that requires finance, has a sunk cost, or an uncertain payoff, is affected.

While the effect on output is clearly negative, the effect on inflation is ambiguous. Uncertainty’s stultifying effects weigh on employment and aggregate demand, creating disinflationary pressures, while the freeze in resource reallocation can hold back productivity and aggregate supply, creating inflationary pressures. Higher uncertainty can also mean investment responds more sluggishly to demand stimulus.

We have seen the consequences of these effects in financial markets for some time. How are these dynamics manifest today?

First, there has been serial disappointment in corporate earnings. The failure of past relationships to reassert, especially rates of productivity growth, has embedded a growing sense of uncertainty in markets about the fundamentals upon which future prosperity will be built.

The serial disappointment in earnings growth is mirrored in global growth since the crisis. In advanced economies, uncertainty appears to be holding back spending, particularly by corporates. Globally, investment remains weak. In the UK, relatively strong business investment growth in the past few years has only restored it to a level still shy of its pre-crisis share of GDP, and it is tracking below past cycles.

A fall in expected growth rates will tend to push down on expected future earnings, lowering equity prices and increasing the equity yield. At the same time, a fall in growth expectations will tend to be reflected in a lower expected path of risk-free rates, pushing down on bond yields. So a decline in growth expectations will tend to widen the spread between equity and bond yields. Since equity prices depend on earnings expectations at all future horizons, the equity yield (and hence the equity-bond yield spread) will be particularly sensitive to expectations about growth rates at long horizons

The Monetary Policy Committee’s May forecast incorporates some of these uncertainty effects. Our projection for the global economy was for 2016 growth of just 3%, the slowest pace since 2009.

Domestically, we expected growth to slow to 2% in 2016, partly as a consequence of an increasing drag from uncertainty.

Specifically, in May the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) estimated that the pick-up in UK economic uncertainty it had recently seen would lower our GDP by around 0.7% after a year. While material, this was less than suggested by past relationships partly because our projections were conditioned, by convention, on a vote to remain in the EU, suggesting uncertainty would fade smartly after the referendum.

Even before 23 June, we observed the growing influence of uncertainty on major economic decisions. Commercial real estate transactions had been cut in half since their peak last year. Residential real estate activity had slowed sharply. Car purchases had gone into reverse. And business investment had fallen for the past two quarters measured. Given otherwise accommodative financial conditions and a solid domestic outlook, it appeared likely that uncertainty related to the referendum played an important role in this deceleration.

It now seems plausible that uncertainty could remain elevated for some time, with a more persistent drag on activity than we had previously projected. Moreover, its effects will be reinforced by tighter financial conditions and possible negative spill-overs to growth in the UK’s major trading partners.

In sum, the material slowing in growth that the MPC had identified as a risk associated with the referendum now looks likely to be our central forecast. Using reports from our nationwide network of agents, private

When uncertainty is high, policymakers should have three objectives. First, conduct a sober, objective assessment of the outlook and the risks to it. Second, develop and communicate a plan to reduce those risks and to seize new opportunities. And third, do no harm, by minimising any possible confusion about the commitment to core macroeconomic policy frameworks themselves.

In Tim Geithner’s famous dictum, “plan beats no plan.” And in my experience, a plan that is clearly articulated and transparently executed is best of all.

A plan for the UK’s current challenges would include a comprehensive strategy for engaging with the EU and the rest of the world – including clarifying the UK’s future trading arrangements, calibrating its openness to migration, ensuring the continuity of capital flows, and confirming the appropriate regulatory framework for the UK financial system.

The impact of concrete progress towards these objectives would be amplified by an overarching, positive and animating narrative for growth in a post-Brexit world. To emerge from an uncertain world with confidence, people and businesses need a fixed point by which to navigate. Once identified, everyone can then play a role supporting the strategy to get us to our destination.

That strategy must be grounded in the bedrock of the UK’s existing macro policy institutions and frameworks. That means fiscal policy anchored in a clear commitment to long-run sustainability and buttressed by the independent Office for Budget Responsibility.

And it means respecting the frameworks for the other major arms of macroeconomic policy as they are set out in statute and conducted by the Bank of England. The Bank has clear remits and can deploy a wide range of instruments. With its goals defined by Parliament, the Bank has operational independence. Its policy strategies and communications are decided by independent, expert committees whose members are individually accountable to Parliament for their analysis and policy actions.

The Bank conducts policy consistently, transparently and accountably. Its policy committees are straight with the British public about the risks and trade-offs in the pursuit of our objectives.

This institutional framework is critical to reduce uncertainty and essential to promote prosperity.

Let me begin with financial policy. The Bank of England realised long ago that banks had been woefully undercapitalised in the run-up to the crisis and needed to build significant resources in order to serve the real economy in a risky and uncertain world.

The reforms have been enormous, with the capital requirements of our largest banks now ten times higher than before the crisis.

Moreover, the Bank has stress tested our major banks and building societies against scenarios far more severe than the country currently faces. In fact, our 2015 stress test entailed losses twice those experienced during the financial crisis.

At its last meeting in March, the Financial Policy Committee (FPC) “assessed the risks around the referendum [were] the most significant near-term domestic risks to financial stability.”

Because we took the risks seriously in advance, the Bank could draw upon its supervisory expertise, its market operations, and its macroeconomic analysis to put in place a range of effective contingency plans.

These measures reinforce the significant steps we have taken over the past several years to enhance the resilience of the financial system.

As a result of all these actions, UK banks have raised over £130bn of capital, and now have more than £600bn of high quality liquid assets.

And as a backstop, in order to support market functioning, the Bank of England continues to stand ready to provide more than £250bn of additional funds through its normal facilities.

As a further precaution, reflecting the possibility that heightened uncertainty may last a while longer, today the Bank of England is announcing that it will continue to offer Indexed Long-TermRepo operations on a weekly basis until end-September 2016. This will provide additional flexibility in the Bank’s provision of liquidity insurance over the coming months.

These facilities provide an effective way for banks to manage their liquidity, with a competitive auction process, designed to encourage usage, but where at times some bids will go unfilled.

We expect institutions to draw on this funding if and when appropriate, just as we expect them to draw on their own resources as needed in order to provide credit, support markets, and generally supply financial services to the real economy.

In order to have confidence and plan for the future, financial institutions, like the rest of us, desire certainty. That is why the Bank will continue to be very clear about their regulatory framework.

Our liquidity framework is now established and effective. Over the past year, the FPC has finalised the overall capital framework. We are steadily implementing measures to develop ring-fenced banks and to end the scourge oftoo-big-to-fail.

Nothing in financial regulation has changed as a result of last week’s referendum. It will not change until the process of the UK’s withdrawal from the European Union is complete, until the UK is no longer a member of the EU and until EU law ceases to have effect in the UK. The law is the law. Rules are rules. The Bank is continuing to implement the current regulatory framework until any new arrangements with the EU take effect.

By enhancing the resilience of banks and by providing regulatory certainty so that firms can operate and plan with confidence, the Bank of England is ensuring that the financial system can continue to provide credit to businesses and households. This progress means that the financial system will dampen the aftershocks from recent events rather than amplify them.

Next Tuesday, the independent FPC will release its biannual assessment of risks in its Financial Stability Report, and it will take any further actions it deems appropriate to support financial stability. Consistent with public accountability, we will then take questions from the media that day and will testify before Parliament the following week.

Let me now turn to monetary policy. In May, the Monetary Policy Committee set out its central outlook for steady growth accompanied by a gradual return of inflation to the target.

As required by our remit, the MPC identified that the most significant risks to its forecast concerned the referendum. This was the view of all nine independent members of the MPC.

In May, the MPC judged that a sustainable return of inflation to the 2% target probably required a gradually rising path for Bank Rate over the next three years as growth picked up, jobs and wages increased and the drags from a stronger currency and lower commodity prices faded.

As required by its remit, the MPC has already described how a vote to leave the EU could materially alter the outlook for growth and inflation.

As a result of increased uncertainty and tighter financial conditions, UK households could defer consumption and firms delay investment, lowering labour demand and causing unemployment to rise. Through financial market and confidence channels, there are also risks of adverse spillovers to the global economy.

At the same time, supply growth is likely to be lower over the next three years, reflecting slower capital accumulation and the need to reallocate resources across sectors of the economy. Both of these forces may be exacerbated by higher uncertainty and tighter financial conditions.

Finally, as expected, sterling has depreciated sharply. For given foreign demand, this will mean support to net trade, though this may well be dampened by uncertainty around future trading relationships. A lower exchange rate will also entail higher prices for imported consumer goods, energy and capital goods, and consequently lower real incomes.

As the MPC said prior to the referendum, the combination of these influences on demand, supply and the exchange rate could lead to a materially lower path for growth and a notably higher path for inflation than set out in the May Inflation Report. In such circumstances, the MPC will face a trade-off between stabilising inflation on the one hand and avoiding undue volatility in output and employment on the other. The implications for monetary policy will depend on the relative magnitudes of these effects.

In my view, and I am not pre-judging the views of the other independent MPC members, the economic outlook has deteriorated and some monetary policy easing will likely be required over the summer.

The Committee will make an initial assessment on 14 July, and a full assessment complete with a new forecast will follow in the August Inflation Report. In August, we will also discuss further the range of instruments at our disposal.

These judgments will benefit from the Bank’s joined-up approach. For example, the PRA’s direct line of sight of banks, building societies and insurers, and the FPC’s oversight of systemic risks, allows the Bank to understand better the net impact of any monetary actions on financial conditions, and ultimately businesses and households. As we have seen elsewhere, if interest rates are too low (or negative), the hit to bank profitability could perversely reduce credit availability or even increase its overall price.

There are also interactions between prudential rules and the provision of credit in the face of large macro uncertainty. The Bank of England is well positioned to understand these interactions and will work across its policy committees to maximise the coherence and effectiveness of their efforts.

I can assure you that in the coming months the Bank can be expected to take whatever action is needed to support growth subject to inflation being projected to return to the target over an appropriate horizon, and inflation expectations remaining well anchored.

Above the central arch of this Court Room is a weather vane. Originally installed in 1805, it played a central role in the Bank’s management of a different type of uncertainty – meteorological.

When the wind blew from the east, ships would be able to travel up the Thames, meaning London’s merchants would need credit to purchase the cargo. When it blew from the west, credit would need to be withdrawn. This Regency forecasting model helped the Bank of England to provide an anchor of stability.

Today, while the economy is more complex and our models less reliable, the Bank has identified the clouds on the horizon and can see that the wind has now changed direction.

Over the past few months, working closely with the Chancellor and with HM Treasury, we put in place contingency plans for the initial market shocks. They are working well.

Over the coming weeks, the Bank will consider a host of other measures and policies to promote monetary and financial stability.

In short, the Bank of England has a plan to achieve our objectives, and by doing so support growth, jobs and wages during a time of considerable uncertainty.

Part of that plan is ruthless truth telling. And one uncomfortable truth is that there are limits to what the Bank of England can do.

In particular, monetary policy cannot immediately or fully offset the economic implications of a large, negative shock. The future potential of this economy and its implications for jobs, real wages and wealth are not the gifts of monetary policymakers.

These will be driven by much bigger decisions; by bigger plans that are being formulated by others. However, we will relentlessly pursue monetary and financial stability. And by doing so we will facilitate the adjustments needed to realise this economy’s full potential.