UK reduces interest rates to 1%http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/7871932.stmLooks like they are headed towards deflation...
Bank Of England: Countdown To ZeroThe Bank of England was expected to cut interest rates to the lowest level in its 315-year history on Thursday to somewhere between 1.0%-1.5%, from 2.0%, in a bid to jolt the British economy out of a miserable recession. But with economic activity not expected to pick up until late 2009, expect interest rates to fall close to zero in February.
What happens then will be somewhat uncharted territory for Britain's economic policymakers, although some form of "quantitative easing"--a stuffy term for pumping more cash into the economy--is expected. With deflation now a real possibility in the middle of this year, and with Britain's banks still holding back on lending, the central bank now has little choice but to keep slashing.
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A world of zero interest rates will not be good news for savers, who will find their returns drying up as banks hack away at savings rates. (See "Saving Yourself From The Bank Of England.") But trying to protect savers by putting a freeze on interest-rate cuts would likely come at a huge cost to the wider economy, which needs more spending and more lending in this unprecedented environment.
The longer the slump lasts, the bigger the threat of deflation. Central bankers in both Europe and the United States have promised to do all they can to keep consumer prices from entering a downward cycle, which would have a knock-on effect on company profits, employee wages and the wider health of the economy.
Read more:
http://www.forbes.com/2009/01/08/bank-england-rates-markets-econ-cx_ll_0108markets09.html?partner=whiteglove_google Text