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Bank will keep rein on house prices

paulajohn
Written By:
paulajohn
Posted:
Updated:
10/12/2013

Mark Carney, governor of the Bank of England, has reiterated that he will act to prevent a house price bubble.

Speaking in the US to the Economic Club of New York, Carney stated that he would not allow ‘warp speed’ growth in the UK housing market, and pointed out that he has an armoury of economic weapons at his disposal with which to control many aspects of the British economy.

The governor indicated that a fall in unemployment would in no way automatically trigger an increase in interest rates.

“It is unlikely that equilibrium interest rates will return to historically normal levels any time soon,” he said.

“This prospect [of low interest rates for a long time] puts a premium on macroprudential policies and financial reforms to manage the associated risks without abandoning the need to keep interest rates in line with the equilibrium level,” he added.

In the summer the governor indicated the importance of keeping interest rates on hold until unemployment falls to 7%. The unemployment rate fell unexpectedly to a three-year low of 7.6% between July and September.

Meamwhile, Carney’s concerns about the housing market come as the Council of Mortgage Lenders pointed to “strong upwards momentum” and the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) said it expects prices to surge next year.

The Bank has already scrapped its Funding for Lending scheme for mortgages, in order to cool the housing markets, a move Carney said “helps ensure that monetary policy can remain as stimulative as necessary for as long as necessary to achieve its objectives”.

“There is a history of things shifting in the UK and the housing market of moving from stall speed to warp speed and underwriting standards slipping. So we want to avoid that,” Carney said.