Erap?? He`s small fry.. Read and weep.
Money growth is simply debt growth. The B of E (Bank of England) provide reserves (lend money) to the banks who then lend much more on to everyone else for a profit. The money is created out of thin air. (Study fractional reserve banking.) Debt = money these days. There is nothing to back it anymore. The ones gaining the greater share of the money, at the expense of savers and those on relatively fixed incomes, are those who borrow it to buy things to sell them at a later date for more money paid for by yet more borrowing by someone else.
Each year more is borrowed and put into assets like houses. (In recent years 2/3rds of all new money has gone into housing.) Those selling take the cash to pay off existing debts and spend the profit in the economy unless they gear up some more for a bigger house. Houses change hands, new houseowners borrow to pay off old houseowners. If lots of borrowing is encouraged, assets rise more quickly and bigger profits are made. But as more cash sloshes around the economy chasing a similar amount of goods and services, the extra money, which is just debt, adds to the pool of existing money and devalues it. More money in the economy (13% in the last 12 months) chasing the same goods means prices rise - by 13% unless more goods and services become available than last year through productivity efficiencies/technology.
At first price rises will tend to be closer to where it enters the economy, i.e. mostly in whatever people selling houses buy, but eventually it spreads itself about so that all prices rise. Those in jobs usually then manage to get their share. Normally in the last year they would get something like 13% (less productivity) but this government is fiddling the inflation figures so they are only getting 2-4% because they don't understand the scam and accept the going rate, but they are starting to realise they are being robbed as only those already on the gravy train can still afford to play now assets prices are so high. Many workers are now threatening strikes since their wages aren't keeping up which is why corporate profits margins have been breaking records - less for workers is more for shareholders. Pensioners and those on fixed incomes can't go on strike, though, so they get poorer as their money is devalued. The biggest beneficiary of debt financed spending is the government. A reckless government borrows far more than it can cope with for short term political gain and then has to encourage borrowing to increase the money supply to devalue its old loans and make the interest payments cheaper.
Gordon has taxed and spent to buy votes with half the country now on some kind of benefit. When he couldn't tax enough, he borrowed. When he borrowed so much he started to struggle with financing, he kept rates low to encourage a debt-fuelled asset bubble to flood the economy with money and generate a feel good factor. He did this by fiddling inflation figures at the same time he was encouraging the banks to pump debt into the economy to lift money supply growth into double figures. Large debts get eroded as money devalues but assets in limited supply hold their value so gain in price in weaker £s. The government's debt gets eroded as it claims more of the weakened £s in taxes but pays the same interest on the old debt. Pensioners and those on fixed incomes get no more money and have higher food and energy bills to pay. (He may give them an extra winter fuel payment or extra old age tax allowance but he gives back less than he takes away as he devalues what they get.) It is fraud.
The biggest problem is this is a game you cannot play long term. Everybody susses it after a bit and all want to borrow to buy assets, which do not produce wealth, instead of borrowing for investment in productive capital (factories, machines, software) that does produce wealth in the form of increased profits and wages that can sustain higher taxes. The latter investment benefits everyone but Gordon's low rates have been robbing the poor and the workers to reward the debt financed speculators at the top of the pile. As the economy doesn't invest it becomes less efficient until all the jobs and wealth go abroad. The debt fuelled party then spirals into a recession which brings money supply growth back down to earth or worse it gets pumped beyond control to maintain the feel good factor until the economy simply collapses like the Weimar Republic or, more recently, Argentina and Zimbabwe. The US is getting dangerously similar to these now and needs to cut rates as little as possible.
The lions share of the 13% extra money goes to speculators, bankers and others that use debt for business. They are in cahoots with the government. Ordinary workers and savers are losing out. That is why the rich are getting noticeably richer and the poor poorer under this government's reckless economic policies. I'm benefitting from it and so are you from previous postings about your properties but it is unsustainable on this scale. (It is a shame that many other countries are doing similarly although to varying degrees. I doubt the world has ever before seen so many countries committing this fraud on its citizens at the same time. It explains why the price of gold and commodities are rising so much stronger than would be justified by growth in BRIC countries. Many currencies are being devalued together.) Our financial benefits may not compensate for the social cost in years ahead, though. Gordon is making life poorer for future generations as well as some current ones.
And I can assure you I am being logical and not reading what I want into the figures. You know perfectly well that inflation is not 1.9%.
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