Rates low for too long, says ex-Bank of England boss
Record high inflation was caused by the Bank of England keeping interest rates too low for too long, according to its former head.
Lord Mervyn King said inflation has now been tamed, but criticised all central banks for failing to act fast enough initially.
Speaking to BBC Radio Fourâs Broadcasting House ahead of the Budget next month, he also said there are âbound to be some changesâ to fiscal rules.
He criticised the previous governmentâs national insurance cut and said Labour should reverse it.
Asked if the Bank of England kept rates âtoo low for too longâ, Lord King said: âYes, and thatâs why we had inflation.â
âBut they raised interest rates like all other central banks â it wasnât just the Bank of England â and inflation is now back under control,â he added.
The crossbench peer added that interest rates were now âin the right ballparkâ.
At its most recent meeting in September, the Bank chose to keep the base rate â which determines mortgage rates, credit card rates, and savings rates â at 5%.
The next meeting will happen in November.
On the topic of the Budget, Lord King predicted âa number of half measuresâ because the government has committed itself both to public sector investment and to spending limits.
As such, he expected the government may chose to tweak those restrictions.
âThereâs bound to be some change to the fiscal rules,â he said.
âThe ratio of national debt to national income is the right metric by which to judge whether weâre on a sustainable path, but to judge it by reference to a forecast five years ahead â a rolling five-year horizon â doesnât make any sense.
âThe right thing to do would be to commit to having the ratio of debt to national income falling by the end of this Parliament, a fixed date.â
Lord King was also critical of the Labour for committing to the Conservativesâ national insurance cut.
âI donât understand why the previous government cut national insurance contributions,â he said.
âI think that was irresponsible, and I think itâs equally irresponsible for the then opposition, now government, to promise not to reverse that.â