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New £80bn credit scheme 'will suffer a slow start'

Thursday 30 August 2012 10:07 BST
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The Bank of England is braced for a long battle to get credit flowing through its new £80bn Funding for Lending scheme, a senior rate-setter warned yesterday.

The FLS was launched at the beginning of August to provide cheap funding for banks, on condition that they grow their lending to businesses and home buyers to help drag the struggling UK economy out of recession.

Minutes of the Bank's Monetary Policy Committee's (MPC) latest meeting showed policymakers "encouraged" by the initial impact of the move as a host of lenders tapped the funds to cut mortgage rates. But the Bank's executive director for markets, Paul Fisher, yesterday said that it would take some time to bear fruit for the wider economy.

He said: "We don't expect this to be something that will cure the economy in a few months. It will take a little while to pass through... We have seen an initial flurry [of interest from banks] but this isn't a sprint."

His remarks came in the wake of warnings from Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg that a "short, sharp" battle against recession "is turning into a longer-term process of economic recovery and fiscal restraint".

While the Bank will take its time to judge the impact of the FLS on constrained business lending conditions, the early signs are that the new funds have had a mixed impact on the mortgage market.

Although the cost of loans for those with bigger deposits has fallen sharply, figures from financial information firm Moneyfacts have shown costs for first-time buyers with just ten per cent deposits actually rising since the FLS was launched, adding £118 on average to the cost of a two-year fixed-rate deal. Worryingly for the Bank, Santander also hit borrowers with a rise in its standard variable rate on mortgages last week.

The FLS was unveiled by Bank governor Sir Mervyn King in June as the latest squalls in the eurozone's debt storm sent bank-funding costs soaring higher. Alongside the funding initiative the Bank is also holding monthly auctions at which banks can bid for cheap cash in return for a wide range of collateral.

The Bank of England Governor Sir Mervyn King has been adamant that the Bank will not buy up significant quantities of private-sector debt under QE.

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