Source · Select Committees · Treasury Committee
Recommendation 4
4
Accepted
Develop detailed planning on long-term balance sheet size and provide regular public updates
Recommendation
The Bank should develop its planning on this long-term steady-state size and composition of its balance sheet, and how this relates to QT, in more detail and give regular public updates on the likely future size and composition of its balance sheet. (Paragraph 23) The macroeconomic and financial impact of quantitative tightening
Government Response Summary
The government states the Bank is continuing to analyse the optimal steady-state level of reserves and is undertaking work to determine the long-term mix of assets for its balance sheet. Decisions on its future size and shape will be made in consultation with HM Treasury and communicated transparently.
Government Response
Accepted
HM Government
Accepted
The recommendation in paragraph 20 states that the Bank and Treasury should clarify the future arrangements for the steady state level of reserves, including the future of QT at that point. It is important to note at the outset that QT is only one factor behind the normalisation of the Bank’s balance sheet. Reserves may also fall for other reasons, most notably repayments of loans made under the Bank’s Term Funding Scheme with additional incentives for small medium-sized enterprises (TFSME). Nevertheless, a reduction in the size of the APF has implications for the level of reserves in the system. In September 2022 the Bank set out its arrangements for allowing the MPC to focus solely on monetary policy considerations in setting its strategy for unwinding its stock of asset purchases.22 These arrangements are designed such that the MPC could, over time, if it judged this necessary for policy reasons, unwind the APF fully in line with the gradual and predictable approach that it has previously articulated. It does not state that QT would cease at a certain level of reserves, nor would it rule out other choices.23 To maintain control over short-term market interest rates during this period and in order to implement monetary policy, the Bank announced a new market operation in the same market notice–the Short Term Repo Facility (STR)–that allows commercial banks to borrow unlimited reserves at Bank Rate against gilt collateral on a weekly basis. In addition, we expect usage of the full set of our liquidity facilities to rise as the level of reserves in the system falls. At the point that reserves reach the minimum desired level, banks will be able to meet their demand for reserves at Bank Rate using the Bank’s liquidity facilities, stabilising the quantity of reserves and allowing the MPC to decide to continue reducing the stock of assets held in the APF for monetary policy purposes, should it judge that necessary for monetary policy reasons. The quantity of reserves needed to maintain monetary control and financial stability once QT has completed and TFSME drawings have been repaid is likely to be substantially higher than in the past. The Bank is continuing to analyse the optimal steady state level of reserves for monetary and financial stability, as discussed in more detail in a recent speech by Andrew Hauser, among others.24 In addition to this, the recommendation in paragraph 4 asks the Bank to develop its planning on the long-term steady-state size and composition of the balance sheet. The Bank is currently undertaking work to determine the appropriate long-term mix of assets to hold on its balance sheet. Decisions on the asset mix have implications for the Bank’s policy objectives, and risks to the public sector balance sheet. Decisions on the size and shape of our future balance sheet will be made in close consultation with HM Treasury and relevant stakeholders and communicated in a transparent manner.