Members of the Bank of England’s interest-rate setting body should be appointed by the devolved administrations and by English MPs in order to counter groupthink, a former member of Threadneedle Street’s monetary policy committee has said.
David Blanchflower said the committee was dominated by people with little knowledge of the “real world”, and greater diversity of thought was needed to ensure the interests of ordinary people were reflected.
Blanchflower, a member of the MPC during the global financial crisis of the late 2000s, said in a proposal co-authored with his fellow economist Richard Murphy that membership of the committee needed to be radically reformed.
Under the plan, the governor would be the only MPC member directly chosen by the government. Of the other eight committee members, a deputy governor would be appointed by the mayor of London, three members by the governments of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, and four by regional committees of MPs to represent England outside London. Members would be appointed for a single fixed term and be supported by strong regional offices of the Bank.
At present, the committee is made up of five Bank insiders and four independent members chosen by the Treasury. The three Bank deputy governors on the MPC have all worked at the Treasury, while three of the four external members are professors of economics.
Blanchflower and Murphy said dissent on the MPC was rare because its members had similar backgrounds and life experiences. There was an inbuilt bias towards banking and the City of London, they added.
“There is a role for a monetary policy committee, but it must be accountable, and it must be representative,” Blanchflower said. “Our proposal diversifies the professional
Read more on theguardian.com