The Treasury should tax commercial banks to compensate for the effects of quantitative easing, according to think tank the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR).

This would be reminiscent of Margaret Thatcher’s 1981 deposit tax on banks, and could save £7-8 billion a year over this parliament

The UK taxpayer is spending £22 billion a year compensating the Bank of England for losses on its QE programme, while since interest rates began rising in December 2021, the four largest UK banks have seen their annual profits more than double, up by £22 billion compared to pre-pandemic.

The think tank said that some of this is a direct transfer of funds from the taxpayer to shareholders.

The suggestion comes amidst the Chancellor’s leaked plans to charge National Insurance contributions on private landlords’ rental income.

Carsten Jung, associate director for economic policy at IPPR, said: “The Bank of England and Treasury bungled the implementation of quantitative easing.

“What started as a programme to boost the economy is now a massive drain on taxpayer money.

“Public money is flowing straight into commercial banks’ coffers because of a flawed policy design. While families struggle with rising costs, the government is effectively writing multi-billion-pound cheques to bank shareholders.

“This is not how QE was meant to work – and no other major economy does it this way. A targeted levy, inspired by Margaret Thatcher’s own approach in the 1980s, would recoup some these windfalls and put the money to far better use – helping people and the economy, not just bank balance sheets.”

The think tank said that, under the current set-up, the Treasury pays the Bank of England for both interest rate losses and the drop in value of gilts bought during QE. These payments ultimately benefit commercial banks, and other financial institutions, which hold hundreds of billions of pounds of QE-related reserves at the Bank of England. The UK is an international outlier in having its Treasury pay for its central bank’s losses.

To rectify this, IPPR recommends that:

• The Treasury introduces a QE reserves income levy on commercial banks

• The Bank of England slows down quantitative tightening (QT), by ending the Bank of England’s fire sale of government bonds to save more than £12bn a year

IPPR says these two policies could save the taxpayer over £100 billion over the course of this parliament, giving the government fiscal headroom.

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