Ajw71 wrote:
So unemployment falling is actually a bad thing? Seriously?
I didn't say that did I?
I merely pointed out the consequence of it falling below 7% is (supposed to be) rising interest rates.
If the unemployment figures are flattered by things like workfare there is a certain irony there in that something Osborne does not want, rising interest rates, would come about because they moved heaven and earth to get the figures down by doing things like setting job centres targets for getting people off JSA and that takes the unemployment figures below 7%.
So on the one hand the government can point to the figures and say aren't we great (ignoring the debate about whether these jobs are paying a living wage) but on the other they are going to have to deal with home owners (and businesses) seeing the mortgage and lending rate rise.
Now given at least two opinion polls since November have said most people are not feeling the benefit of the recovery that feel-good factor Cameron wants to have by 2015 is going to take a big knock if we have add rising mortgage payments to ever increasing fuel bills.
It is also not what Osborne wants as the last thing he needs is business lending to become more expensive and demand hit because people have even less money in their pocket. Rising interest rates will also increase the value of the Pound so our exports will become more expensive. A devalued pound is what Osborne wants, not one rising in value.
The B of E have been caught out as they felt unemployment would hit 7% in 2016. Well into the next parliament so safely away from increased mortgage rates coming in before the next election. It could now do it in 2014 and so there is chance mortgages rates will rise before the election.
The B of E may deem inflation low enough and pay settlements low enough not to raise interest rates the minute unemployment dips below 7% but they can't hold off forever because again (ironically) increasing employment tightens the labour market forcing wages (and so inflation) up and low interest rates for a prolonged period like we have had risk creating a boom-bust scenario in the housing market.
All this is pretty much just common sense but you'd have to look at the bigger picture than just a set of unemployment statistics to see it.