wellinghall: (New keeper)
wellinghall ([personal profile] wellinghall) wrote2009-02-01 01:39 pm
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Questions

For mathmos and physicists:
(1) What is the force generated by a three-pound pheasant falling from sixty feet?

For medicos:
(2) How will the human head and neck react when this pheasant falls on you?

(No, this didn't happen to me. It did, however, happen to my father!)

For economists:
(3) Just how does the UK's current economic situation lead to a weak pound?

For Anglo-Saxonists:
(4) What is the current thinking on when Beowulf was composed and written down?

[identity profile] philmophlegm.livejournal.com 2009-02-01 03:42 pm (UTC)(link)
3. In the simplest of terms, UK interest rates are a) very low and b) could still go lower* and money supply could well go higher. Interest rates are the reward for holding a currency, and so if the reward is low there is less incentive to do it. Hence demand for sterling is lower. At the same time, the government is taking steps to increase the supply of Sterling (cash injections into banks, guaranteeing loans etc). If demand for a commodity falls and supply increases, the price of that commodity will fall. In this case, the commodity is Sterling itself.

It's worth pointing out that a 'weak' pound at the moment is definitely a good thing. It has the advantage of helping exporters by making their goods and services cheaper overseas. It has the disadvantage of making imports more expensive and so can be inflationary - but there are very few inflationary pressures in the economy at the moment. We should all be grateful that this government never joined the euro - if it had, we would have been saddled with a higher interest rate and a currency that was too expensive.


* Lower than the euro-zone base rate, but not as low as the dollar or the yen. However, the dollar and the yen rates won't go lower and sterling rates could.

[identity profile] wellinghall.livejournal.com 2009-02-04 08:52 am (UTC)(link)
Thank you (it was the oversupply point that I hadn't quite got).