Notayesmanspodcast371

Notayesmanspodcast371

From Notayesmanspodcasts by Notayesmanseconomics

March 27, 2026 · 15 min

About this episode

This episode discusses the implications of current economic conditions, including interest rates and government financial strategies during the pandemic era.

This is the latest in my series of podcasts explaining how economics works in the credit crunch and now virus pandemic era. This week I give my thoughts on Full english Hi Shaun....one for the pod. 10yr gilt at 5.03% this morning. I assume you're about to sound the Klaxon. At what level does stuff start to break? Mark Bishop A question for your pod, Shaun: with the 10-year hovering around 5%, should the Bank of England be a buyer, not a seller? sally copper When will the Bank of England be forced to re-start QE or Yield Curve Control? 😋🤪 Actually, I am really wondering which central bank will be the first ... the Fed, the ECB or the Bank of England. Mr B Shaun, do you see the UK govt or a quasi private BAE issue of a private bond paying 6.5% fixed yield long term a special issue to fund the defence budget & nuclear power plants. As a way to fund both much needed areas to save UK ? Morris May With Gilts up 75bps in March, 2/3 base rate hikes priced in, along with the biggest downgrade in growth for the G7 by -0.5%, higher inflation increasing welfare costs and public sector pay demands and energy bill support, how likely are tax rises in autumn budget?erfect storm

People in this episode

Host: Shaun

Topics covered

  • economics
  • credit crunch
  • pandemic
  • central banking
  • government finance

Keywords

  • 10-year gilt
  • Bank of England
  • QE
  • Yield Curve Control
  • private bond
  • defence budget
  • nuclear power
  • tax rises
  • inflation
  • public sector pay

Mentioned in this episode

Places: UK

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