
NEWS
Preston Byrne is quoted in City AM
Adam Smith Institute fellow, Preston Byrne, was quoted in a City AM article on the opportunities created by the development of alternative currencies like Dogecoin.
Read the article here.
"Preston Byrne, a fellow of the Adam Smith Institute and a commercial lawyer specialising in securitisation and cryptocurrency in the City of London, says that such alternative currencies do offer great opportunities for corporates - which could easily repurpose their Twitter presences to accept payments in cryptocurrencies.
One study, "A Fistful of Bitcoins: Characterizing Payments Among Men with No Names", suggests that 64 to 75 per cent of the dominant cryptocurrency, Bitcoin, has never been spent. So Byrne sees room for competitors in the crypto-arena - "in my view, the battle for supremacy in this market segment is far from over."
The Times, Daily Mail quote Sam Bowman on the failures of the planning system
Research Director at the Adam Smith Institute, Sam Bowman, was quoted by The Times and the Daily Mail on housing prices and the failure of the planning system.
Read the Daily Mail article here.
Excerpt from The Times:
Sam Bowman, from the Adam Smith Institute, a think-tank, cautioned that house prices in the capital were "out of control" and argued that the planning system was to blame. "This is a disaster. The housing market is out of control, particularly in London, making housing increasingly unaffordable for many people, particularly the poor and young," he said. The planning system "makes it inordinately difficult for new construction to take place to allow supply to meet demand," he added.
City AM quotes Ben Southwood on CPI fall
The Adam Smith Institute's Head of Policy, Ben Southwood, was quoted by City AM on the CPI drop.
Read the article here.
“After years of above-target annual CPI rises, then coupled with lacklustre growth or even retrenchment, below-target inflation at the same time as substantive recovery is highly encouraging,” said Ben Southwood of the Adam Smith Institute."
Sam Bowman quoted in City AM
Research Director of the Adam Smith Institute, Sam Bowman, was quoted in a City AM article regarding sky-rocketing housing prices in London, England.
Read the article here.
"This planning system is "the biggest cause of these runaway prices rises", says Bowman, and the solution is to cut it back.
"Unless the government liberalises planning radically to allow a huge amount of new house construction, house prices are likely to stay high for the foreseeable future," he says. As long as permits stay at rock bottom lows, then we can get used to prices that stop new buyers from getting on the property ladder."
Press Release: Housing market out of control; planning system to blame
Commenting on sky-rocketing house prices in London, Research Director of the Adam Smith Institute, Sam Bowman, said: "London’s house prices are out of control, and the planning system is to blame. The ONS’s headline data, which shows that house prices rose across the UK by 9.1% in the year to February, is extreme enough, but drilling down into the data reveals that prices rose in London by an eye-watering 17.7%.
"This is a disaster – the housing market is out of control, particularly in London, making housing increasingly unaffordable for many people, particularly the poor and young. Rising house prices are nice if you own your own home and are planning on downsizing or want to leave your house to your children, but if you want to get onto the property ladder or move to a larger home, say, to start a family, the price rises revealed by today’s news are devastating. Rents are rising more slowly than house prices but it seems likely that eventually they will catch up, particularly for short-term leases.
"Help to Buy is likely to be one factor in these price rises, because the scheme inflates demand by subsidizing home buying. [1] And if house prices fall, the taxpayer will take the hit. But the biggest cause of these runaway train price rises is the planning system, which makes it inordinately difficult for new construction to take place to allow supply to meet demand. Since 2008, issuance of construction permits for residential buildings has been at a fifty-year low [2].
"Unless the government liberalises planning radically to allow a huge amount of new house construction, house prices are likely to stay high for the foreseeable future
[1] http://www.adamsmith.org/wp-content/uploads/ASIburningdownthehouseWEB.pdf
[2] http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/ODCNPI03GBA661N
For further comment or to arrange an interview, contact Kate Andrews, Communications Manager, at kate@adamsmith.org / 07584 778 207.
The Adam Smith Institute is an independent libertarian think tank based in London. It advocates liberal public policies to create a richer, freer world.
Press Release: Fall in annual CPI inflation to 1.6%
Ben Southwood, ASI Head of Policy, commenting on the fall in annual CPI inflation to 1.6%, said:
"After years of above-target annual consumer price index (CPI) rises, then coupled with lacklustre growth or even retrenchment, below-target inflation at the same time as substantive recovery is highly encouraging.
"Disinflation is a worry in a time of weakness, but should be desired and expected in a time of strength—many economists believe the failure to account for the "good deflation" generated by productivity improvements from inward migration and developing world growth in the early 2000s set the scene for the 2007-8 crash.[1]
"Since this fall is accompanied by robust real GDP recovery, and appears to be mainly driven by cheaper fuels, we needn't be too worried that the Bank of England has decided to go the way of the European Central Bank and let nominal aggregates fall well below the appropriate and previously expected growth rates.
"But the difficulty of working out whether or not this inflation is in fact supply- or demand-side, and thus whether or not the Bank should respond by easing or doing nothing, is yet another indication that we should look to an alternative policy regime. Targeting nominal income would automatically let inflation fall when RGDP growth is strong and automatically let inflation rise when RGDP growth is weak—both the ideal appropriate policies.[2]
"The Treasury and the Bank should seriously consider this alternative—to take uncertainty out of the system and avoid a repeat of 2008."

[1] http://object.cato.org/sites/cato.org/files/serials/files/cato-journal/2008/11/cj28n3-1.pdf
[2] http://mercatus.org/sites/default/files/Sumner_NGDPTargeting_v2.pdf
For further comment or to arrange an interview, contact Kate Andrews, Communications Manager, at kate@adamsmith.org / 07584 778 207.
The Adam Smith Institute is an independent libertarian think tank based in London. It advocates liberal public policies to create a richer, freer world.
Eamonn Butler Writes for The Sunday Times
Director of the Adam Smith Institute, Dr Eamonn Butler, wrote an op-ed for The Sunday Times entitled: "Britain's fake growth totters along with the zombies."
Excerpt:
"Will the big, profligate governments of the G20 ever take a lesson from their more prudent partners, and sort out their banks, balance their books and trim their spending? Probably not. They still imagine that they can create real growth by slashing interest rates, printing money and borrowing whatever they need. But that is what caused our problems. If the world's big economies do not face up to reality, world economic growth is going precisely nowhere."
Press Release: Bank of England's decision to hold policy was the right choice
Commenting on the Bank of England's decision to hold policy, the Adam Smith Institute's Head of Policy Ben Southwood said:
"The MPC has made the right choice.
"The path of aggregate demand—as measured by nominal GDP growth—is just about where we'd want it, given the Bank's apparent decision to start a new trend rather than catching up with the one we saw prior to the recession.
"In general, and historically, we'd want to catch up to pre-recession trends, but by now most of the costs of failing to do so have probably been borne.
"It would certainly be inappropriate to tighten policy now—the recovery is only just setting in and there is considerable slack in the labour market, with nominal wages growing just 1.4% annually according to the latest data."
For further comment or to arrange an interview, contact Kate Andrews, Communications Manager, at kate@adamsmith.org / 07584 778 207.
The Adam Smith Institute is an independent libertarian think tank based in London. It advocates liberal public policies to create a richer, freer world.
Ben Southwood is Featured in City AM
The Adam Smith Institute's Head of Policy, Ben Southwood, was quoted in a City AM article, arguing that the Bank of England made "the right choice" to hold policy.
Read the article here.
"Ben Southwood, head of policy at the Adam Smith Institute, says that it's "the right choice" as the path of aggregate demand - measured by nominal GDP growth - as the current trend is "just about where we'd want it".
It would "certainly be inappropriate to tighten policy now", says Southwood, as nominal wages growing at just 1.4 per cent annually suggests there is still considerable slack in the labour market."
Media contact:
emily@adamsmith.org
Media phone: 07584778207
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