Bank of England to monitor Twitter and Facebook to set interest rates

New task force will look to "informal" data channels as Bank of England looks to modernise

Daniel Johnston
Tuesday 30 December 2014 07:04 EST
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Bank of England is looking to modernise the way it sets interest rates, Twitter could play a big factor (Rex)
Bank of England is looking to modernise the way it sets interest rates, Twitter could play a big factor (Rex)

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The Bank of England could use social networks such as Twitter and Facebook to help set its interest rates.

A new task force will investigate how unconventional sources of data such as web searches and social media activity could improve ways in which the Bank detects the nation’s economic health.

In an interview with Sky News, the Bank's chief economist Andy Haldane explained that previously untapped “informal” sources of data could be key to modernising the official streams of information currently used, introducing more timely data to the current system.

"Official statistics tend to be lagging and tend to be revised," he said. "And what this scraping of the web can do is give us a better today read on what's going on."

Examples of the sort of activity the new task force is looking to monitor include analysis of the frequency of job searches on Google to give insights into unemployment, and close monitoring of online shopping prices to help set inflation rates.

"We have a new advanced analytics team who are constructing little models, algorithms and methods for extracting this data", said Haldane, who revealed that the use of a “bid data” database on mortgages was influential in the Bank’s decision to impose new constraints on the housing market earlier this year. "This is quite a big strategic change for the bank. This is going to be quite a big shift from the past."

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