Quantitative tightening? Britain’s 1980s experiment with overfunding

Staff working papers set out research in progress by our staff, with the aim of encouraging comments and debate.
Published on 22 May 2026

Staff Working Paper No. 1,183

David Ronicle

This paper presents the first in-depth empirical assessment of the Bank of England’s ‘overfunding’ policy, a neglected historical episode that may offer insights about quantitative tightening. Overfunding – government bond issuance in excess of fiscal financing needs – was used as an active monetary policy tool in the early 1980s to slow money growth. Exploiting high frequency issuance announcements and a novel external instrument derived from money market segmentation, I show that overfunding shocks had countervailing effects on asset prices. Excess gilt issuance raised long-term yields, via a portfolio balance channel, but reduced short-term rates, potentially through signalling effects. These offsetting forces led to limited effects on inflation and monetary aggregates. This offers a valuable insight for policymakers now – that the different channels of quantitative tightening can be exploited to calibrate the aggregate effects of balance sheet unwind.

Quantitative tightening? Britain’s 1980s experiment with overfunding