Although the inquiry exonerated all involved, the details of the interactions between private financial institutions, the
Bank of England, and the government created quite a public stir. The economist and journalist
Andrew Schonfield criticised the
Bank of England as an outmoded and sluggishly amateurish operation, and
Labour continued to criticise the
Macmillan Government for its perceived cosiness with high finance. The inquiry ran concurrent to the ongoing Committee on the Working of the Monetary System under the chairmanship of the esteemed
Lord Radcliffe, which produced the
Radcliffe Report in 1959. Although the extent of the report's impact is debated, it was a further focus of dissatisfaction with the monetary system as it was operating in the 1950s. The
Radcliffe Report made several recommendations regarding reform of the
Bank of England, particularly with regard as to how
Official Bank Rate was to be set and how decisions in its changes were to be communicated. For example, part-time and non-executive directors of the Bank of England were to be excluded from discussions of Bank Rate. Although few of the recommendations of the
Radcliffe Report were immediately implemented by government, the report's findings reinforced a discontent with the monetary system that had also been expressed throughout the proceedings of the Bank Rate Tribunal. ==References==