The UK economy is about to be thrown into a black
hole – by its own government
Larry
Elliott
It fits the definition of madness to propose more
austerity. But that, along with higher interest rates, is what’s coming
Illustration: Eleanor Shakespeare/The Guardian
Wed 2 Nov
2022 16.24 GMT
Economic
policy in the UK is peppered with the language of S&M. The Treasury demands
budgetary discipline. The Bank of England sees the need for monetary
tightening. Policymakers talk of the need to avoid “fiscal dominance”. Only in
Britain could there ever have been an instrument of monetary control known as
the corset.
Judging by
the way in which the Treasury and the Bank are behaving, it’s easy to see why
the novelist Anthony Burgess once described the English as “profoundly
masochistic”. A great deal of self-inflicted pain is about to be administered,
but for its victims there will be no pleasure involved.
Here’s the
current state of the nation. The economy is going backwards. National output is
lower than it was at the start of the pandemic. Property prices have started to
fall. Households have started to increase the amount they save in anticipation
of hard times ahead. Living standards are falling because wages are not keeping
up with prices. Despite the government’s price cap, average energy bills are
double what they were a year ago. Officials are “war-gaming” the possibility of
week-long energy blackouts this winter. NHS England has more than 7 million
people on its waiting lists. Food bank usage is soaring.
And what’s
the response to this? Well, the Bank of England’s monetary policy committee is
about to raise interest rates for an eighth meeting in a row, because it is
worried that high inflation will set off a wage-price spiral. The City expects
a 0.75 percentage-point increase to 3%, and a signal from Threadneedle Street
of more to come. The Bank knows what it is doing will cause pain, but says
that’s better than even more pain later.
Yet there
are none of the classic signs of the economy overheating. The Bank admits that
cost of living pressures are mainly caused by global factors outside its
control, such as supply chain bottlenecks after the end of Covid-19 lockdowns
and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The high level of job vacancies is not the
result of excessively strong demand but because workers, mainly those aged 50
and above, have left the labour force. In those circumstances, raising interest
rates is a particularly blunt instrument.
Meanwhile,
the chancellor, Jeremy Hunt, is preparing an autumn statement on 17 November
that will raise taxes and cut public spending. He has already told voters to
brace themselves for decisions of “eye-watering” difficulty. Hunt’s message is
that Britain has been living beyond its means, and that a new era of austerity
is needed to fill the black hole in the state’s finances. Or, to put it another
way, we’ve been naughty and deserve to be punished.
If there
was really such a thing as a fiscal black hole, it might be a good idea to fill
it, but the idea that Britain is about to sucked into a vortex because it is
running a budget deficit is a fairytale. A country that has its own currency,
as the UK does, can print money to cover its spending. While it is never
admitted, the Bank of England’s quantitative easing – large-scale buying of
bonds – effectively funded government deficits during both the global financial
crisis and the pandemic. There is no black hole because there is no way the
government can ever run out of money.
David
Blanchflower, a member of the MPC during the global financial crisis, says the
UK looks set to repeat the policy mistakes made back then – and his warning is
timely. In September 2008, a month before Royal Bank of Scotland came within
hours of running out of cash, the Bank was considering raising interest rates
because it feared inflation would become embedded. The real threat, as
Blanchflower pointed out at the time, was of a monster recession. Within
months, official borrowing costs had been cut from 5% to a then record low of
0.5%.
The
Treasury is living proof of the notion that insanity is doing the same thing
over again and expecting a different result. In 2010, just as the economy was
starting to recover from the crash, George Osborne decided that the time was
right to start hacking away at the budget deficit. Just as today, tax increases
and spending cuts were deemed vital to keep the financial markets sweet.
An early
critique of Osbornomics came from Ed Balls in August 2010, when he was pitching
to become leader of the Labour party. Yes, Balls said, there needed to be a
credible plan to reduce the budget deficit and the national debt, but only when
the economy had fully recovered. By doing too much too soon, the coalition
government was “undermining the very goals of market stability and deficit
reduction which their policies are designed to achieve.”
Balls was
making a straightforward Keynesian argument. JM Keynes did not believe in
permanent budget deficits, and thought in good times that the state’s income
should exceed its spending. But he was adamant that it was self-defeating to
tighten policy during a downturn, as happened during the Great Depression.
Doing so would make matters worse in every respect: slower growth, higher
unemployment and a bigger deficit.
The same
applies now, only more so. Things are worse than in 2010 because then, the Bank
of England kept borrowing costs at rock-bottom levels while the Treasury
imposed its austerity programme. Currently, both the Bank and the Treasury are
tightening policy at the same time: a policy stance guaranteed to make the recession
deeper and longer.
It is not
just that unemployment and poverty will rise. Cuts to capital spending will
mean more productivity-sapping delays on the country’s creaking infrastructure.
The ill health that explains some of the absence of the over-50s from the
labour force calls for more spending on the NHS. There is a case for lower
taxes to stimulate investment, targeted at small and medium-sized businesses.
But even
though it should be obvious that more austerity will make structural economic
problems worse, the UK is firmly in the grip of a technocratic, economic
orthodoxy that insists budgets must be balanced, inflation tamed and markets
kept sweet. The consensus among the commentariat is that there is no real
alternative to what the Bank and the Treasury are doing. Credibility is the
priority.
This
argument has been deployed before. It was used in 1925, when the consensus
agreed there was no alternative to putting the pound back on the gold standard.
It was used in 1990, when the consensus was that there was no alternative to
joining the exchange rate mechanism. Eventually, the “no gain without pain”
approach was seen to lack credibility, and abandoned. But only after immense
damage was done.
Larry
Elliott is the Guardian’s economics editor
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