OPINION
Britain’s ‘emerging market’ crisis
Unfunded tax cuts are the last thing the UK should be
doing.
The markets will need to be convinced that the program
will deliver real GDP growth |
BY TIMOTHY
ASH
SEPTEMBER
27, 2022 4:01 AM
https://www.politico.eu/article/britain-emerging-market-crisis-gdp-growth-economic-policy/
Timothy Ash
is an associate fellow in the Russia and Eurasia program at Chatham House and a
senior sovereign strategist at Bluebay Asset Management.
For just a
minute, imagine a country that has been buffeted for years by political
instability. It has seen four prime ministers in just six years and three
general elections over the past seven. This country also held a referendum on
its relations with its neighbors, and voted to leave its main trading bloc,
leading to a collapse in its trade volumes and stalling growth.
While this
country calls itself a democracy, its new prime minister was chosen by members
of an elite club comprising just 0.2 percent of the actual electorate. And now,
this prime minister — who hasn’t even won a popular mandate to rule — has
launched a populist pro-growth agenda: Taxes on the top 5 percent are to be cut
in hopes of kick-starting growth and creating a trickle-down feel-good factor.
The United
Kingdom’s economy has deep structural problems, and a fundamental lack of
competitiveness as reflected in a current account deficit of over 8 percent of
GDP. Years of underinvestment in public services, education, housing and
transport have left a poorly skilled and regionally immobile labor force
struggling to fill the gaps left by the departure of foreign workers, which was
caused by the ruling party’s nationalist agenda.
Similarly,
years of underinvestment in the energy infrastructure has left the economy
dependent on energy imports and, with little storage capacity, dependent on the
vagaries of global spot prices. Inflation is rising, living standards are
falling and workers are striking for higher wages. A wage-price spiral looms.
The U.K.
government has met these challenges with bailouts and now tax cuts, which will
further boost already bloated budget and current account deficits, and increase
public debt. Experienced public servants, who might have critiqued such
economic policy, have been forced out, and an office for fiscal responsibility
has been told to delay publishing updated economic forecasts, for fear it might
show government plans in an unfavorable light.
Meanwhile,
the “independent” central bank governor has been undermined by constant carping
and whispers as to his competency from within the ruling party.
Predictably,
the market has been unconvinced by the new government’s dash-for-growth
economic policy. Borrowing costs for the government have risen, making its
macro forecasts now appear unsustainable. Everything is unraveling, and talk of
crisis is in the air.
All of the
above sounds like a classic emerging market (EM) crisis country. And as an EM
economist for 35 years, if you presented me with the above fundamentals, the
last thing I would now recommend is a program of unfunded tax cuts.
Sri Lanka
tried to do just that between 2019 and 2022, and it ended up in currency
collapse and default.
To begin
with, there’s little evidence to suggest that a package of hugely regressive
tax cuts can succeed in kick starting growth.
Fiscal
tightening seems to have been ruled out by Chancellor of the Exchequer Kwasi
Kwarteng’s desire to go for growth | Jack Taylor/Getty Images
Moreover,
with the starting point being a public-sector-debt to GDP ratio of close to 100
percent, the obvious question is, how will all this be financed?
The markets
will need to be convinced that the program will, indeed, deliver real GDP
growth, and achieve competitiveness gains to address the big account deficit.
The markets will also surely ask what the U.K.’s fundamental structural
problems are — is it high taxation and restrictions on bankers’ bonuses? Or do
the problems run much deeper?
I would
argue that the U.K.’s problems start with Brexit, itself the result of years of
underinvestment in education, housing and transport, which sparked a huge
north-south divide and helped fuel racism, which powered the Brexit vote.
Brexit
signaled that foreigners were not welcome in the U.K., and as a result, many
skilled foreign workers have now left. But low taxation won’t attract
international business back if the country isn’t perceived as open to
international labor — which it isn’t.
And even if
tax cuts could deliver growth, confidence in the U.K. is now so low that
international capital markets have little trust in the ability of British
policymakers to deliver.
Instead, in
reality, tax cuts likely mean a bigger current account deficit in the short
term, which will require either a weaker currency or higher interest rates, or
both, to narrow the external financing gap. Interest rate hikes will likely
cripple the housing market and force a deep recession, running counter to the
government’s pro-growth agenda.
As in many
EMs, in the U.K., the “independent” central bank is now being pressured by the
ruling party to hold pat on rates, which only risks a currency collapse, fears
of a sovereign debt crisis and, ultimately, a banking crisis.
In the EM
world, all of this would mean that financing gaps would need to be closed by a
combination of fiscal or monetary tightening, and/or currency adjustment,
perhaps put off for a time by foreign exchange (FX) intervention — but the Bank
of England’s FX reserves are limited.
An
alternative is to “phone a friend” — namely, the International Monetary Fund
(IMF). However, in an EM setting, if a country goes to the IMF, they would also
demand policy tightening, throwing out the country’s pro-growth agenda. Yet,
fiscal tightening seems to have been ruled out by Chancellor of the Exchequer
Kwasi Kwarteng’s desire to go for growth.
The only
option the U.K. has without the IMF, however, is for sterling to weaken even
more and U.K. borrowing rates to go higher. But the harsh reality is that even
this option would surely crimp growth as well.
It’s time
to face that the U.K. government’s growth agenda is simply wishful thinking.
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