Truss Takes a Bold Economic Gamble. Will It Sink
Her Government?
Three weeks into her term, Prime Minister Liz Truss’s
financial plans have thrown the markets and Britain’s currency into chaos and
put her future in peril.
Mark
Landler
By Mark
Landler
Sept. 27,
2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/27/world/europe/uk-economy-truss-pound.html
LONDON —
Prime Minister Liz Truss of Britain campaigned as a tax cutter and champion of supply-side
economics, and she won the race to replace her scandal-scarred predecessor,
Boris Johnson. Now she has delivered that free-market agenda, and it may sink
her government.
Four days
after Ms. Truss’s tax cuts and deregulatory plans stunned financial markets and
threw the British pound into a tailspin, the prime minister’s political future
looks increasingly precarious as well.
Her
Conservative Party is gripped by anxiety, with a new poll showing that the
opposition Labour Party has taken a 17 percentage point lead over the Tories.
It’s a treacherous place for a prime minister in only her third week on the
job.
Labour is
seizing the moment to present itself as the party of fiscal responsibility.
With some experts predicting the pound could tumble to parity with the dollar,
economists and political analysts said the uncertainty over Britain’s economic
path would continue to hang over the markets and Ms. Truss’s government.
“It’s
entirely possible she could be replaced before the next election,” said Tim
Bale, a professor of politics at Queen Mary University of London, who is an
expert on the Conservative Party. “It would be very, very difficult to conduct
a full-blown leadership contest again, but I wouldn’t rule anything out.”
That Ms.
Truss should find herself in this predicament so soon after taking office
attests to both the radical nature and awkward timing of her proposals. Cutting
taxes at a time of near-double-digit inflation, when central banks in London
and elsewhere are raising interest rates, was always going to mark Britain as
an economic outlier.
But the
government compounded the shock last Friday when the chancellor of the
Exchequer, Kwasi Kwarteng, unexpectedly announced that the government would
also abolish the top income tax rate of 45 percent applied to those earning
more than 150,000 pounds, or about $164,000, a year.
And Mr.
Kwarteng did not submit the package to the scrutiny a government budget
normally receives, deepening fears that the tax cuts, without corresponding
spending cuts, will blow a hole in Britain’s public finances.
Cutting
taxes at a time of near-double-digit inflation, when central banks in London
and worldwide are raising interest rates, has made Britain an economic outlier.
Cutting
taxes at a time of near-double-digit inflation, when central banks in London
and worldwide are raising interest rates, has made Britain an economic
outlier.Credit...Carl Court/Getty Images
On Tuesday,
the pound stabilized briefly against the dollar, as did 10-year rates on
British government bonds, though both began to gyrate later in the day after a
senior official at the Bank of England signaled an aggressive rise in interest
rates.
The International
Monetary Fund, which bailed out Britain in 1976, added to the deepening sense
of anxiety when it urged the British government to reconsider the tax cuts. In
a statement, it said the cuts would exacerbate inequality and lead to fiscal
policy and monetary policy working at “cross purposes.”
Already,
the specter of higher interest rates was causing the housing market to seize
up. Two major British mortgage lenders announced that they would stop offering
new loans because of the market volatility. Higher rates will hurt hundreds of
thousands of homeowners who need to refinance fixed-term mortgages — property owners,
analysts noted, who are the bedrock of the Conservative Party.
“It’s not
like the U.S., where people are on 30-year mortgages,” said Jonathan Portes, a
professor of economics and public policy at King’s College London.
An
estimated 63 percent of mortgage holders have either floating rate mortgages or
loans that will expire in the next two years. And the steep decline of the
pound means that interest rates will have to rise even further than they would
have merely to curb inflation.
Ms. Truss,
he said, could have taken a more cautious approach: rolling out the supply-side
measures first, like plans to untangle Britain’s cumbersome residential
planning rules and build more housing, which are hurdles to economic growth.
Then, when inflationary pressures had eased, the government could have cut
taxes.
But that
was never in the cards, Professor Portes said, because Ms. Truss and Mr.
Kwarteng are free-market evangelists who ardently believe that cutting taxes
will reignite growth, and because they have little more than two years to turn
around the economy before they face voters in a general election.
“This is
‘shock and awe,’” he said. “Truss, Kwarteng, and the people around them think
they had to act quickly. The longer they wait, the more the resistance will
build up.”
During the
campaign, Ms. Truss modeled herself on Margaret Thatcher, who also announced a
series of free-market measures after taking office as prime minister and
endured a turbulent couple of years. Unlike Ms. Truss, though, Thatcher worried
about curbing inflation and shoring up public finances; she even raised some
taxes during a recession in 1981 before reducing them in later years.
But
Thatcher came in after an election victory over an exhausted Labour government,
which gave her more time to weather the downturn and for her deregulatory
measures to take effect. She also got a lift after Britain vanquished Argentina
in the Falklands War in 1982, which uncorked a surge of patriotism.
“Thatcher
was thinking in 1979 that I only need to give voters something they like by
1982,” said Charles Moore, a former editor of The Daily Telegraph who wrote a
three-volume biography of the former prime minister. “Liz Truss hasn’t got this
amount of time.”
The better
analogy to Ms. Truss, he said, is Ronald Reagan, with his emphasis on tax cuts
and other supply-side policies, as well as his relative lack of concern for
their effect on public deficits. Like Thatcher, Reagan weathered a recession before
the United States began growing again in 1983. And like her, he had a cushion
before he had to face voters.
Ms. Truss,
by contrast, has taken office after 12 years of Conservative-led governments,
and three years into Mr. Johnson’s tenure. She will have to call an election by
the beginning of 2025, at the latest. The Labour Party, which had been divided
by Brexit and internal disputes, has been galvanized by the new government’s
chaotic start, in particular Mr. Kwarteng’s plan to cut the top tax rate, which
has allowed Labour to stake out a clear contrast on issues of economic equity.
Speaking at
the party’s annual conference in Liverpool on Tuesday, the Labour leader, Keir
Starmer, declared that the Conservatives “say they do not believe in
redistribution. But they do — from the poor to the rich.”
Keir
Starmer’s Labour Party is seizing the moment to present itself as the party of
fiscal responsibility.Credit...Henry Nicholls/Reuters
Labour’s
lead of 17 percentage points in a new poll by the market research firm, YouGov,
is the largest advantage it has had over the Conservatives in two decades. The
Tories won the support of just 28 percent of those surveyed, raising questions
about its ability to hold on to its existing seats, according to Professor Bale.
That
forbidding political landscape only adds to the challenge facing Ms. Truss. For
the tax cuts to have one of their desired effects — which is to encourage
businesses to invest more — economists said companies would need some
reassurance that the policy is not going to be reversed by a new government in
two years.
“This is a
very inexperienced government swinging for the fences in a situation where
Labour is the strong favorite in the next election, if they don’t swing too far
left,” said Kenneth S. Rogoff, a professor of economics at Harvard. “If one
believes that the tax cuts are going to be reversed under Labour, and that
there is a high chance of a Labour government, why would they influence
long-term investment?”
Britain,
Professor Rogoff said, was also rowing against much greater forces in the
global economy. After years of low inflation and extremely low interest rates,
the flood of public spending because of the coronavirus pandemic has brought
back the scourge of inflation and a shift toward higher rates.
“The
verdict will almost certainly be that governments borrowed too much and should
have raised taxes on the wealthy more,” he said.
In the
short term, Ms. Truss is likely to find herself increasingly at odds with the
Bank of England. The bank was already expected to raise rates at its next
meeting in November. On Tuesday, its chief economist, Huw Pill, said the
government’s new fiscal policies would require a “significant monetary policy
response.”
Adam S.
Posen, an American economist who once served on the Bank of England’s monetary
policy committee, said, “The government’s policies are not only outrageously
irresponsible, but they don’t seem to understand that the bank has to respond
to these policies by raising interest rates a lot.”
Mr. Posen,
who is the president of the Peterson Institute of International Economics,
likened Britain’s loss of credibility in the markets to that of Britain and
other European countries in the 1970s and Latin American countries in the
1980s. The best course, he said, would be for the government to reverse its
fiscal policy, though he said Ms. Truss and Mr. Kwarteng seemed “willfully
committed to it.”
Certainly,
they have given no indication that they plan to back down. On Tuesday, Mr.
Kwarteng told bankers and asset managers that he was confident the government’s
plan would work.
After the
turmoil that led to Mr. Johnson’s ouster in July, and the protracted contest to
replace him, few in the Conservative Party have the stomach to move against Ms.
Truss now. But analysts note that the new prime minister has a shallow
reservoir of support among lawmakers. Barely a third of them voted for her in
the final ballot against her primary opponent, Rishi Sunak, and she won the
subsequent vote among party members by a closer margin than expected.
Taking note
of the new YouGov poll, Huw Merriman, a Conservative lawmaker, may have spoken
for many of his colleagues when he said on Twitter, “Those of us who backed
Rishi Sunak lost the contest, but this poll suggests that the victor is losing
our voters with policies we warned against.”
“For the good
of our country, and the livelihoods of everyone in our country,” he added, “I
still hope to be proven wrong.”
Mark
Landler is the London bureau chief. In 27 years at The Times, he has been
bureau chief in Hong Kong and Frankfurt, White House correspondent, diplomatic
correspondent, European economic correspondent, and a business reporter in New
York. @MarkLandler
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