Britain once rioted over the price of bread. What
would it take for us to confront greedflation today?
Andy
Beckett
We seem to wearily accept corporate profiteering as a
fact of life. But an ever poorer public can be pushed only so far
Fri 28 Apr
2023 06.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2023/apr/28/british-bread-greedflation-profiteering-poor
This
country’s rate of inflation, the worst in western Europe, is everywhere in most
people’s lives: in our anxious shopping and conversations, our late-night fears
and fraught pay negotiations, our cancelled or rationed pleasures, and our
sense of Britain’s shrinking possibilities. After the pandemic, Brexit, and
years of austerity and political chaos, to be experiencing the biggest
sustained fall in the national standard of living for over 60 years can feel
like the final straw.
Yet in the
endless conversations about the price of everything there is a frequent
absence. The role of increased profits in the cost of living crisis remains a
relatively neglected topic: sporadically raised by leftwing activists, business
analysts and economists, occasionally the reason for protests, but largely
avoided by the main parties, and seemingly not a consistently important issue
for the wider public. Brief periods of anger about profiteering, as happened
last year with the energy companies, give way to fatalistic silence.
In some
ways, this is a surprise. Over the past decade and a half, as the privatised
utilities have provided ever poorer service, reckless banks have required
expensive bailouts and executive pay has soared while average wages have
stagnated, big business has lost much of the authority it used to enjoy during
the Thatcher and Blair eras. To say that corporations are too greedy has become
commonplace, on the populist right as well as the left.
And there
is more and more evidence that aggressive profit-seeking has contributed
significantly to the inflation surge. Research released in March by the trade
union Unite showed that for the 350 largest companies listed on the London
Stock Exchange, “Profit margins for the first half of 2022 were 89% higher than
in the same period in 2019.” The Financial Times recently noted that across
western economies “[profit] margins reached record highs” during 2022, and
“remain historically high”. New terms have been coined to describe the
phenomenon: “greedflation” and “excuseflation” – the exploitation of our era’s
frequent crises to excessively hike prices.
The
awkwardness of these terms may explain why they haven’t quite caught on. But
there are deeper reasons why profiteering hasn’t become the issue it ought to
be. These reveal a lot about the state of our politics, and about how we think
of the economy.
Both Labour
and the Conservatives, after being critical of business under Jeremy Corbyn and
Boris Johnson, are now under more orthodox leaders, who are seeking economic
“credibility”. In speeches and at more discreet gatherings, they are competing
for the approval of the business establishment, seeing its support as essential
to winning the election and reviving the economy afterwards.
Keir
Starmer, it is true, has repeatedly and rightly attacked the “excess profits”
of energy firms. Yet, tellingly, he has not extended that critique to other
companies that, Unite’s research shows, have also been “profiteering”, such as
some of Britain’s supermarket chains, port operators and road hauliers.
Understandably,
from a party-political perspective, Starmer prefers to blame the government for
inflation and our economic problems generally. He rarely talks about the
current economy in a more fundamental and compelling way, as a rigged system
for distributing resources and rewards – a perspective that was such a novel
and welcome feature of Corbyn’s leadership. With Labour no longer providing a
clear economic analysis, many Britons remain greedflation’s uncomprehending
victims.
Yet the
passivity about profiteering can hardly just be blamed on Starmer. There is a
wider culture at work. In this country, it is generally believed that the main
duty of businesses is to maximise returns for their shareholders, despite the
fact that the 2006 Companies Act describes their duties much more widely. This
profit-fixated culture makes it hard to define what an excessive profit is, or
even to argue that such a thing can exist.
Beyond
these difficulties lies a more profound fatalism about the power of business.
In his 2009 book Capitalist Realism, the influential leftwing theorist Mark
Fisher described a “widespread sense that not only is capitalism the only
viable political and economic system, but also that it is now impossible even
to imagine a coherent alternative”.
The
accelerating climate crisis and drastically narrowed distribution of economic
rewards since 2009 have damaged capitalism’s claim to long-term viability. But
the difficulty for many people of imagining a different economy remains – which
is one of the reasons Corbyn did not win a general election. The idea of a
society where a cost of living crisis was not exploited by greedy companies
would almost certainly be dismissed by many voters as a fantasy.
The
succession of national crises and deterioration in living standards since the
late 00s have also accustomed many Britons to the idea that the country and
their individual lives are getting worse. Artificially inflated prices seem
just another problem, to work around rather than protest about. In the 18th and
19th centuries, Britons regularly rioted when they thought the price of bread
was unreasonably high, but nowadays, retail analysts tell us, consumers react
to inflation in essentials by shopping around, buying them in smaller
quantities or going without.
It’s just
about possible to see a political side to these contemporary responses: that
they are undeclared, individualised forms of consumer boycott. And they may be
having some effect. In the supermarkets I use, there are suddenly lots of
discounts on products that have had their prices hugely hiked over recent
months. This week it was announced that the rate of grocery inflation has
fallen slightly. Perhaps some of Britain’s profit maximisers are beginning to
realise that they have pushed their customers too far.
Yet if the
profiteering of the past two years is not to recur as soon as the next global
crisis gives cover, more collective and more official action will be needed:
wider windfall taxes, moves by regulators to break up Britain’s many undeclared
pricing cartels, and perhaps even government-imposed price controls on
essentials.
Is it
conceivable that such things could happen? Under as corporate a premier as
Rishi Sunak, it is very hard to imagine; and under the cautious Starmer, only a
little less so. Yet as rulers across the centuries have discovered, an ever
poorer public can ultimately become impossible to govern. If current or future
prime ministers have to choose between limiting profits and being pushed from
office, they probably won’t opt for the latter.
Andy
Beckett is a Guardian columnist
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