Britons ‘need to accept’ they’re poorer, says
Bank of England economist
Chief economist Huw Pill says workers and firms should
stop trying to pass on rising costs by hiking prices or demanding better wages
Graeme
Wearden
Tue 25 Apr
2023 16.09 BST
British
households and businesses “need to accept” they are poorer and stop seeking pay
increases and pushing prices higher, the Bank of England’s chief economist, Huw
Pill, has said.
Pill said a
game of “pass the parcel” is taking place in the economy – as households and
companies try to pass on their higher costs.
Speaking on
a podcast produced by Columbia law school, Pill said it’s natural for a
household to seek higher wages in response to soaring energy bills, or for a
restaurant to increase its prices.
However, he
said the UK is a big importer of natural gas, and its price has gone up a lot
compared with the exports, mainly services, which the UK sells to the rest of
the world.
“If the
cost of what you’re buying has gone up compared to what you’re selling, you’re
going to be worse off,” he said.
“So somehow
in the UK, someone needs to accept that they’re worse off and stop trying to
maintain their real spending power by bidding up prices, whether higher wages
or passing the energy costs through on to customers.
“And what
we’re facing now is that reluctance to accept that, yes, we’re all worse off,
and we all have to take our share.”
“Instead,
[people] try and pass that cost on to one of our compatriots, saying ‘we’ll be
all right, but they will have to take our share too’.
“That pass
the parcel game that’s going on here … that game is generating inflation, and
that part of inflation can persist.”
Last year,
BoE governor Andrew Bailey, was widely criticised after saying workers should
not ask for big pay rises, to try to stop prices rising out of control.
Pill’s
comments risk attracting fresh criticism that Threadneedle Street is out of
touch over the cost of living crisis, at a time when public sector workers have
been striking as they sought pay rises to match, or beat, inflation.
They come
on a day in which Nestlé, PepsiCo and McDonald’s have all reported that higher
prices boosted their sales this year, and as UK families face 17.3% grocery
inflation in supermarkets.
Bailey was
paid £495,000 in the year to 28 February 2022, while Pill was paid £88,000 for
his first five months and 24 days, according the the central bank’s annual
report, taking his annual salary to £180,000. According to the latest official
data, median average household disposable income last year was £32,300.
The
headline rate of inflation in the UK fell by less than expected in March, to
10.1% from 10.4% in February, as households came under pressure from food and
drink prices soaring at their fastest annual rate since 1977.
The Bank is widely expected to increase interest rates
for the 12th time in a row next month, by 0.25 percentage points to 4.5%, as it
attempts to curb inflation.
During the
podcast, Pill explained that “inflation has been higher than we expected for
longer, for an undesirably long time”, and that central banks have lifted
interest rates to fight rising prices.
However, he
said a series of shocks had all pushed inflation in the same direction, meaning
price pressures had not dissipated.
First, the
Covid-19 pandemic disrupted supply in the economy, just as the US government
was handing out stimulus cheques to citizens in the lockdown. Those cheques led
to increased demand for consumer goods, allowing retailers to lift prices.
Just as the
pandemic inflation shock was easing, Russia turned off gas supplies to Europe,
driving up wholesale energy prices by over 1,000%.
“That had a
massive contribution to inflation,” Pill says, and while gas prices have fallen
recently from their Ukraine war highs, food price inflation is now
accelerating.
In the UK,
food and non-alcoholic drink inflation is the highest in 45 years, with prices
rising by over 19% in the year to March.
Last month,
the Unite union reported that large corporations have fuelled inflation with
price increases that go beyond rising costs of raw materials and wages.
This trend
of “greedflation” is causing growing concern in central banking circles, given
companies have had little trouble in hiking their prices.
“Many
companies have taken advantage of the return of inflation to inflate their
prices excessively, at the risk of stimulating an inflationary spiral,” warned
Charles-Henry Monchau, chief investment officer at Bank Syz, the boutique Swiss
private bank.
“The idea
is simple: when world prices rose because of supply and demand, companies
raised their prices. But they didn’t just raise them to cover higher costs.
They have fuelled inflation with price increases that go beyond the rise in raw
material costs and wages, pushing their revenues to record levels,” Monchau
said.
The
weakness of the pound has also pushed up the cost of imports. Sterling fell to
a record low last autumn after the mini-budget chaos, hitting $1.03, but has
now recovered to about $1.24. Before the 2016 Brexit vote, the pound was
worth almost $1.50.

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