Monday, 5 September 2022

Can Liz Truss be another 'Iron Lady" of Britain?

According to Reuters, New British Prime Minister, Liz Truss faces a financial markets test. If she was planning big energy subsidies only, investors might not worry too much. But she plans tax cuts – and may pick a fight with the Bank of England (BoE) and trigger a trade war with the European Union (EU).

In many ways, Britain faces similar challenges to other European countries i.e. high inflation, rising interest rates, soaring energy prices and an imminent recession. Insofar as it stays in the pack, markets won’t single it out for special attention.

Britain faces extra risks. Inflation is particularly high, Brexit has damaged the economy and the country has a chronic current account deficit meaning it relies on foreign investors to pay its bills. Truss does not want to be part of any pack. She believes that bold supply-side reforms will launch the country onto a new higher-growth trajectory.

While that is not a bad ambition, she hasn’t presented a convincing strategy to deliver it. Rather, she looks like a populist prime minister who relishes confrontation.

According to media reports she is set to declare China a threat and has questioned Britain’s special relationship with the United States. She is also taking a hard line with the EU. She also wants to change the BoE’s mandate, which is to deliver price stability.

Up to now, Britain has been in the middle of the European herd on fiscal policy. Government debt was 100% of GDP at the end of the first quarter, not vastly above the EU’s 88%. Since last September Britain had allocated 1.6% of annual economic output to cushion consumers and businesses from the energy crisis, about the same as Germany and France, according to Bruegel, the Brussels-based think tank.

It’s still unclear what extra help Truss will give to support people with spiralling energy bills this winter. But it will be expensive. Just supporting households could top 50 billion pounds over the next year, or about 2% of GDP.

Helping businesses would require another mega-package. If gas prices stay high now that Russia has suspended some gas deliveries to Europe indefinitely, the government could face similar costs the following winter and beyond.

This bailout may end up being roughly in line with the rest of Europe. Germany announced a 65 billion euro energy package over the weekend.

The difference is that Truss will at the same time cut taxes on employment and reverse a planned rise in corporation tax, costing at least 30 billion pounds a year. And she does not seem to want to cut spending to compensate.

Truss is also dead set against funding her support package via windfall taxes on energy companies. This is a missed opportunity since the sector is set for excess profits of up to 170 billion pounds over the next two years, according to the Finance Ministry calculation.

High inflation might help the government by lowering the debt-to-GDP ratio. But this is not as much of a get-out-of-jail-free card as it is for some other countries, because a quarter of British government debt is linked to rising prices and just over a third has been bought by the BoE.

One area where Britain is already an outlier is that prices are rising faster than in other Group of Seven countries. Inflation jumped to 10.1% in July, and Citigroup analysts recently predicted it could reach 18.6% early next year.

As a result, the BoE will need to jack up interest rates sharply to re-establish price stability. It’s also minded to start selling government bonds later this month. These moves are unlikely to please Truss. Not only will they deepen the recession and hit her core voters; these will make it harder to fund a fiscal bonanza.

This could lead to further confrontation between Truss and the BoE. Although many investors agree that the central bank has been slow to nip inflation in the bud, the priority now is to bring prices under control. Financial markets will not appreciate anything that looks like tampering with the BoE’s independence.

Until recently investors viewed Britain part of the European pack. Both pound and the euro have fallen sharply against the US dollar this year – and government bond yields have been rising across the world. But there are now the first signs of jitters focused specifically on Britain. The yield spread between UK and German 10-year government bonds has widened by 0.3 percentage points in the past month. In the past 10 days, pond has fallen about 2% against the euro.

No comments:

Post a Comment