The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Crisis of confidence was years in the making

Britain’s financial turmoil gets from bad to worse

-

LONDON: Britain is in a self-inflicted financial crisis that threatens to accelerate the economy’s dive into recession – and the country’s new prime minister is coming under intense pressure to blink.

In the week since the government unveiled the biggest tax cuts since 1972 with scant detail of how they will be financed, the pound has crashed to its lowest-ever level against the dollar.

The cost of insuring British government debt against the risk of default has soared to the highest since 2016, and the Bank of England (BOE) has been forced to intervene amid concerns about the nation’s pension funds.

What happens next will determine just how deep the looming recession proves.

Central to that question is whether Liz Truss’s three-week old administra­tion can restore its credibilit­y with investors.

Today’s mini-budget has become a flashpoint for not just investors’ short-term concerns about unfunded tax cuts at a time when inflation is running close to a four-decade high, or the Boe’s failure to contain price growth.

It has given sharp focus to their long-held fears about Britain, its current-account deficit, its fractious relationsh­ip with its closest trading partner and, above all, a mistrust of what successive politician­s promise.

“It’s the latest in a long line of self-imposed economical­ly illiterate decisions,” said Peter Kinsella, global head of foreign exchange strategy at Union Bancaire Privee UBP SA in London.

“It started with Brexit, and now we’re seeing the latest iteration.”

As markets tumbled, the BOE was forced into action to prevent a gilt market crash – and deployed a variant of a policy tool Truss spent recent months criticisin­g.

It promised to buy whatever long-dated gilts were needed to restore order to the market.

That set off a rally in long-dated gilts – but increases two risks: that the bank will have to raise rates even further within weeks, and that investors could take fright at whether the BOE is bankrollin­g the government.

For now, though, the BOE has bought the “government time to fix its credibilit­y,” according to Kallum Pickering, senior economist at Berenberg Bank.

How they use that time will be crucial. Top bankers in the City of London yesterday urged chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng to reassure markets before a planned statement on Nov 23.

Truss, who hasn’t appeared in public since Friday, is preparing for her first speech to the Conservati­ve Party conference as prime minister next week.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, which came to the United Kingdom’s rescue in 1976, has already urged the government to reconsider its tax cuts.

Famed economists are lining up to warn the UK is displaying the hallmarks of an emerging market. The problem for Truss is that she made the tax cuts the centrepiec­e of her programme for government.

An about-turn so early into her tenure would be politicall­y fatal: She only won office thanks to the backing of grassroots party members.

Most MPS in her own party voted against her, leaving her exposed to a backlash if they sense her policies will lead to defeat.

While Britons wait to see if her gamble on “trickle-down” economics pays off, they face a dramatic increase in borrowing costs – something that could trigger a housing crash and deepen any recession – or a round of swingeing public spending cuts.

“Between Brexit, how far the BOE got behind the curve and now these fiscal policies, I think Britain will be remembered for having pursued the worst macroecono­mic policies of any major country in a long time,” said former US Treasury secretary Lawrence Summers, now a professor at Harvard University and paid contributo­r to Bloomberg Television.

The Treasury declined to comment for this story.

The crisis of confidence had been brewing for years. Dubious claims from the ruling Conservati­ves – ranging from Brexit’s benefits to parties in Downing Street during lockdown – together with the recent ousting of the Treasury’s top official and the side-lining of the country’s budget watchdog meant investors didn’t believe the chancellor when he promised to stabilise the public finances.

The markets “aren’t willing to trust the Truss administra­tion’s claims that it will deliver medium-term fiscal sustainabi­lity on the basis of its word alone,” said Allan Monks, an economist at Jpmorgan Chase & Co in London.

“That reflects a broader distrust in markets about how UK policy making has been evolving – and in our view, that distrust is entirely justified.”

Nothing illustrate­s it better than the slide in the pound.

It’s fallen from a high of more than US$2 (RM9.26) in 2007, just before the financial crisis, to US$1.50 (RM6.94) at the time of the Brexit referendum, and is now on the brink of parity with the dollar.

“Because the UK has damaged its once strong credibilit­y with a poorly managed Brexit and persistent threats of a Uk-european Union trade war, it no longer enjoys the benefit of the doubt,” said Berenberg’s Pickering.

For Jpmorgan’s Monks, the doubts set in before the 2016 Brexit referendum, accelerate­d after the shock result, and culminated in recent attacks on the central bank, the judiciary, and the civil service. That background of mistrust may have obscured some of the mini-budget’s beneficial reforms.

Simon French, chief economist at Panmure Gordon & Co, said the mishandlin­g of the minibudget was “a shame” because several of the supply-side reforms in areas like planning “have real merit.”

Neverthele­ss, today’s act of fiscal largess – being unfunded – marked a major break from the economic traditions of Truss’s Conservati­ve Party.

The government still needs to set out how it will cover the additional borrowing required to fund its £45bil (Rm225bil) of tax cuts and further £60bil (Rm300bil)-plus for its programme to offset the recent surge in energy bills.

Those measures will drive up the country’s budget deficit to 4.5% of gross domestic product (GDP).

That would be enough to put the debt burden on an explosive path, hitting 101% of GDP by 2030, according to Bloomberg Economics.

In the meantime, the BOE will come under mounting pressure.

The central bank has spent much of the year struggling to raise interest rates fast enough to combat a surge in inflation it failed to predict.

The BOE is now all but guaranteed to respond to the looser fiscal policy with tighter monetary policy. Money market traders are now betting on at least a 150 basis-point rise in interest rates by the policymake­rs’ next gathering on Nov 3.

Setting aside the risk of an emergency hike outside of scheduled meetings, that would be a move unpreceden­ted since the bank was granted independen­ce by the government in 1997.

Pricing also shows the benchmark rate will almost certainly hit 6% next year.

Companies and homeowners are now bracing for a steep increase in borrowing costs.

The biggest British firms already face the highest cost on record to refinance their debt. The Resolution Foundation estimates that the additional increase in rates could add more than £1,000 (RM4,997) to the annual cost of a typical £140,000 mortgage (RM700,000). — Bloomberg

 ?? ?? Tighter policy: A woman walks past the BOE in London. money market traders are now betting on at least a 150 basis-point rise in interest rates by the central bank. — reuters
Tighter policy: A woman walks past the BOE in London. money market traders are now betting on at least a 150 basis-point rise in interest rates by the central bank. — reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia