Daily Mail

Britain isn’t working

- Alex Brummer CITY EDITOR

THE crowded images from the Dorset coast, Southend and my home town of Brighton bring an uncomforta­ble thought to mind. My fear is that we are witnessing people dancing on the deck of an economic Titanic.

In the face of frightenin­g forecasts for output, jobs and the public finances the nation has been lulled into a false sense of security as a result of Covid-19 transfers of resources from the public purse to private sphere.

In spite of a tick tock of job losses at RollsRoyce, BA, Easyjet, Royal Mail, Centrica and almost certainly Intu, there are 9m employees on furlough. No doubt some are desperatel­y worried, but the scenes on the beaches make it look as though many don’t recognise that they could be next. Only the left- out 1m self- employed (without the right tax records) have been confronted with the reality of the frugal job seekers allowance or universal credit.

The Institute for Fiscal Studies noted a doleful legacy of the financial crisis of 200809 earlier this week. As the UK went into lockdown, pay was still stagnating for median income households. The less welloff in society were doing even worse, with five years of privation.

The banking meltdown resulted in a 4.1pc loss of output in 2008-9 or put another way, a 6.5pc drop from economic peak in 2007 to the trough a year later.

The formal data we have so far on the Covid-19 shows a peak to trough fall of a whopping 25pc. The IMF has forecast a decline of 10.2pc over the full year. Even if there is a bounce in 2021 the lost output will not quickly be recovered and the impact on jobs will be horrendous, with 1980s style unemployme­nt beckoning.

It is against this disturbing backdrop, together with the prospect of £300bn plus borrowing this year and £100bn or more next, that Rishi Sunak will have to weigh up his economic options in the days ahead. In the short term, he is under pressure to cut VAT on the grounds that even the modest reduction from 17.5pc to 15pc after the financial crisis added back one per cent to spending.

He may not be inclined to do so on the grounds that a build-up of savings, along with reductions in credit card debt in the pandemic, means that consumers have the spending headroom they need.

More pertinent is the risk of high unemployme­nt. As furlough is faded out between August and October Sunak will need to find new ways of incentivis­ing employment. A simple approach would be a cut in employers’ contributi­on to national insurance, making it cheaper to keep people on the payroll. Sunak might even have to reach back to the 1997 Gordon Brown playbook of a ‘New Deal’ for young people if he wants to keep university and school leavers in training.

The UK has offered massive fiscal and monetary support as part of the effort to rekindle output and jobs. But it still compares unfavourab­ly with what has been done in Germany and Japan. Germany went into Covid-19 with the luxury of a modest debt burden and the Japanese with the comfort that there is never any shortage of domestic demand for its government IOUs.

Sunak will have to make the most of limited fiscal capacity if a jobs catastroph­e is to be averted.

Rental strike

LANDLORDS rarely receive any sympathy. Intu, which has been serially mismanaged, with the accumulati­on of £4bn of debts, doesn’t deserve any.

However, some retailers have behaved disgracefu­lly in the Covid-19 crisis with Primark, Boots, JD Sports among those which unilateral­ly suspended rents.

In effect, the retailers were passing the Covid-19 risks up the chain to real-estate owners. These are not the grasping landlords of urban myth. They include companies such as British Land, property funds and insurers including Legal & General. Pension savers will end up paying for the unthinking behaviour of shopping mall occupants.

Grocery champ

PANDEMIC costs have soared to £830m at Tesco but it is having a good crisis.

It reports a near double digit same store sales gain. It is price matching German challenger Aldi on a range of goods and has revved up its online sales with a 33.5pc market share in grocery against Ocado’s 15.7pc. Departing boss Dave Lewis might have to admit he is a better grocer than financier with Tesco Bank operating losses hitting up to £200m.

Anyone fancy buying a bank?

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