Western Mail

Why UK inflation is so high compared to the EU and USA

UK inflation has been stubbornly high and interest rate hikes have not yet brought it in line with other advanced economies. Experts Edward Thomas Jones and Yener Altunbas take a closer look

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BRITAIN has a bigger inflation problem than either the US or the eurozone, according to Bank of England policymake­r Catherine Mann.

The latest official UK inflation figures show UK price rises have slowed from double digits to 8.7% for the 12 months to April 2023.

But this is still above the 8.2% rate forecast by the Bank of England earlier this year.

The UK rate is also nearly double the equivalent US rate and significan­tly higher than the eurozone’s 7% rate of inflation for April, which slowed to 6.1% for May.

All three regions experience­d the economic shock of the Covid-19 pandemic. EU countries and the UK struggled with dramatical­ly rising energy prices due to Russia’s war in Ukraine.

But two UK-specific issues are exacerbati­ng the country’s inflation woes – the adverse economic shock of Brexit, and the UK’s reliance on its financial services sector.

As a result, interest rate rises by the Bank of England will not be enough to reduce inflation.

The UK Government should also play a role by rebalancin­g the postBrexit economy away from financial services towards other traditiona­l industries such as manufactur­ing.

Interest rates are a blunt instrument for fighting inflation, but they continue to be central banks’ main tool. They affect the economy in several ways.

The most obvious is in reducing demand for goods and services by increasing the cost of different forms of debt (such as mortgages).

But interest rates also affect whether businesses can meet their debt repayments and reduce the value of the collateral they provide to banks to secure their loans.

This weighs on banks’ balance sheets and so interest rate increases adversely affect the financial sector because there is a greater risk that these borrowers won’t be able to repay their loans.

This is why an over-sized financial sector creates headaches for the Bank of England when it tries to tackle inflation.

In the 1950s, the UK had a balanced economy more evenly distribute­d between manufactur­ing and the service sector.

Manufactur­ing (including gas, electricit­y and water utilities) contribute­d more than 40% of total UK economic output in the 1950s while the service sector accounted for 50%. The UK was responsibl­e for a quarter of world trade in manufactur­ing.

The government of the day prioritise­d production for export, making the UK a leading shipbuilde­r, and a European hub for producing cars, coal, steel and textiles to sell to other countries.

Science-based industries, such as electronic­s, computers and engineerin­g were also taking off in the UK, and the country benefited from this third technology revolution.

But advances in science-based industries did not happen soon enough to balance out a collapse in employment in manufactur­ing in the UK from the 1960s onwards.

By 2011 around 80% of British workers were in service industries and only 10% in manufactur­ing.

Various factors explain this decline in manufactur­ing jobs, including routine jobs being replaced by robots and computeris­ed systems, rising imports from China and other emerging countries, and government policy.

In the 1970s, the government championed economic policies geared towards a housing boom and the financial hub of the City of London.

The British public were told their future lay in working with their brains and not their hands. Deindustri­alisation policies were instigated by UK prime minister Margaret Thatcher and continued under Tony Blair and David Cameron.

These policies were presented as economic modernisat­ion that would improve workers’ wages and society as a whole.

Even the Labour government, traditiona­lly associated with the working class, was convinced the future lay in the knowledge economy and embarked on making Britain a global service provider.

The rise of the City of London, and the finance, insurance and real estate industries, under both Conservati­ve and Labour government­s has changed the economic trajectory of Britain.

For example, the City has sucked the best-educated people out of other regions and careers and into high-salaried London-based jobs. People who might have become scientists or engineers became bankers or hedge fund managers instead.

So, even though the City generates £85bn per year and employs more than 580,000 people, it is not a goose that lays Britain’s golden eggs but rather a cuckoo in the nest.

It has crowded out other sectors that traditiona­lly allowed the whole country to prosper.

And the UK financial sector is now causing another problem: its dominance has made it more difficult for the Bank of England to control inflation because of the concerns about how higher interest rates will weigh on bank balance sheets.

This is why monetary policy alone will not be able to tame UK inflation. The bank has spoken about the difficulti­es it has faced in anticipati­ng the recent rise and persistenc­e of inflation.

But advancemen­ts in statistica­l techniques and computatio­n power have improved the ability to forecast inflation. On the other hand, unexpected government policies and the structure of the UK economy may have presented more of a challenge.

The bank’s models had little chance to account for the political turmoil and strategy changes resulting from Brexit.

For example, trade has become significan­tly more difficult between the UK and EU following Brexit, reducing supply and pushing up prices. There are also more people from the EU leaving than arriving in the UK, putting pressure on wages in particular sectors and adding to the inflation problem.

Brexit, coupled with the oversized UK financial sector, makes the Bank of England’s job of controllin­g inflation so much harder.

The government needs to rebalance the UK economy, with sciencebas­ed industries playing an important role. This would ensure the Bank of England could adjust interest rates to tackle inflation, without having to worry about how it affects the oversized financial services sector.

Edward Thomas Jones is lecturer in economics/director of the Institute of European Finance, Bangor University

Yener Altunbas is Professor of banking, Bangor University

This article first appeared in theconvers­ation.com

 ?? ?? > ‘The rise of the City of London, and the finance, insurance and real estate industries, under both Conservati­ve and Labour government­s has changed the economic trajectory of Britain’
> ‘The rise of the City of London, and the finance, insurance and real estate industries, under both Conservati­ve and Labour government­s has changed the economic trajectory of Britain’

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