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Saturday 15 October 2022

Real Resources

There was a useful Twitter exchange between Chris Bertram and Chris Dillow today that captured a fundamental truth about the UK economy: namely that with low unemployment the government lacks the human resources necessary to significantly invest in public services, and that there is little enthusiasm for the constraints on private consumption that could free those resources up. The last few weeks have been characterised as a struggle between monetary and fiscal methods - the now-departed Chancellor's plan for unfunded tax cuts at the upper end of the income scale versus the intervention of the Bank of England to prop up pensions funds as the cost of borrowing rose steeply. What this has occluded is the role of real resources, both capital and labour. The former is alluded to only in the context of fears that property prices may fall if higher borrowing costs crater the housing market, while the latter received only an indirect reference in the latest exhumation of the Britannia Unchained quote about British workers being among the world's great idlers.

I take a less pessimistic view of this quandry because it seems obvious to me that much of our capital and labour is currently misallocated - the evidence is there in the weak productivity data - and that can be changed. Unproductive capital can be taxed, which effectively means a portion of it can be reallocated to addressing the pitiful state of the public fabric, while the cost of labour can be increased to incentivise better allocation within the private sector. The latter would best be done through a combination of increased payroll taxes (i.e. employer NICs) and an increase in the minimum wage. Some businesses at the margin of profitability would go under, but that is precisely what we need given the long tail of low productivity firms. It would be nice to believe that businesses can raise their productivity endogenously, and some undoubtedly can and will, but the hard truth is that significant aggregate improvements come about through business churn and people moving jobs.

If the travails of the current administration have confirmed anything it is that conventional policy has run out road, even if that orthodoxy remains tenacious. If the cuts to public services a decade ago didn't alter the UK economy's long-term trajectory, another round of austerity now is hardly going to do the trick. And let's not forget that the delay to the Bank of England's unwinding of its quantitative easing programme isn't simply down to the bad timing of Liz Truss and Kwasi Kwarteng's mini-budget. The Bank has been unable to wean the financial markets off QE for the past 13 years. The return of Jeremy Hunt has been greeted by centrists as an "adults in the room" moment, but their determination to restore a status quo ante marked by low growth, widening inequality and a steady deterioration in the balance of payments is frankly perverse. So too is the suggestion that all will be well if we simply reverse Brexit: the mother of all u-turns that the liberal media are now urging on Keir Starmer as the Prime Minister-presumptive.


It's a commonplace to observe that Margaret Thatcher's desire to create a shareholding democracy through the privatisation of public assets failed. Those assets are now in the hands of foreign governments or international conglomerates while the number of indvidual private investors in British companies has steadily declined. But what this narrative misses is that she succeded in cultivating a new breed of petty capitalists and rentiers in the form of sole trader companies (there are now over 4 million of these) and buy-to-let landlords. Much of the hidden under-employment in the UK economy can be found among these micro-businesses, and many sole traders are only reluctantly self-employed: they'd prefer a better paid, more stable job with a bigger firm, not a "bonfire of red tape". The recovery of the rentier after the near-liquidation of the mid-twentieth century reflects not only widening inequality and greater financialisation but also the massive injection of capital into property, which in turn was the result of the state's deliberate withdrawal from the provision of public housing.

Given these characteristics, there is little reason to believe that the UK economy is about to turn the corner. Productivity growth will continue to be weak; house prices may stumble but without a massive public housing programme they will recover; and the balance of payments will continue to widen as the pound slowly drops and global inflation steadily rises. While the government's mini-budget was badly-timed and tone-deaf, the strong reaction of the financial markets clearly reflected a more profound correction in expectations about the country's prospects. This pessimism goes beyond disappointment with the choice of Conservative Party members, or worries about the future trading relationship with the EU. Centrists who insist that all our problems are of recent vintage, going back no further than 2010 or even 2016, are deluded. We are still suffering from the deindustrialisation of the early-1980s and the hubris that led to Black Wednesday in 1992. The New Labour years were simply a missed opportunity.

A rational policy would turn the state's punitive gaze away from welfare recipients towards the self-employed and small businesses. It would also shift the burden of taxation from income to accumulated wealth - property above all. Neither is likely to happen during the fag-end of the present government. Not only would such measures be anathema to Truss, or indeed any other Tory leader, but the time required to effect the changes and to see the benefits is too long to be considered at any point other than the start of a parliament. Assuming Labour next takes office, the centrist clamour for a "return to normality" suggests that the "hard choices" of a Starmer-led government would once more centre on hoary old debates about means-testing and the need to keep business sweet. Blairite outriders like Philip Collins are already preparing the ground: "Good social democratic virtues can be served without committing a single extra penny. “We will work with what we have” is a good and comprehensible approach that still leaves plenty of room for action."

We are trapped because the real resources of the economy, i.e. capital and labour, are not being put to efficient use, and there is no political will to take the steps necessary to rectify this. That lack of will isn't simply the result of calculations over the reaction of electorally-important groups such as homeowners. The truth is that the politico-media caste are perfectly happy with this state of affairs. While they have derided Liz Truss as an idiot, she wasn't wrong to talk of "managed decline" in this context. Obviously her insistence that only her plan to arrest this would work has proved a hostage to fortune, and her maladroitness has been spectacular, but her initiative went well beyond the usual "something must be done" new-broomism of previous Prime Ministers that invariably left the fundamentals untouched. What this debacle has proved is not just that the international financial markets retain the disciplinary power that Hayek celebrated but that the machinery of informal government, from Threadneedle Street to Fleet Street, remains dedicated to preserving the gains of Thatcherism.

4 comments:

  1. There is much to agree here, except for the point of view, which is that of a "benthamite", of the "greatest good for the greater number of people", which is not how politics works.

    The realistic part is that “electorally-important groups such as homeowners. The truth is that the politico-media caste are perfectly happy with this state of affairs. [...] remains dedicated to preserving the gains of Thatcherism.

    That is because the past 40 years have been perceived by the upper-middle and upper classes, including the “politico-media caste” as a boom, not as a decline, as their incomes, wealth and living standards have been rapidly rising.

    Those “gains of thatcherism” are largely those of homeownership, which has redistributed several trillions of income and wealth from the lower classes to the upper-middle and upper classes via booming house prices and rents.
    Essentially all members of the “politico-media caste” are propertied, often with significant portfolios, here is a rather minor example that came to light:

    https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/keith-vaz-how-mp-90k-8782028
    Keith Vaz: [...] The former Europe Minister and his wife Maria own seven properties between them. They jointly own a family home thought to be worth about £2.1million

    The "sponsors" of the “politico-media caste” are even more invested in property, here are some topical quotes:

    Boris Johnson: I think the vast majority will want to put their pots into the market with the greatest yield over the past 40 years – and that is property

    Chief Economist of the BoE: Haldane believes that property is a better bet for retirement planning than a pension. “It ought to be pension but it’s almost certainly property,” he said. “As long as we continue not to build anything like as many houses in this country as we need to ... we will see what we’ve had for the better part of a generation, which is house prices relentlessly heading north.”

    Mark Wright: Speaking about his first year in business with Lord Sugar, Mark Wright, the winner of last year’s Apprentice, said the Amstrad founder had given him tips on creating long-term wealth. “Lord Sugar said you make money from property and do business for fun. Many of our customers make money from property and I’d love to go into property development one day”

    Property-based redistribution has been so large and so long lasting that it has become the central concern of UK economic and political life, and those who shop at Waitrose, not to say Harrods, have no perception of decline, and the last thing they want is taxing of unproductive capital. As long as property-based redistribution continues I think that thatcherism is going to stay, regardless of what happens to the “Real Resources”, and I guess the “politico-media caste” will do whatever it takes to keep property booming, until there is a huge foreign trade crisis, because that is usually the one constraint that a self-dealing caste cannot evade.

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  2. «and her maladroitness has been spectacular»

    My usual comment as to this is that has happened a *according to the right-wing media*, which normally would have ignored or minimized the mistakes of a right-wing PM, and instead have been bigging them up since sometime after Johnson became PM. Her only major mistake was not to consider the effect of a rise in interest rates on bond prices; but I guess she did not expect that the BoE would suddenly rediscover (part of) their anti-inflation zeal, and stop pumping up asset prices, and most "aligned" Economists are trained to regard asset prices and balance sheets as irrelevant.

    The big deal that is rarely if ever noted is that the right-wing media have been campaigning against right-wing PMs like Johnson and Truss, instead of supporting them with eager servility as usual, because the media are (working for) right-wing globalists and the PMs are right-wing kippers. After all Johnson was brought down by stories about beers at "work" meetings and about expensive wallpapers, hardly major issues relatively speaking.

    The mechanism used is well known: most people cannot verify news themselves, so instinctively reckon that news coming from several sources are credible ("vox populi vox dei"), and even more so if there are no significant contradictory sources. Unfortunately that instinct works to some extent only if the sources are independent of each other.
    That has been used in the past to dispose of Sanders, Trump, Corbyn, Johnson with campaigns of allegations, because those targets had strayed beyond the "guardrails" of acceptable "centrist" politics.
    https://taibbi.substack.com/p/everybodys-saying-it-guardrails

    As to that here is a loud and passionate call (one of many) for widespread preventive censorship to ensure those guardrails are robustly enforced:

    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2022/oct/13/online-regulation-alex-jones-us-court-fine
    «There have always been Alex Joneses spreading poison from the world’s soap boxes and pavements. As a boy I used to listen to them at Speakers’ Corner in Hyde Park. We would turn away with a grimace from their rubbish, while a couple of police stood by in case of trouble. Their lies never made it into newspapers or on to the airwaves.
    Free speech went only as far as the human voice could carry. Beyond that, “news” was mediated behind a wall of editors, censors and regulators, to keep it from gullible and dangerous ears. [...] Justice can avenge lies – but not prevent them. [...] an ex-president with a fantasy can lead followers towards a coup in the capital of world democracy. [...] But if freedom is to be protected and treasured, this means the US and Europe acting in concert.
    »

    Side note: quite amusing to see a "journalist" not merely admit, but actually *boast* that MSM contents were and are managed by “a wall of editors, censors and regulators”.

    As long as property prices are booming, many voters don't care what else happens, they write a blank cheque to authorities that have gifted them with so much money (entirely redistributed from the lower classes) almost every year for decades.

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    Replies
    1. You cannot attribute it all to the media. Everyone knew that interest rates were going up (the US had already taken the lead) and the BoE had long flagged its intention to start selling gilts at this time. The mini-budget was stupidly timed: a fiscal expansion at a point when monetary contraction had already been priced in by the financial markets. This push-me-pull-you is what did the damage, not the rightwing media, much of which was initially strongly supportive.

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    2. Indeed the budget was not a smart move, with the miscalculation that the BoE would keep nominal interest rates lower, and the bond market would not crash.
      But most of the right-wing press while not creating this mistake has been attacking the kippers ferociously instead of minimizing or ignoring their issues as they would have done in different times.
      Consider the fall in the pound: not that big, compared to previous episodes, that were ignored or minimized, but has been talked up relentlessly.

      There is another tell, the biggest: given RPI at 12-14%, interest rates are deeply negative in real terms, and mortgages are also shrinking at the RPI rate in real terms, while rents are booming at RPI+3% as specified in "standard" contracts. But curiously the pretty yuuuge point is rarely made that credit policy is even more extraordinarily expansive than in recent decades, and the situation is almost universally described by the media as reckless kipper tax cuts leading to a credit crunch.

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