Saturday 27 June 2009

V's and W's

The media and politicians are currently doing a lot of speculating about when the recession is going to end in the UK. The government are forecasting that the 2nd half of 2009 will feature growth followed by strong (above trend) growth next year and beyond.

This is known as a V-shaped recession. Short and sharp followed by a quick recovery. In this instance, it is also accompanied by a group of flying pigs and songs from Elvis on the moon...

There are various other recession patterns, a popular one being a W-shape. This has the initial fall followed by a false recovery and then a 2nd dip as the economy actually heals itself. The early 80's is a good example of a W (or double dip) recession. The 2nd dip is where the pain is really felt - higher unemployment, major cutbacks, etc. Oh, and minor things like rioting and crime rising!

I might be overly pessimistic, but I think a W-shaped recession is a nailed on certainty despite what most of the media say! The Sunday Telegraph's Liam Halligan honorably excepted. The UK has a bit of a conundrum to solve, namely:
  1. Borrowing this year: approx £200bn (artificial stimulation of economy)
  2. GDP: approx £1400bn
  3. Increasing total debt (increased interest payments)
  4. Need to cut spending in future years
  5. 3 & 4 shrinks economy = recession
Note that the bank bailouts that everyone gets hot and bothered about are excluded from these numbers. That's even more borrowing to cripple our economy!

Looking at (1.), borrowed govt money now forms 10-15% of the total economy. The UK government takes in approximately £500bn in tax revenue, but is spending close to £700bn. As a guide, you would have to raise the basic rate of tax to 70p (from the current 22p) to balance this budget. What a balls-up! If you're not angry about this, then you should be...

The added problem is that the £200bn of extra stimulus does actually stimulate the 'real' (private sector) economy. So more than £200bn of the £1400bn GDP is linked to government debt. Let's say £300bn as an example. To balance the economy by cutting spending, GDP would have to drop 20% - which would be a horrendous depression.

We are stuck between a rock and a hard place. Raising taxes is not an attractive option - it becomes self-defeating after a while, failing to increase govt income. But at the same time, drastic cuts is not attractive as it would devastate the economy. There are no easy options...

What should we do? My simple answer is that we should not have come here in the first place. Dodging the question I know, but it is the fundamental point.

The UK/US dropped rates drastically in 2001 in the 'recession that never was'. We stimulated our way out of it by borrowing (and dropping rates drastically). But then we did not put the brakes on the boom that followed. We had chances to knock the boom on the head in 2003 and 2005 but chose not to do so. In doing this we just made the problem bigger. Now it is so big that we don't have a viable solution.

2005 made me angry at the time as it was such a missed opportunity. The UK dropped rates when we should have risen them (BoE Governor Mervyn King voted against the cut) - while the economy was doing a controlled slowdown. This made the boom worse and distorted the economy more. Consumer borrowing was £1100bn then - it is now £1470bn and will cause a lot more human misery. The public sector has had 2-3 more years of unnecessary growth. Unwinding that is going to be much messier in 2011 and beyond than it would have been if we had applied sensible thinking in 2006.

But we couldn't have predicted this all, I hear you say. Rubbish! It was painfully obvious that we were heading for the buffers from 2003 onwards. We just chose to look the other way because the value of our houses were going up and we were all getting rich quick...

We've had a major failing in leadership, particularly since 2001. Gordon Brown maintaining that public sector spending increases are the right thing in future just shows he does not get it at all. Maybe we should give him a 'V' of disapproval...

Budget Basketcases

I haven't posted much of late. The main reason for this is that there are a couple of big topics that I've meant to post about, but knowing it would take a while I have never bothered to start writing them. So I didn't post anything...

The big topic in front of us at present is Government spending. Namely all those deficits and 'stimulus plans'. Our ever thoughtful governments taking it upon themselves to spend ever larger sums of unearned cash to stop the recession getting worse. How considerate.

Or not in my view...

Let me explain. In days gone by, we used to have something called an economic cycle, the main cycle often being 14-16 years in length. This had periods of expansion (where we lowered debt) and periods of stagnation or contraction (where we borrowed more). But now, following the inspired policies of intellectual heavyweights like Dubya Bush and our own Gordon Brown we are now trapped in a situation of ever-increasing debt.

The graph below of US spending (from http://www.mwilliams.info/images/obama-budget-deficit.jpg) illustrates the point. Governments (led by UK/US) now are just borrowing obscene amounts for which there is no plan to repay, despite what the spin doctors / idiot journalists say. If anyone dares question this, they are dubbed a doom-monger who does not understand the need to get out of recession. But there is a cost associated with debt, even if you don't repay it. The UK govt is likely to borrow £200bn this year (and probably the same again in 2010). At 5% bond rates (the current level) this is £10 bn of interest just to service. If rates went up to 10%, it would rise to £20bn. That is equivalent to 5-6p on the basic rate of income tax. Big sums. Now try multiplying it by 5-10 years of culmulative borrowing....
Problem is this can't go on forever. At some point time will be called on this nonsense. The likelihood of the above 10 year forecast coming true is low in my view. In the last couple of weeks, the UK has been put on notice of a debt rating downgrade. This is the equivalent of the bond markets telling us to get our house in order quick. Inspired policies like printing money (sorry QE) won't get us out of this pickle. Indeed they will make it worse as debasing our currency discourages bondholding, further driving up bond rates. At some point, we'll have to act - possibly drastically as in places such as Iceland (headline interest rates fluctuating in 10-20% range) or Ireland (drastic public sector cutbacks and 10% pay cuts). If we don't then we'll be consulting the Bob Mugabe book of fiscal discipline for ideas!

Meanwhile our leaders put off much needed activity - similar to my blogging really...