Walking a tightrope
The Bank of England (BoE) meets on Thursday to talk policy. Unlike their counterparts across the Atlantic, the monetary policy committee is expected to keep rates at 5.0%.
According to job postings website Indeed, UK annual wage growth was 6.7% in the three months to 31 July. The official figure from the Office for National Statistics is a more staid 4%, yet even that amount of growth keeps up the pressure on labour-heavy services inflation (prices in cafes, cinemas, garages, law firms and the like), which is still above 5%. How quickly it comes down will influence how much further the Bank of England is willing to cut interest rates. The next update is on Wednesday, the day before the BoE meets, and headline inflation is forecast to remain at 2.2%. Best to watch the services component closely.
Last week the European Central Bank (ECB) cut its rate for the second time, from 3.75% to 3.50% in a unanimous decision (the first decrease had one dissenter). Recent data increased the committee’s confidence that inflationary pressures are under control, with Eurozone inflation for August falling from 2.6% to 2.2%. However, the core measure (which strips out volatile food and energy costs) is a little more stubborn at 2.8%. And services inflation actually ticked up from 4.0% to 4.2%. The ECB was convinced to cut rates because of the economic side of the ledger. Falling industrial production has led the central bank to trim its GDP growth forecast from 0.9% to 0.8% for 2024 and from 1.4% to 1.3% for 2025.
Speaking of more downbeat expectations, a report from the UK’s Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) painted a grim long-term picture of the public purse. The OBR projects that under current tax plans, unless productivity growth improves, the ratio of public debt to GDP will almost treble over the next 50 years. From 98% today – already the highest level in 60 years – it is slated to hit 274% by 2071. The main culprits for ballooning government spending are social care costs for the elderly, health spending, pensions and higher borrowing costs. Global warming is expected to have an impact as well, with climate-related damage projected to increase debt by 23% of GDP in a two-degree warming scenario by the mid-2070s, or by a third of GDP in a three-degree scenario.
This has only added fuel to concerns that the Budget on 30 October will deliver higher taxes. This came as an investigation into the state of NHS services called for investment, alongside reform to boost productivity and have more services provided in the community.
Cutting your way to growth isn’t a strong strategy, yet neither is spooking the bond market by spending with abandon. The government is walking a difficult path. It needs to encourage investment in the UK and work to improve the health and skills of its people. That won’t happen overnight and it costs money today. We await the Budget with interest.