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The threats from Iran

April 15, 2024 141 Comments

President Biden changed US policy towards the Middle East in 2020. He pulled out of Afghanistan too suddenly, losing a crucial air base and undermining  his allies. It led directly  to the Taliban taking the country over, after 20 years of the west losing lives and spending huge sums to stop them. He then tried to get a negotiated settlement with Iran. President Trump had negotiated successfully with the Gulf states to achieve their peace with Israel and to try to do the same with Saudi. All agreed Iran was a threat.

President Biden has ended up with worse relations with Saudi and the Gulf states, with OPEC pushing up oil prices by witholding production and now with US forces shooting down Iranian drones and missiles. Iran was always constructing a ring of hostile forces to the west with the Houttis in Yemen now firing on civilian cargo ships, with Hezbollah in Lebanon , Iraq and Syria and Hamas in Gaza.

The UK needs to be super vigilant to stop terrorists gaining access, to continue to work closely with allies to ensure good intelligence

Why do no other MPs want to stop the Bank of England mistakes?

April 14, 2024 132 Comments

The political classes seem incapable of understanding why we have so many boom bust inflationary cycles. I want more MPs to be demanding a change of policy by the Bank so we can have a growth policy with lower tax rates and better funded core public services.

It is no accident or external force which gave us an inflation in 1975. It was the  Bank conducting a policy called competition and credit control badly leading to fast money growth and a secondary banking crisis. In 1977 it was an overspending over borrowing Labour government which ended with a humiliating trip to the IMF to bail us out.

In 1990-92 it was Bank and Treasury policy to put us into the European Exchange rate mechanism which ballooned the money supply backed by PM Major and gave us more inflation.

In 2007-9 it was Bank and Labour government policy to allow commercial banks to lend much more which led to inflation, egged on by high public spending and borrowing.

In 2023-4 the inflation came from Bank Quantitative easing and a big boost to the money supply.

In each case the Bank over corrected  for its errors pushing us into recession.

Why doesn’t the Bank learn from  this string of errors and give better advice?

The Bernanke Report

April 13, 2024 78 Comments

Let’s start with some agreement. I agree the Bank needs to improve its forecasting and the  communication of its findings.

I do not agree that all Central Banks made worse forecasts over covid and Ukraine. Mr Bernanke seems to ignore China, Japan and Switzerland who kept inflation down despite the swings of oil and food prices. Their forecasts remained nearer the mark.

I do not agree that more highly paid people and more spending will provide the answer. The Bank has a lot of intelligent well qualified people. They need to correct their errors and change their thinking. The models need improving, but they have the people to do that.

It would be a good idea for the Monetary Policy Committee to look at the quantity of money being created and the velocity of circulation, and to provide comment, if only to say they have a good reasons to think creating lots of money will not be inflationary or destroying lots of money will not be recessionary so others can challenge this. Those outside the Bank that did look at the ballooning of the Bank balance sheet and money supply and warned it could prove inflationary got the forecast right even if the Bank is still sure they got the reason wrong. It would be better to have this argument around the MPC table. Why did the MPC who think inflation comes from other sources not manage to predict what happened? The MPC itself needs greater diversity of economic thought. Having someone on it who got the inflation outlook right in recent years would be a good start.

It is also a big disappointment that Mr Bernanke did not consider the impact of the waxing and waning balance sheet of the Bank. Decisions about the bond buying and selling need careful consideration as well as the interest rates. Their strong connection to public finances is also important for their impact on the economy.

 

The Opposition needs to understand the problems with UK government

April 12, 2024 168 Comments

The UK public sector is letting many people down and upsetting a lot of voters. Opposition parties in Parliament are good at criticising. They blame Ministers, as our system invites them to do. Opposition parties fail to ask why so many of the failures are in so called independent bodies with highly paid public sector chiefs paid many times a Minister. They  claim just small extra sums – compared to the huge extra  sums this government has tipped in – would make all the difference.

If only. If extra money would bring the NHS  waiting  lists down or would fix the Post Office and the railway things should be improving well by now. Ministers have tried this. Any Conservative MP will vote for a few extra billions of spending if it could deliver the end of waiting lists, good border control or a new railway line on time and to budget. We have often so voted.

Continue reading

Blame the Minister, but sort out the system

April 11, 2024 147 Comments

It is a crucial part of our Parliamentary democracy that we do ultimately  hold government Ministers to blame for the many failings of public services and public bodies. We also expect government to intervene or to change the law when the private sector and or too many individuals miscarry.

I still believe  in that system. I fully understand why government gets the blame when inflation goes too high, but note that an independent Bank of England is responsible for inflation and brought high inflation on. There are so many areas now where government is blamed but in practice the decisions and budgets rest with independent bodies, or where national and international law and judges prevent Ministers carrying out what they want to do. There are even cases where Ministers change the law but are still thwarted by activist courts.

I will explore how far this removal of power has gone, how many of the independent bodies are behaving badly or incompetently, and how courts and treaties prevent Ministers implementing  the public will. As many blame Ministers, Ministers need to take back powers to solve the problems the current system fails to resolve or make worse. The doctrine of independent bodies is doing plenty of damage, from the Post Office to the railways, from Ofwat to the Bank of England. The EHCR stops us controlling our borders  and the WHO which had a bad covid pandemic wants more powers to control the NHS.

Bond yields and mortgage rates

April 10, 2024 90 Comments

In July 2022 the UK ten year interest rate was 2%. In early September it was 3% and by the time of the Kwarteng budget on 23rd September it was approaching 4%. It peaked on 9th October at 4.38%. In July 2023 it made another new peak at 4.65% and stayed high until November. It is now just over 4%.

This pattern was similar to the pattern in the USA and the Euro area. The main cause of large rate rises in all three places was the decision of their Central banks to go in for rapid and severe monetary tightening, as they belatedly woke up to the high inflation they had allowed or caused, depending on your view.

It is true that in the period September  26th to September 28th 2022 the UK had a  bad sell off in gilts . This was mainly caused by the Liability Driven Investment crisis.  The Bank has written of “severe dysfunction in  the UK government bond market when distressed forced selling of gilts by liability driven investment funds led to a fire sale dynamic”. The IMF also wrote  how  “liability driven investment funds were at the centre of the severe stress that emerged in the UK gilt (bond)  market”

There are those for political reasons who claim all this was brought on by so called unfunded tax cuts in the mini budget. They overlook the fact that the increases in  spending were considerably higher than the tax cuts, forget that the gilt market had fallen a long way that month before the budget because the Bank wanted a big rise in interest rates, and forget the role of LDI investors the following week in driving the market down more. The Chancellor did push the  deficit up more than I suggested  and could have done more to control spending. Nonetheless the pattern of rate rises and falls show that the main cause of the rate increases was Bank policy, and the main cause of the three day  meltdown was LDI troubles as owners of bonds they could not afford had to sell to pay their bills. It was very difficult finding buyers when they knew the Bank was about to sell £80 bn worth of bonds and LDI investors had to sell lots of bonds as well.

Further proof of this is how the Bank turned the gilt market round. By announcing purchases of bonds and suspending the planned sales the Bank brought the ten year rate back down to 3.1% by 20th November 2022.The fact that  the following year after a series of tax rises the rate went considerably higher than in September 2022 again underlines tax cuts were not the main issue.

The Bank of England losses stop a growth policy

April 9, 2024 111 Comments

I

 

 

 

The scale of Bank losses

In the budget figures we were told the Bank of England’s bond buying and selling will end up losing us £102 bn. In its early phases the Bank sent the Treasury profits of £124 bn, so on these OBR estimates there are astonishing total losses coming of £226 bn. As of March 2024  the Treasury had had to pay the Bank £49 bn to cover losses to date, so another £179 bn could become due if the OBR has  got a forecast right.

These losses are huge and unacceptable. A substantial portion of the loss is avoidable. The government needs to have urgent discussions with the Bank to slash these costs. Other major Central Banks including the US are not receiving any bail outs from Treasury whilst  China and Switzerland  did not buy too many bonds in the first place. The ECB  which made similar mistakes with bonds to the UK is now containing the losses much better with a different approach.

There are two simple changes needed.

1 Stop selling bonds in the market at low prices. The bonds repay on maturity when the Bank will get more for them than current prices, so stop selling.

  1. Copy the ECB approach to payments of interest to commercial banks on their deposits at the Central Bank . The Bank of England is losing too much on the costs of remunerating the reserves placed with it by  the commercial banks compared to the interest it gets on the bonds. As the rate paid to banks is a managed rate fixed by the Central Bank cut the losses.

These changes would lead to a good improvement in  the public sector deficit x Bank of England, the measurement they use to control the economy, and to lower mortgage rates.

 

Bernanke needs to be radical in his review of the Bank of England

April 8, 2024 68 Comments

Ben Bernanke knows a lot about Central banks getting things wrong. On his watch at the Fed he saw inflation hit 5.6% in 2008 before watching it collapse along with important parts of the banking system. He was there for  the banking crash and great recession of 2008-10. He pioneered the money printing and bond buying policy that lies behind the wild ride the UK has experienced in inflation and growth 2019-24.

Recommending the same people on the MPC be asked to publish their own differing forecasts will not solve the problem, as there is too much groupthink on the MPC. Telling them to publish a range of scenarios does not help much either, because what we need and want to guide money policy is a reliable base forecast. How else can they set a good interest rate if they have no idea what inflation is going to be. That is why I have set out the need to completely change their forecasting models, to take money and credit seriously, and to recruit different people to provide diversity of thought.

1.The Bank should immediately conduct an internal review into its
models and forecasting to find out why it got inflation so wrong and to
propose amendments that would have produced better outcomes. It should
back test changes to the model to make sure they would result in material
improvements.

2.The Bank should produce an analysis of the role of money and
credit in inflation and discuss how this can be monitored and used in helping
make policy decisions about rates and money creation going forward.

3.The Bank should ensure in its future recruitment to senior roles on
the staff and to external appointments on its committee that it appoints to
obtain a greater diversity of views about economics and inflation. It should
wish to have representatives of the main strands of economic thought on the
important topics around the table.

4.The Bank should reward staff when it hits targets for accuracy of
forecasts and success of out turns to policy decisions.

5.The Bank should reconsider its attitude to Quantitative
tightening. If it is unimportant as an influence on inflation as it says and the
purpose is technical or tidying up it should stop selling bonds and let
maturities gradually reduce its balance sheet. It should consider whether its
bond sales do depress markets in ways which can disrupt them, consider the
flow across to its tasks in maintaining banking sector stability and ask
whether too many bond sales might make a recession more likely. Selling bonds at huge losses and sending the bills to the taxpayer is encouraging recession and preventing a growth policy.

Reduce government interference in energy

April 7, 2024 141 Comments

 

One subsidy leads to another. One windfall tax soon becomes several permanent tax rises on overtaxed energy. One price distortion tempts Regulators to do more. Instead of pursuing the three aims of security of supply, affordable power, and environmental requirements we end up with energy which is too dear and a growing dependency on imports and the goodwill of foreigners.

The boost to oil and gas prices caused by the decision to get Russian oil and gas out of our supply chains in retaliation for the invasion of Ukraine was used as an opportunity to increase taxes on oil and gas. It was called a windfall tax  though the government did not specify what element of the price/profit was windfall, nor did it promise to cancel the tax when oil prices fell back. This then caused super profits for older renewable electricity investments so they too were put under a windfall tax. Subsequently new investment in renewables was exempted .  All this reinforced dearer energy, so then the government decided to spend a fortune on subsidies to domestic consumers. The government introduced a price cap on domestic energy bills. As prices fell so the price cap held costs up until the next review point. All these interventions were backed by the Opposition parties who usually wanted them to go further, last longer and tax and subsidise more.

This is a wasteful and worrying model for energy. It has meant higher public sector spending and borrowing. It has deterred investment in  new capacity through the higher and unpredictable taxes. It has helped close factories in the UK thanks to high energy prices, increased energy imports, and increased the imports of energy intensive goods.

The same thing is happening with energy using products. It is wrong to  tax car producers for selling too many petrol vehicles that people want to buy, and for  selling too few battery cars which people do not want to buy. It would be wrong to tax gas boiler manufacturers or to ban their product if people do not want to buy heat pumps. Government did not need to step in to ban blackberries in  order to promote smart phones, or to boost computer pads by taxing home desktops. There was no subsidy to promote mobile phones or internet services. Good products sell because people want them.

 

My Conservative Home article on a vote about net zero

April 6, 2024 197 Comments
Net zero is on the ballot paper. Greens have never wanted a referendum on whether we should make the road to net zero the centrepiece of so many of our policies and life choices. Many think there should be  a vote , as this mission has become so dominant, affecting so many areas of government activity and of our daily lives . The country was never allowed a proper conversation  about the wisdom of this course of action. All the main parties signed up so there was little debate in Parliament.
 Greens will   find  policies to promote net zero increasingly become election issues despite the apparent party consensus as they weigh on people’s minds and the road gets tougher. In the UK there are two major issues confronting the government which the many pro green Opposition parties wish to shrug off. They are the costs of the transition and the issue of whether the public will buy the goods and services it will take.
The question of money has already come to the front pages. The Labour plans were said to need an extra £28bn over the next five years. Labour has had to withdraw this proposal as it does not fit in with the numbers supplied by the OBR about what is affordable. Labour will want to find ways to increase the contribution of private capital, and will be looking to see if there other taxes it can raise to pay the bills. One way or another it has to accept the fact that wanting to get the power sector to net zero by 2030, five years ahead of the government, will require a lot of extra spending which will need subsidy and incentives. I doubt it can be done, but it certainly cannot and will not be done by private money alone. Closing down our fleet of gas fired power stations early means writing them off and substituting dearer ways of generating power when full costs are taken into account. There would need to be government subsidies for the electricity  storage and transition costs. I doubt we could build enough new capacity in time and couple renewables with all the ways you would need to keep the lights on when there is no wind or sun.
UK energy customers already carry a net zero burden on their energy bills. Lower costs of buying electricity have been overridden to provide boosts to the use of renewables and nuclear in past bidding rounds. Subsidies have been built into some net zero decisions that are carried as a general charge on bills. A mesh of controlled prices, windfall taxes and preferred fuel choices has kept prices higher recently, with some subsidies providing some offset. Voters do not warm to higher fuel prices, and the government stepped in with large subsidies when the Ukraine war caused a spike in fossil fuel costs with the withdrawal of Russian oil and gas from the market.
Clearly scrapping all fossil fuel power stations and putting in many new renewable generators is costly. There will also need to be substantial storage capacity , with investment in some mixture of batteries, hydrogen production from renewable energy and pump storage to able to cope with  interruptible sources of electricity. In the meantime as government thinks about how and who pays for all that extra cost there needs to be back up power stations capable of being switched on when the wind dies and the sun sets.
Today there is considerable opposition to siting new wind farms near settlements, to putting pylons across landscapes, to drilling for onshore oil and gas and to digging up roads and pavements to install larger capacity cables. These can become issues in local elections in particular. If the costs of electricity storage and carbon capture become too high then the cost of energy will be back on the agenda as a running sore for the government that imposed the costs.
The question of consumer acceptance needs more debate than the greens allow. The truth is hardly anyone wants to buy a heat pump to rip out their gas boiler. Most people are put off by the large installation cost. They do not want the double disruption of putting in more insulation followed by heat pump works. They find the overall costs far too high, several  times  the cost of a new gas boiler. They are concerned that in an older house it may never be possible to get a heat pump to provide higher temperatures given heat loss, and are worried that running costs will still be high as electricity is a much dearer fuel than gas per unit of energy. It is true the heat pump cuts the need for energy in use, but that can be  offset by the higher costs of the energy.
Battery electric cars are a minority choice for individual customers. Many are put off by the high prices, by the difficulty in finding recharging places on longer journeys, by range issues and by the time it takes to recharge. Some of these problems will be resolved as and when more fast chargers are put in. Many people are waiting for the roll out of hydrogen as a fuel for trucks, and of synthetic fuel for planes. As this happens why not use those fuels to power a conventional internal combustion engined car or van? Why  not keep your home gas boiler in the expectation that clean gases will be added to the gas mix as more are produced.?
The green revolution wants to change the way we heat our homes, the kind of transport we use, the products we buy from industry and the diets we eat. To do this there needs to be far more consumer enthusiasm than there is today. Government and business are working together on this strategy. They need to spend more time working out which new products people will want to own and will be affordable. We still have no idea of what combination of hydrogen based or synthetic fuel based transport and heating we will have and how much will require improved battery vehicles and heat pumps. There is a danger of backing too many competing technologies and failing to get any of them to the scale where they will work better and be more affordable.
Bite sized books  have just published John’s  updated short book “The $275 trillion Green revolution. Will consumers buy it? ” available through Amazon.
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John Redwood won a free place at Kent College, Canterbury, and graduated from Magdalen College Oxford. He is a Distinguished fellow of All Souls, Oxford.
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