John Redwood's Diary
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Living in the EU means living beyond our means

I have always thought the UK’s balance of payments deficit is a bigger problem than the state deficit, though the two are in part related. I have spoken about it often here and in Parliament. The reason is the longer we run a large balance of payments deficit the more money we will owe to foreigners, and the more of our industry and property will be brought up by overseas investors. Progressively a country loses economic control as it sells many of its assets and mortgages the rest.

A larger state deficit can in some circumstances be financed at home by lending to ourselves. We do not necessarily lose overall control of our destiny, but switch money and assets around amongst ourselves. The state can always repay the debt, though if it overdoes the borrowing it will end up repaying in devalued pounds, partially reneging on the debts through inflation. The state will pay for itself at the expense of domestic savers or by taxing productive people more to repay the debts. Done to excess it makes us poorer. A large state deficit may also mean having to accept loans from abroad. These are more difficult. These usually require repayment in someone else’s currency , so we do not have the power to simply print that. If we borrow in foreign currencies the debts may get bigger and more onerous to repay if and when our currency falls in value.

The EU model put out by the Remain campaign is a model for economic dependence. Taken to extremes it leads to bankruptcy as we have seen in Greece and Cyprus. They say they want to attract more overseas investment. They welcome more purchase of UK companies and assets by French nationalised industries or by German shareholders. That means running a bigger balance of payments deficit and placing ourselves more and more in hock to overseas investors. They do not come here out of charity or kindness. They come to earn a return, to make a profit and to take money out of our country from their activities. One of the main reasons our balance of payments has been deteriorating so quickly is foreign investors are now taking much more out in terms of profits, dividends and interest charges.

The Remain model welcomes German investors taking majority voting control of our Stock market, and accepts we will import German steel rather than make our own. They welcome large imports of German cars and French food products. They do not tell us the truth, that the UK has to compete to maintain and improve our living standards. We cannot afford to allow too many industries and services go uncontested. There are limits to how many activities we can give up doing altogether or can sell to overseas buyers.It is interesting that Tata wants to exit all steel making in the UK and also wants to invest in German steel making. By doing so it accepts the EU logic that Germany should as the creditor nation keep on strengthening its industrial base to export to the other states. They in turn become more dependent economically on Germany. We see the dangers of going too far down that road when you see what happen to an economy like Greece which is now very dependent on the goodwill of Northern European creditors led by the German state. The creditors forced a 25% cut in Greek incomes as they tried to rebalance their books.

Let us draw an analogy with an individual household. It is true that you can boost your spending power above your income for a bit by borrowing more to buy new things . You can also boost it by taking out a loan on your home or selling some of your furniture and other assets. Done in moderation you can buy assets on borrowings which go up in value and make you better off. Done to excess you can end in grave financial difficulty. You find out that you then have to work harder and earn more just to pay the interest on the extra debts. If you are not careful you will reach the position where the interest charges take up too big a percentage of your income and your living standards fall as a result. You eventually reach the end of your ability to borrow more. You also run out of assets to sell. You can only sell your house once to spend the proceeds.

I want the government to curb the national deficits. I want us to generate our own power, make our own steel,produce more of our own cars. I believe we can do this. It requires taking back control from the EU, cutting energy levies and prices, and redoubling efforts to create good conditions at home to produce and sell our goods and services. Leaving the EU will immediately improve our balance of payments deficit and give us back more of our own money to spend on our priorities as I have pointed out from my analysis of the balance of payments deficit. At the moment we are being made to borrow to send money to rich continental countries to spend on what they want.

Do hopes and fears of Brexit move markets?

According to the Remain campaign, if the pound falls against the dollar that shows investors have fears about Brexit. In recent days the pound has been rallying against the dollar. They have gone quiet. Is this a reappraisal by investors, who now see the substantial gain to our balance of payments from leaving?   The pound fell from $1.47 to $1.38 between January and the end of February, but has since improved to $1.44.

If we take up the Remain view that investors are mainly moved by Brexit considerations and have been so far this year, then we can see that investors have some good thoughts on the advantages of Brexit. So far this year the number of jobs is up, vacancies are up, and a record number of people are in work. The Remain fears that Brexit worries would damage the jobs market have so far proved inaccurate.

The cost of government borrowing has gone down since the end of last year. The cost of borrowing ten year money has fallen from 1.99% to 1.4%. Why don’t the Remain people hail this as a substantial improvement, and see that implies investors are positive about Brexit? The US in contrast has to pay 1.8%a year  to borrow for ten years.

Then there is the prediction that inward investment will dry up. At a time when German investors are keen to take a majority share in a merged company with the London Stock Exchange ahead of the vote, it is difficult to sustain this argument. Various industrial businesses with five year investment programmes have confirmed they are not going to cancel if we vote to leave.

I think the Remain campaign exaggerate the impact of Brexit on the economy and on markets. Sterling has been falling against the dollar since last summer, as have other currencies, mainly on forecasts of rising US interest rates. The pound fell from over $2 in 2008 to $1.4 in 2009 when we were firmly committed to the EU, so we know other influences can generate large sterling movements. Whilst I would like to claim hopes of Brexit as the main cause of lower interest rates it is as difficult to do so as to claim Brexit caused the fall in sterling. Advanced country bonds have generally been rising in price with the European and  Japanese authorities both heavy buyers of their own paper.

The main imports of steel come from the EU

In January, the last month for official figures, the UK imported £202m of steel from the rest of the EU and only £80m from the Rest of the world. The way EU energy, regulatory and procurement policies are enforced in the UK versus the continent allow much more steel to be produced in the rest of the EU than here. This should be one of the prime issues.
As the government looks for a buyer with Tata it should also evaluate Tata’s closure costs so a buyer can have a realistic negotiation over a dowry for the plants.

The EU provides us with our balance of payments problem and harms our steel industry

Yesterday’s figures for the UK’s balance of payments made bad reading by the standards of this worrying series of figures. The deficit reach a new high of 5.2% of national output for last year, and 7% for the last quarter. These are records we do not want to break.

The deficit had three main components. There is first the running deficit on government  account. Overseas aid payments combined with payments to the EU which we do not get back amounted to 1.4% of GDP or one quarter of the total deficit. As government policy is to continue to increase these payments in line with economic growth only Brexit could reverse this trend and cut this part of the deficit.

The second is the gap between money we have to send abroad to foreign owners of property, businesses and shares in the UK and the money UK investors receive as interest and dividends on their overseas investments. The gap is likely to carry on growing. All the time we run such a large payments deficit it means more foreigner buying more UK assets and expecting more interest, rental  and dividend income to be paid to them.

The third is the gap on trade. The UK is still in trade surplus with the rest of the world, but is in massive deficit with the rest of the EU. Common EU policies from fish to steel and from farming to energy are pushing the UK into more and more dependence on imports. We now import electricity which we could produce at home, import steel and steel based products especially from Germany, import more fish as overseas vessels take more of our resource and import food as the vagaries of the Common Agricultural Policy do not always help us.

I would like the UK to adopt a policy of improving our balance of payments deficit. To do so it will be easier once out of the EU. We get the immediate benefit of not having to make contributions. We can then adjust domestic policies to help our industries more than the EU does. I appreciate that the UK has added to some of the difficulties created by the EU common energy policy, but the EU policy constraints are now being used as the main reason we cannot change. It is also the case that the UK feels very circumscribed in responding to the steel crisis by both the state aids rules and the public procurement policy. The problem with interventions in markets like the heavy interventions in energy cause distortions which then lead to the need for other interventions to try to offset them

Save our steel – and the problems of nationalisation.

I want the government to find  a means  for a new owner or owners of our steel industry to keep open our current plants and to maintain a steel capacity in the UK. There are ways government can and should help bring about a new settlement that offers hope of continuing  steel production. Government can and should respond to demands over business rates, energy costs, anti dumping actions and public sector steel purchases.

The Welsh government could give Port Talbot rate relief, as business rates have shot up in recent years. Very high energy costs have been a problem for sometime. The government says it is doing something, but it needs to do more as I have been urging. The EU has taken some action to deal with dumping by Russia and China, but has imposed lower tariffs than some other countries around the world. More allegations of dumping are being investigated. This is entirely an EU competence, so we rely on them for action.

The UK government is working to secure more orders for UK steel works. the large building programmes it has for railways, utilities and property all require substantial quantities of steel. It needs to ensure UK bidders have good access to the possible contracts.

They need to help the management and workforce negotiate with the current owners, Tata, over the terms of transfer of ownership. If no-one emerges for early purchase Tate will face large closure costs, so government can help persuade it to include a dowry with the plants for the new owner which will still leave Tata better off and free of future liabilities.

 

The problems of our steel industry has led to exchanges over Brexit. What is clear is membership of the EU has not protected our industry, and some EU policies have made the problems worse.

To those who think nationalisation offers a simple solution, I suggest they read the sad history of nationalised British Steel from its establishment in 1967. Government had a bold vision of five new large coastal works to produce and sell 35 m tonnes of steel by the end of the 1970s. They embarked on a huge capital investment programme to construct the plant necessary for the task. The private sector industry they took over produced and sold 27 million tonnes in 1965. Output from the nationalised industry slumped from that figure, despite the large investment in new capacity. In 1972-3 British Steel Corporation  produced 25.1 million tonnes, in 1975-6 just 17.2 million tonnes, and in 1978-9 17.3 million tonnes. In the early 1980s a new Chairman concluded he had to plan for just 14.4 million tonnes of output, 59% less than planned output under the investment programme.

Thousands lost their jobs both under the Labour government of 1974-9 and the Conservative government from 1979 onwards. The workforce of 250,000 in the early days of nationalisation became just 50,000 in the early 1990s. Large numbers of redundancies were needed both because capacity had to be reined in so much and because UK steel productivity was well below US and Japanese levels. Bilston, Cleveland, Consett and Corby all had to be closed. There was still far too little work for the five main new coastal facilities which ran up colossal financial losses for taxpayers. The Conservative government  decided to keep Ravenscraig open despite advice from the Corporation that they  had too much capacity and Ravenscraig had the highest cost base.

Today of course the EU  rules on state aids would not allow any government to pay the huge losses successive governments paid for in the 1970s and early 1980s. They would not allow the £2bn of public dividend capital which turned out to be free money for the business nor the large capital write offs which BSC enjoyed in the 1970s.

Helping refugee and migrant children

Nothing pulls the heartstrings as much as seeing a young child in danger. We see powerful images of children being put on boats and struggling on the long journey from Africa and the Middle East to northern Europe. So what is the UK doing about this tragedy of our age?

Young children need an adult  to look after them and guide them. Where the child is with a parent or parents we expect the parents to take care of them as best they can, and to make judgements about the risks of travel. We all rightly blame the people traffickers, as they organise unsafe boats or car rides across the desert, and seek to profit out of the misery. The UK along with other western countries is seeking to stop any illegal and unsafe  trade and prosecute the offenders.  We need the help of travelling adults to identify the unsafe and illegal  traffickers and intercept the trade before it kills more people. We need to remember that most unaccompanied  children who undertake such a journey have usually been advised to do it by an adult in the first place, and have been paid for by an adult who did so  wanting to act in the best interests of the child.   All these unsafe travel modes are organised by people who profit from it and should have a duty of care towards their passengers. They clearly often do not meet health and safety standards set out by the EU and many national governments. Shouldn’t all governments along the routes set standards of safety and seek to enforce these standards?

The UK’s policy towards helping young refugees and migrants is based on three central propositions. The first is ask them to apply for asylum or entry into the UK from somewhere near their original home to avoid the dangers of the long and irregular journey using illegal carriers. The UK is providing  substantial aid to assist the refugee settlements in the Middle East, and will consider applications to come to the UK from there. The second is to try to bring families together, not to split them up. It is usually better for a child to be looked after by his or her own parents, or where they are dead by grandparents or other close relatives. If an unaccompanied child in a camp has the closest  relative willing to take responsibility for him or her living in the UK the UK usually wishes to assist by giving the child legal entry. Where a child is an orphan with no close family willing to look after him or her, the UK gives such a person priority in assessing asylum and settlement needs from the refugee camps.

There may well  be fewer children with no adult willing to help than at first sight. Most families do love their children and wish to help bring them up. As every child may have  grandparents as well as  parents and may have  aunts and uncles the UK wish to reconnect children to  adults in their own family can be successful. UK personnel are helping in the camps to trace missing relatives who may themselves be in places of  safety. Where the family has suffered a disaster from war and the parents and grandparents are all dead or unable to take responsibility, the UK is willing to help.

The government’s website invites people to assist in various ways. Those wishing to help can offer clothes, toys and books to charities helping provide. You can volunteer to offer your time to assist refugees on arrival in the UK. You can provide a room or an empty property if you own such space. You can provide a foster home for a child. The government sets out the general approach. Seeing it through to a happy conclusion for each refugee who comes requires a response from the wider community to offer accommodation, jobs, school places and the rest that refugees will need.

An Easter message

I attended a service at the invitation of the various Churches  of the Wokingham Christian community, and joined them afterwards in the Marketplace to see their Easter play. I am grateful to all who produced it and performed in it. It was thought provoking and hard hitting.

This year in line with the messages from the Archbishop of Canterbury and  the Pope they tackled the difficult issue of refugees and migrants. They captured well the dangers and troubles faced by migrants who travel long distances by sea in search of a better life. They appealed to our common humanity. None of us want to see people suffer. We all feel great pain  when we see the plight of children trusted to the people smugglers.

The play implied criticism of Wokingham Council for not accepting more refugees. It did not consider the pressures on Wokingham housing from people already here, and the obvious shortage of affordable housing. Nor did they consider whether perhaps it is better as well as quicker to accommodate more refugees in parts of the UK with lower house prices and  a surplus of homes with empty properties available.

The play also stated that no-one would trust their children to the sea unless that was safer than where they were fleeing from. The worry is that people smugglers taking children from Turkey are endangering young ones who would not be at so much risk if they were kept off the overloaded and unsafe little boats and inflatables that the traffickers use for their profit. The trade  is shocking, leading to the deaths of too many people and taking money from many who have little in the first place.  We need to find a way of making sure this trade  does not pay.

The play was effective at getting over the shock and the scale of the dislocation of the current mass migrations, but was not able to consider the wide  range of actions the UK is rightly taking to tackle the  problem closer to its source. The best way of helping the migrants is to work for peace and economic reconstruction in their own countries. It is good news that there is a kind of truce in more parts of Syria, and peace talks have begun their slow and difficult way.

Helping the most able and energetic to leave a country  intensifies the difficulties of the country losing its  talent. These countries will need much energy and ability to rebuild as peace slowly takes hold. We need to find ways of allowing more to stay and more to be near at hand to return as soon as peace does permit.

The UK also thinks it is better to help migrants closer to the country they are fleeing. It is cheaper so we can help and feed many more. It means they are better placed to return once their own country becomes safer. It keeps them more in touch with their own culture, friends, relatives and homeland. The UK’s overseas aid programme for Middle Eastern refugees is the largest in the world after the USA.

The play asked the question who is our neighbour? In a way I agree with their answer, that all mankind is our neighbour. They cannot all become our next door neighbour. I also think we have stronger obligations to those who live with us and need our direct help, as we are bound by not just our common humanity but also  by ties of fellow citizenship, and mutual obligations over the years of living under a common rule of law. Being part of the UK we all accept that the richer pay more tax and poorer receive more benefit wherever they live. We are not able to extend that system of redistribution to all the rest of the world given the numbers involved and the very different average living standards in many countries.

The UK should play a leading part in the worldwide response to the Syrian, Libyan and  wider Middle Eastern and African crisis, as we are doing. We need as we have tried to do to rally more of the richer and stable countries of the world to share in the task.  We also need to make sure that we do not  send out a signal to people traffickers that their business model is a good one which many more people should pay to use. We need to be careful lest the answer to every trouble in a  country is the exodus of that country’s brightest, most determined and  best to live somewhere else.

 

 

 

 

Our EU membership in a few numbers

1970  21,443 fishermen                    2914  11,845 fishermen

The EU has been most damaging to UK business. The more closely it has been involved, the bigger has been the collapse.

Consider our fishing industry. In 1971 just before entry we produced around 1 million tonnes of fish with a thriving industry in England  as well as in Scotland. There were 21,500 fishermen.

Last year we caught around 600,000 tonnes, with just 11,845 fishermen. The English industry has been very badly damaged, with our fishing now concentrated on Scottish waters. Overfishing and regulation combined have done grave damage to the English fishery in particular, as the EU made our fishing grounds into a common resource with free access for all EU member states with dreadful results.

The UK now imports more fish than it exports, and has witnessed a collapse of the cod,haddock and plaice fishery.

 

Steel Output   1972     25 million tonnes     2013     12 million tonnes

Consider our steel industry. Output has more than halved since we joined the EU, whilst Germany’s at 43 million tonnes has been much more stable and is now 3.6 times the UK’s.

The current state of crisis in the industry has been brought about in part by very dear energy prices from EU energy policies, and from the inability of the UK to buy enough UK steel owing to EU procurement rules. Other states do not seem to enforce them in the same way.  EU state aid rules now also prevent  helping the industry at a time of crisis made worse by cheap Chinese steel.

The UK has become a heavy net importer of steel.

 

Aluminium output

1972  300,000 tonnes   2015  43,000 tonnes

Both the UK’s large smelters at Anglesey and Lynemouth have closed. High energy costs resulting from EU and UK energy policies have been the main reason.

So can we say the EU has been good for business? It has certainly been good for continental businesses, who have come in and taken our fish and sold us many manufactured products. It has promoted imports to the UK, but has helped or caused the collapse of important industries at home. The Fishing decline is wholly attributable to the EU, as throughout the time we have been in the EEC/EU they have controlled it through their common policies and have insisted on others exploiting our natural resource.

 

 

 

 

 

 

The business community wants to hear the Leave case

I have done many debates and briefings for the business community in recent weeks. They all have some  things in common. There is a strong wish to learn, as many in the business community have  been starved of honest accounts of what powers the EU has and what policies it is following. There is an ignorance of the Leave campaign, as the media crowds out our positive message by endless aggressive interviews asking us to rebut the latest absurdity of project fear, or they seek to turn the whole thing into a Tory split story. The business community and many others are getting fed up with this silly treatment of a big national issue.

 

The first thing few grasp is this is about much more than trade rules and how easy it should be for Germany to sell us her cars. It is about who makes our laws, who levies taxes, who spends our money, who controls our borders. I have to explain just how much power the EU now has over VAT, Corporation Tax, energy policy, business regulation, criminal law and much else.

 

The second thing I notice is even the big  banks and foreign investment houses who say they analyse economics do not understand the need to analyse the favourable economic impacts of saving a £12 bn outflow on balance of payments and a £11bn contribution which is spent on the continent which could be spent at home. When I point out we get a 0.6%boost to GDP from spending our own money no one disagrees but no one  includes this  in their analysis.

 

The third thing I notice is they assume we will follow the Article 50 route out if the EU but do not then realise that means no change for the first two years. They are usually unsighted on the UK Parlianentary route allied to a faster negotiation timetable.

They find it difficult to understand that Article 50  is designed more for the convenience of the Union than of the leaver. That’s why using UK legislation to restore our veto before entering a faster negotiation would give us more leverage.

Many of them  assume we will do a Norway and seem not to have heard the clear  statements of the Leave campaign that we will not pay contributions in or have free movement once we have left.

The state of the Britain stronger in Europe campaign

I have spent all my energies setting out how we will be freer, more democratic and better off out of the EU. I want  a policy of prosperity, not austerity. I want us to take back control of our laws. I want us to spend our money on our priorities.

Today I want to do something the BSE people do all the time. I want to ask a few questions of my opponents in this referendum.

The  BSE campaign should be called the Better Stay in Europe or else campaign. They spend all their time portraying a bleak future for us should we dare to vote for freedom and independence. Their pessimism is usually based on assuming all our partners in Europe will single mindedly seek to do us down in ways which will damage themselves.Why do they want to stay in organisation with people they think are so unpleasant?

Apparently BSE have their doubts and problems.  A series of endorsements by powerful foreigners, large investment banks and multinational companies may be putting more people off than it is winning over. Why should British voters vote for a deal which suits Germany and the USA when it clearly doesn’t meet the Prmine Minister’s aims in his Bloomberg speech, when it does not get us our money back or give us control of our own borders and taxes? Many voters are unhappy about the self serving conduct of some large corporations, so they are not impressed by being told how to vote by them. Lord Rose of BSE let the cat out of the bag when he told us the higher wages he expects when we leave could be bad news!

Given their absence of positive messages it is easy to ridicule their style of bombast. Will EU exit lead to the Black Death being visited upon us? Will France and Germany refuse to ring us up if they hear of a threat to our country?  Will they want to stop selling us their cars and wine, and wrongly impose new trade barriers which are largely  illegal anyway under international law?

What new groups and companies will they get to sign letters of support? What new fears will they dream up? I would welcome your suggestions for more absurd claims than they have already made, though it is difficult to  outdo some of their wild forecasts.

We also need to remind people all the time that institutions like the CBI and some of the investment banks that are so keen on us staying in recommended the European exchange rate mechanism to us which caused a big inflation and a major recession. They then often went on to recommend the Euro, which has done enormous damage to many of the economies outside the German core of the zone. Why should we believe them again when their track record has been so lamentable?

Few of them seem to have read the 5 Presidents Report on future political union and the next treaty and none of them want to talk about it. As we know from the EUs own words they want more central powers, a Euro Treasury and a bigger EU budget, shouldn’t they tell us their view of all this. The EU is on a wild ride to political Union.