By Michael Burke
For once it seems that the widespread reaction to a Budget was correct.
Chancellors usually bury bad news in the detail of a Budget released long after
their speech. However the dire electoral position of the Tories means that the
main changes were announced with a flourish. The personal income tax rate
threshold was raised to £10,500 a year, which the
Institute
for Public Policy Research has shown mainly benefits the highest earners. In
addition, the annual amount of tax-free savings was boosted to £15,000 a year,
which is actually
close
to the average (mean) disposable income in Britain. This was a Budget to
shore up the Tory vote among higher earners and savers and staunch the
defections to UKIP.
Osborne did nothing to address the economic crisis. This is not because the
crisis is over or a self-sustaining recovery is underway. That is a dangerous
delusion. Even the forecasts from Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR),
which
has proved to be significantly over-optimistic on growth since it was
established, project only an annual average growth rate of approximately
2.5% over the next 5 years.
Embedding poverty
SEB has previously shown that
a
huge gap has accumulated between the current level of economic activity and
the previous trend rate of growth. Even if 2.5% GDP growth materialises that gap
will not close. At best it will not widen further. The poverty and misery
arising from the current crisis will become embedded in the economy.
To arrive at its forecasts the OBR has made the following assumptions:-
- Wages will only rise half as fast as GDP growth
- Average real wages (after inflation) will not rise at all, yet
- Non-wage incomes (salaries, interest and rent) will rise sharply
- House prices will rise by over 30%, and
- Stock markets will rise by 27%
Even under the OBR’s forecasts it is clear that all the benefits of projected
growth are claimed by high earners, the rich and the owners of capital. Even if
all these gains were spent by the rich (which is never the case) this would be
insufficient to power the growth the OBR is projecting. The main contribution to
growth envisaged by the OBR over the next period is a rise in household debt.
This is shown in the chart below (Chart 3.33 in OBR data).
Fig1. OBR Projection of household debt
Reversing the post-crash trend, the OBR assumes that households will increase
their debt on average from 142% of their incomes currently to 166% by 2019,
close to levels preceding the crash. Under these officially-sanctioned forecasts
most households will see no rise in incomes, only a rise in debt. They will be
worse off in 5 years time than they are now.
It is not necessary to enumerate all the ways in which this forecast might be
proven wrong, if for example there are increases in interest rates or inflation
picks up because the currency falls, and so on. The key point to note is that
for most people the crisis will be an enduring one, at least a decade long.
Causes unaddressed
The crisis will continue because its root cause has not been addressed.
Currently the fall in investment is approximately three times as large as the
entire fall in GDP since the begnning of 2008. Investment has fallen by £58bn
and GDP is still £21bn below its previous peak in the 1
st quarter of
2008.
In fact, while GDP inches ahead in the longest-ever recession, investment
(Gross Fixed Capital Formation) continues to decline. In addition, as the
statisticians refine their understanding the most accurate position, the data
for investment has mainly been revised lower. This is shown in the chart below
(Chart in the OBR data).
Fig. 2 Business investment & its revisions
Total investment in Britain is one of the lowest of all the industrialised
economies over a prolonged period (as shown in Fig.3 below, Chart G in OBR
data). Business investment is currently equivalent to just 8% of GDP, also one
of the lowest. Yet the OBR is effectively forecasting that the problem will
disappear.
Fig.3 Total investment as % of GDP in industrialised countries
The OBR forecasts that business investment will rise by 50% in the course of
the next 5 years- which has never happened in Britain outside of war. This means
investment will be growing approximately 5 times as fast as the rest of the
economy- even though, according to the OBR, there will be a tremendous profits
squeeze, with profits falling from 33% of GDP in 2012 to 27% in 2018. These are
outlandish forecasts. Only a policy to control and direct investment could
produce such results.
Meanwhile, minimal wage growth, rising household debt and the investment
slump are all related. It is impossible to create new, high-skilled high pay
jobs without investment. The government can boast that one million jobs have
been created in the last two years. But less than half of these have been for
full-time employees and many of those are on zero hours or minimum wages. In
order to finance any increase in spending at all, workers whose real wages are
falling are obliged to drawn down savings or take on new debt.
This is the mess that the Tories will bequeath to Labour. Only a thorough
break from the policies of austerity can solve it.