Moody’s blues, private-sector grief and another letter from Mervyn

The credit rating agency’s decision to put the UK on negative watch is a big embarrassment to the Ch

The biggest news on the economy recently was the decision by the credit rating agency Moody's to place the UK on "negative outlook", which means that the country's rating is at risk of a downgrade. The reasons? The "increased uncertainty regarding the pace of fiscal consolidation in the UK, due to materially weaker growth prospects over the next few years, with risks skewed to the downside", and the high risk of further shocks (economic, financial or political) from the euro area.

This presents a considerable embarrassment to the Chancellor, who used to claim that his austerity measures had taken the UK off a negative watch that he had inherited when he took office. George Osborne's response was to claim that it is "a reality check for anyone who thinks Britain can duck confronting its debts". For those on the right who think Moody's was spooked by the UK's debt burden, think again. The biggest concern is that the UK economy is heading back to recession. And maintaining a AAA rating may well not be worth the pain: since France lost its AAA, the country's ten-year bond yield has fallen. The reality is that there is still no growth plan or any credit easing. Rabbits in headlights come to mind.

Crisis of confidence

Then, on 15 February, there was the latest labour-market data. The unemployment rate rose to 8.4 per cent, driven primarily by an increase of 27,000 in the number of unemployed 18-to-24-year-olds. The rise was not surprising: a survey released on 13 February by the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development (CIPD) suggested that the first three months of 2012 will be the most difficult quarter for the jobs market since the recession, as the number of private-sector firms surveyed planning to make redundancies increases. The worsening prospects, the CIPD found, are almost entirely accounted for by a drop in confidence in the private sector. Your response, George?

Heading for a fall

The Consumer Prices Index (CPI) measure of inflation at long last plummeted, as I and the Monetary Policy Committee had been predicting for a while. It's expected to drop like a stone over the next few months. Most people, including some economic commentators, have no idea how the CPI is calculated. It is the rate of change in prices, so if the oil price rises from £100 to £110 a barrel today and stays there for five years, the increase in the first year is recorded in the CPI, but the next year the change in prices is zero and the CPI doesn't move. This month, the impact of the VAT increase introduced at the beginning of last year dropped out of the calculations.

I set out below the official data to illustrate how inflation is likely to drop sharply. The new estimate of 3.6 per cent is obtained by dividing 121.1, the price level in January 2012, by 116.9, the level in January 2011, and taking a percentage, which gives the annual change in prices. The difference between the two numbers, 4.2, is just the sum of the 12 monthly changes. This month's drop of 0.6 was predictable, given that -0.6 is the average price fall for the month of January between 2000 and 2005, before the latest inflation burst. We knew which number was being dropped from the calculation. Going forward, if I impose the averages for 2000-2005 on top of the latest 12 months of data we have - not an implausible proposition - inflation will be 1.1 per cent by the end of this year. So, rather than write a letter because inflation is too high, Mervyn King will likely have to write a letter because inflation is below the target.

Misplaced faith

I have been having an ongoing spat with David Smith of the Sunday Times about what I consider to be his one-sided reporting on the economy. It's perfectly possible - excusable - that all of this has passed you by but it strikes me that as the data moves against his increasingly untenable positions, Smith clutches at ever thinner straws. In his 12 February column, he claimed that I believed "that all the economy's woes [my emphasis] are due to the government's fiscal tightening". Not so. I have always said that our economic woes were exacerbated by fiscal tightening that was too deep and too fast at a time when the economy was being hit by severe headwinds (including from the euro area), a lack of bank lending and senior government ministers talking down the economy.

But I have never, and would never, claim that Britain's economic problems are uni-causal. Serious economists know better. As I am on a roll, I thought I should also present some research to counter Smith's suggestion that GDP is invariably revised upwards and so we need not worry about initial, gloomy data releases. Look at the definitive source on revisions to GDP growth data, "Understanding the Quality of Early Estimates of Gross Domestic Product" by Gary Brown et al, from November 2009. This concluded: "Revisions are not sufficiently large, regular or predictable to be able to support any procedure of incorporating bias adjustments into early estimates." Or how about a 2007 Bank of England study, which found that historically there is some evidence of bias in early estimates of GDP - certainly in the 1980s and early 1990s - but that it is far from clear "this has persisted into more recent periods"? It looked at revisions between 1999 and 2005 and concluded that, compared to initial growth estimates, revisions were "not significantly different from zero".

Then, on 14 February, Smith downplayed the Moody's negative watch for the UK, claiming that "today's real news" was "a drop in inflation". Really?Feels like more spin to me.

78 comments

mike555's picture

@Matt

I made a point then asked a question. Here's what I said afterwards (sorry to other readers to have to answer such pathetic ridicule again):

"I simply asked why it didn't get a mention when it goes up"

So I said "I simply asked" (which implies a question), then said "when it goes up" , after saying it went up. So what is your point again Matt?

I remember you said I wouldn't last two minutes on here because there were "too many adults" (that was on "Too big to fail becomes too big to bail"), is this your idea of adult debate?

What is it about house prices being too high you don't like me talking about? Is it the negative effect it has on the poor and low paid?

Indu Pendent's picture

@Daniel

Same here.

If Danny was not left wing bias then why he is the inhouse economist of NS? I thought thats what this block was suppose to be about and why its popular.

At least one of Osbornes achievements is avoiding a double dip recession. Desparate but only for Labour.

mike555's picture

@Matt

"It is a crying shame you never mentioned the Nationwide Consumer Confidence Survey in Nov 11, which showed a record low."

Absolutely pitiful.

mike555's picture

How come no one can answer the questions about the house price boom and it's effect on the poor, and the constant warnings about reckless lending , low rates and high house prices many years before the credit crunch hit? People are still feeling the effects. Very odd indeed how no one can offer any defense.

matthew fox's picture

Come on Bozo555, your the one who is writing the guff, not me.

It is not my fault you don't understand what you write, not me.

I think the term " All I said " is pretty explicit Bozo555, or don't you understand that term either.

You asked a question that didn't need asked Bozo555, Prof Blanchflower could not be more explicit either, telling you in no uncertain terms how the numbers stack up.

Again Bozo555, you didn't have an opinion when the numbers came in at a record low, no surprise there Bozo555.

Daniel's picture

The critics on this blog are talking a load of tosh. I mean really . . . bringing up a irrelavent argument that proves how successful Osbourne is. Desparate. And they accuse Blanchflower of using ideology in his analysis. It has now almost got to the point where one just reads Danny's post and not read these posts. Intellectual debate, my arse!

mike555's picture

@Matt

Dismal, and no answers as ever, just pathetic insults. I've already answered you, everyone can see that.

Strange how you don't seem to have an opinion on the house price boom under New Labour, I've lost count of the amount of times you've not answered that one.

David Blanchflower1's picture

No of course I didn't mean the UK is worse than Greece - they are not even comparable. The UK economy is now in much worse shape than it was when the coalition inherited it.

So it's in worse shape than it was in May 2010. Austerity has failed miserably as many of us predicted it would.
Danny Blanchflower

Indu Pendent's picture

Apart from the case for a credible alternative has never been made. The only alternative Labour have a chance with is Plan A+. Plan B and Plan A lite had 3 legs and never left the paddock.

"miserable failure" - lacks a valid basis for the assessment: it is set against legacy expectations at the end of the last government.

Indu Pendent's picture

@matt

Have you won any arguments ever? Let me know when you do and I'll update the score line. Quick recap

Interest rates/ house prices (Foxy 0, Mike 1)
Dagenham Fiesta ( Foxy 0, Indu 1)
Lagarde and pensions (Foxy 0, Indu 1)

Care to list the others you lost?

Just been reading the little red book to learn the meaning of "busted flush". Its after "biggot", "Billions" and "Borrowing" but before "gullable voters" and "state fairy".

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