Saturday 7 May 2022

Not a pretty picture

This week’s decision by the BoE to raise interest rates another 25 bps to 1% takes Bank Rate to its highest since 2009 and in the process managed to please nobody. Consumers certainly do not welcome it, nor do the markets if pressure on the pound is any guide. Following on from the Fed’s 50 bps rise on Wednesday, central banks are now acting on their rhetoric to take action against the big rise in inflation which is running at 40-year highs in the US and 30-year highs in the UK. This puts the spotlight on the ECB which has yet to follow up its recent more hawkish message with action. But maybe the ECB, like many of us, has significant reservations about countering an adverse economic shock with a tightening of policy which in the short-term will squeeze the economy and make life harder for consumers and businesses which are already reeling under the strain.

The BoE’s economic forecast grabbed a lot of headlines with its prediction that CPI inflation will hit 10.2% by the fourth quarter of 2022, which would be the highest ever CPI inflation reading on data back to 1989 (the RPI series, by contrast, can be extended back to 1914). It also forecast that GDP will contract slightly in 2023, though the quarterly profile suggests that the technical definition of recession, in which there are two consecutive quarterly contractions, is not fulfilled. Looking out over the next three years, the forecast is consistent with annual average growth of just 0.3% which is a grim picture and not one in which a central bank would normally be expected to raise interest rates. So why do it? Aside from the surge in headline CPI inflation, the minutes of the MPC meeting made it clear that the Committee is concerned about the tightness of the labour market and the potential for a spillover to wages. We should thus view this week’s rate increase as a precautionary measure.

When looking ahead it is important to be aware of the interest rate assumptions underpinning the forecast. The baseline (modal) forecast is conditional on market interest rate expectations in which Bank Rate is expected to hit around 2½% by mid-2023 before falling to 2% by mid-2025. Under this assumption, GDP contracts by around 0.25% next year and the output gap widens to 1¼% on a twelve month horizon which under normal circumstances would be considered disinflationary. The central case projection also foresees rising unemployment, with the jobless rate rising by two percentage points to 5.5% on a three year view. These forces combine to produce a sharp slowdown in CPI inflation over the forecast horizon, with inflation close to target on a two year view (2.1%) and well below it by Q2  2025 (1.3%). In the alternative scenario, in which interest rates hold at 1%, the fall in output is less dramatic, with GDP growth next year averaging +0.8%. The rise in unemployment (jobless rate at 4.2% by mid-2025) and fall in inflation (still above target at 2.2% by mid-2025) are correspondingly slower. On the basis of these two forecast paths one conclusion we might draw is that in order to hit the inflation target on a three year view, rates will rise further but perhaps by less than the market is currently pricing in.

Any forecast relies on assumptions about the future, and those regarding energy prices are particularly uncertain but will have major implications for the inflation projection. As it currently stands, the BoE assumes household energy bills will rise by another 40% in October when the domestic price cap is up for its biannual review, following the 54% rise in April (5 percentage points of which were accounted for by the costs resulting from those suppliers that went bust in recent months). Yet the BoE admits that if energy prices “fall back to the levels implied by futures curves …  the level of GDP would be nearly 1% higher by the end of the forecast period and excess supply and unemployment around ¾ percentage points lower. CPI inflation would fall back towards the target more rapidly than in the central projection and would be around ½ and over 1 percentage points below the target in two and three years’ time respectively.” Bottom line: Things may not turn out quite as bad as this forecast suggests.

There are some other elements of the forecast which don’t necessarily stack up. First, if energy prices do rise by 40% in the fourth quarter, the slowdown in inflation in 2023 looks quite ambitious – the BoE estimates that energy will add only 0.25 percentage points to inflation versus 4 points in 2022. Average earnings inflation is expected to slow from 5¾% this year to 4¾% in 2023 despite the fact that if the labour market is as tight as the BoE believes, surely there will be greater upward pressure on wages rather than less as workers try to recoup some of the real wage losses suffered in 2022. This would point to upside risks to the inflation forecast and it is noteworthy that the BoE sees risks to the inflation outlook as tilted marginally to the upside.

If inflation does turn out higher, should the BoE be more aggressive in raising rates compared to current market expectations? In my view, no. Higher inflation will continue to act as a brake on real incomes and activity rates, and in an environment where the UK is struggling to come to terms with a post-Brexit world the headwinds are strong enough without an additional monetary burden (the BoE’s forecast looks for net trade to subtract 1.5 percentage points from growth next year).

Not everyone agrees. Former MPC member Adam Posen is quoted as saying that “The central bank has no choice but to cause a recession when a broad range of prices are rising at such a strong pace … It is duty bound to bring inflation down after more than a year when it has been more than 2 percentage points above its 2% target level during a period of full employment.” This is both irresponsible and wrong from an economist whose work I admire and is the kind of thinking which gets economists a bad name. It also ignores the fact that the BoE’s mandate is to maintain price stability subject to “the Government’s economic policy, including its objectives on growth and employment.” Given the Conservatives’ poor showing in this week’s local elections, I cannot imagine anyone in government believes that exacerbating the cost of living crisis is going to make them any more popular at the ballot box.

Another issue which perhaps did not get as much prominence as it deserved was that in lifting Bank Rate to 1%, the BoE has reached the threshold at which it will consider actively running down its balance sheet. We can expect more guidance as to how this might happen in the August Monetary Policy Report. Suffice to say that if the BoE is raising interest rates whilst simultaneously engaging in quantitative tightening, it is likely to make a bad situation worse.

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