A year ago I posed the question “if Johnson is the answer, what is the question?” Twelve months on, the question still stands.
It has been a remarkably turbulent year, what with last year’s constitutional shenanigans;
a general election; Brexit and the outbreak of Covid-19. On the basis of this BBC Fact Check Johnson's record is at best checkered. He failed in his primary objective to leave the EU on 31 October ("no ifs or buts"); his position on the Irish border has been less than honest and his much-vaunted social care plan has yet to see the light of day. Being generous,
Johnson’s programme has been derailed by the worst recession in 300 years. But
as I noted around the time of last year’s election it is still not clear what
Johnson believes in, apart from delivering Brexit – and even then, he has
cynically used this cause celebre as a platform for his ambition rather than
being a hardline supporter of the policy.
There have over recent months been many claims in certain
areas of the media that the Johnson government is engaged in shifting the
political centre of gravity to the right and it is prepared to ride roughshod over
the niceties of the British constitution in pursuit of its aims. Reasonable
people can agree to disagree on this point but it certainly looks as though his
government has taken the old Facebook maxim to heart: “Move fast and break
things.” Johnson’s actions over the last 12 months are more
authoritarian than anything we have experienced in British politics in living
memory. Take for example, the attempt to suspend parliament last year in a bid to deliver Brexit – subsequently overturned by the courts – and the suspension of 21 MPs from the Conservative Party for defying the government. Whatever you might think of the action, and regular
readers will know I was not a fan, it was at least designed to break the
parliamentary deadlock over Brexit which had paralysed the government over the
preceding three years.
But the recent decision to withdraw the whip from Julian
Lewis for having the temerity to run against, and beat, the government’s preferred candidate to chair the Intelligence and Security Committee (ISC) was worrying on a number of levels and it highlights many of the
weaknesses at the heart of the Johnson government. First, it appears from the
outside that the government was prepared to appoint a lackey to oversee the
release of the highly sensitive report into Russian influence on British public life. Filling parliamentary committees with “yes” men (and women) erodes the
ability of parliament to hold the government to account on matters of national
importance. Second, the government’s preferred candidate, Chris Grayling, does
not have a strong track record of delivering. As The Economist noted last week,
there is a dearth of talent in government because MPs are subject to “a Brexit
purity test” which acts as a barrier to many competent people. Third, the fact
that the government managed to lose a rigged election to the ISC calls into
question its general competence to deliver on some of the bigger issues it will
have to face (notably Brexit). Finally, the fact that the ISC report found
that the government had not even bothered to investigate allegations of Russian
involvement – whether true or not – points to remarkable complacency on matters
of national importance.
In a week when the UK and EU warned that little progress has been made towards signing a trade deal by year-end and there is no prospect of a trade deal with the US,
the risks to the UK economy are mounting. As it happens, I still believe that
the UK and EU will sign some form of trade agreement before 31 December for to
do otherwise would be a major policy failure that the government cannot afford.
But in terms of international economic relations, the government appears to
have a dwindling circle of friends following its decision to cut Huawei out of the 5G network and this week’s spat with Russia. When the government claimed that Brexit would
allow the UK to forge its own path, nobody imagined it would be quite this
alone on the world stage.
During his tenure as London Mayor Johnson was noted for
being a hands-off leader, preferring to delegate the hard thinking to a group
of trusted advisers. At the heart of Johnson’s administration is his chief adviser
Dominic Cummings who is a man in a hurry to get things done. Cummings appears indispensable
to the Johnson project – after all, his clear breach of the Covid-19 lockdown guidelines
would in most circumstances have seen him removed from office. For anyone
interested in understanding Cummings, his views and modus operandi, I heartily
recommend this BBC documentary (Youtube link here).
I am uncomfortable with the media attention Cummings generates, and the picture
that is painted of a guy who controls the heart of government (a view I hope is
untrue). My impression is that Cummings is an iconoclast who wants to make
radical changes to the way in which Britain is governed. Whilst he is clearly persuasive
and articulate, I do not get the sense that he has thought through the longer-term
implications of his ideas. In short, he is a campaigner rather than a man who
follows through.
I can see why this appeals to Johnson, who is a fantastic campaigner
in his own right and always looking for the next idea to sell. But this is not
how the hard work of governance is conducted. If politics is the art of the possible,
a sensible strategy is to adopt a small number of ambitious but achievable
goals rather than trying to do too many things at once. Arguably it is this
rush to do too much that has forced the government to crack down on those who
get in the way of it achieving its goals. However it creates the impression of
unstable government in which a small, unchanging, group of people are driving the
agenda.
Johnson won a handsome majority at the December election on
the promise of getting Brexit done and creating opportunities for those voters outside
the London bubble who perceive they have been left behind. The UK may have left
the EU but Brexit is far from done, and the government has its work cut out to deliver
on its promises now that Covid-19 has turned the economic landscape upside
down. Johnson has had a difficult year, and not all the problems are of his own
making. But too many are, and if he fancies another term as Prime Minister, he
will have to change his approach to government.
Friday, 24 July 2020
Saturday, 18 July 2020
Greatest hits
For most of the last 40 years I
have listened to politicians misrepresenting fiscal issues. In the 1980s the
Thatcher government in the UK talked about “living within our means”, treating
the government budget constraint as if it were a household. This never made any
sense because whilst households have a finite lifespan, governments – in theory
– do not which raises their borrowing capacity because they can repay debt on a
multi-generational basis. A decade ago, George Osborne adopted a similar approach, arguing that if the UK government did not rein in
its budget deficit it would suffer similar fiscal consequences to Greece. Never
mind the fact that UK debt levels were lower, or the fact the UK had an
independent monetary policy or indeed that it issued debt in a currency which
it controlled.
For the present we appear to have
put the need for wearing a fiscal hair shirt behind us. Instead politicians
like to boast of their fiscal largesse, even though a large segment of the
public is increasingly asking who will pay for it. Ultimately, it is the tax
payer although not necessarily the current generation. But just as politicians
have overdone the fiscal rectitude in the past, so they may be guilty of exaggerating
their largesse today. At the end of June, Boris Johnson announced a plan to spend £5bn on infrastructure which was portrayed as a “new deal” along the
lines of Franklin D Roosevelt’s 1930s plan. It was, of course, nothing of the
sort. FDR’s plan amounted to a splurge equivalent to around 40% of US GDP at
the time whereas Johnson’s equates to around 0.2% of UK GDP. The BBC Fact Check team looked at the details of Johnson’s speech and concluded that large parts of the
plan merely involved allocating funds that had previously been announced.
Chancellor Rishi Sunak, who has
performed creditably during the crisis, did come up with a more substantive
plan in his Summer Statement last week. His plan to provide additional support of £30bn (1.4% of GDP)
included a Job Retention Bonus which promised a subsidy to employers for each furloughed
employee they retain until end-January 2021; a package of measures to help the
hospitality sector and a housing Stamp Duty holiday. There are many reasons why the package is badly targeted: A subsidy of £1000 per employee will
not do much to dissuade employers from making job cuts and it also runs the
risk that taxpayers will foot the bill for workers who would otherwise have
been re-employed anyway. A Stamp Duty holiday will be of most benefit to those
in the south east of England where house prices are highest, which is not exactly
consistent with the government’s plan to level up the economy by helping those
regions which have fallen behind. Yet for all that, we do have to give the
Chancellor credit for pulling out all the stops after a decade in which fiscal
policy has been relegated to the back burner.
The plan came too late to be fully
incorporated into this week’s Fiscal Sustainability Report (FSR) from the OBR. Nonetheless, it dutifully ploughed through the fine details and
found that the Chancellor has been even more generous than he admitted. The OBR
pointed out that the Treasury “’has so
far approved £48.5 billion of additional expenditure on public services’, of
which £32.9 billion had not previously been announced.” On my maths, this
implies a fiscal boost equivalent to almost 3% of GDP.
For those with the time to browse
it, the FSR was an excellent, sober overview of the current problems facing the
UK economy and how it might perform in future (chart 1). The scenario set out in April always felt a little rushed – understandably – but having had time to reflect
on events, the OBR set out three possible long-term scenarios. The central case
looks for output to get back to pre-recession levels by end-2022, which is
achievable although I fear it could take a bit longer. In this scenario, the
deficit balloons out to 16% of GDP this year before falling back to 4.6% by
fiscal 2024-25 with the debt-to-GDP ratio remaining above 100%.
Indeed it is the long-term
implications of the economic crisis which are particularly interesting. A debt ratio in 2025 of around 100% is far
lower than in the late-1940s when it went above 250%. A combination of favourable
demographics, rapid growth and low interest rates allowed the ratio to halve
between 1947 and 1957 and it halved again within the next 15 years. We are
unlikely to see such a rapid reduction this time around unless there is a
miraculous transformation in the potential growth rate. Indeed, the OBR’s central case scenario
suggests that based on assumptions for demographics, pensions and health care
spending, the debt ratio will rise to 320% on a 50 year horizon (chart 2). Whilst we should
not take the figures at face value, they do highlight that in the absence of
counteracting measures the debt ratio is not going to decline anytime soon and
the OBR’s illustrative calculations suggest that fiscal tightening of around
2.9% per decade will be required to get the debt ratio back to 75% over a
50-year span.
All of this is, of course, subject
to a huge degree of uncertainty and it is purely an illustrative scenario. But
the point is made that even in the absence of COVID-19, the UK (and indeed all industrialised
countries) face major fiscal challenges. Governments will have to make major
decisions about what kind of debt levels they are prepared to tolerate and what
level of services they can realistically provide. Societies as a whole will
have to make decisions about how much tax they are prepared to pay. Whilst I
have been an advocate for greater use of fiscal policy over the past decade, like
most people I never expected to see the kind of hit to public finances which we
have seen in just the last four months. In the coming years we will need a proper
debate about the role of the state in the economy. Political blustering on
fiscal issues will no longer suffice.
Monday, 13 July 2020
Don't give up on the tried and trusted
There is a considerable degree of trepidation as we head
into the Q2 company earnings reporting season. It is obvious that earnings will
have taken a huge hit as consumer demand collapsed across the board. However,
the main focus will be on guidance as investors treat the last three months as
bygones. Dow Jones reported at the start of July that 157 S&P500 companies
had reduced their outlook as of end-June with just 23 providing upgrades,
whilst 180 have pulled them altogether which suggests that markets will be
flying blind for a while to come.
Current consensus estimates point to a fall of around 30% in
S&P500 Q2 earnings relative to Q1, which follows a 15% decline in Q1. If
realised, this will put Q2 earnings around 45% below year-ago levels. Even
assuming a rebound in the second half, the consensus suggests we are set for a
25% decline in 2020, which would be close to the 28% decline registered in
2008. It would not take a huge miss on the numbers to record the worst year for
US corporate earnings since the 1930s (chart 1). Moreover the concern is that the consensus is
overstating expectations for an earnings rebound. In the wake of the 2008 crash
it took more than three years for earnings to get within 10% of the previous
cyclical high. This time around, the consensus view is that it can be achieved
within 18 months.
Valuation metrics also look elevated as markets are priced
for perfection. The one-year forward P/E ratio on the S&P500 is trading
above a multiple of 25 and the price-to-book ratio is at 3.65 versus a
long-term average of 2.65. Under normal circumstances such indicators would set
the alarm bells ringing but as we are all too well aware, times are not normal.
Discounted future cash flows have been boosted by central bank actions to cut
rates to zero, and on the expectation they will not rise anytime soon it is
logical that equity prices should rise. The lack of returns in other asset
classes further raises the attractiveness of equities. Even sectors which have
performed strongly over the past decade, such as property, are struggling.
Whilst stocks may look over-bought and there are clearly risks associated with
both the earnings and economic outlook, investors cannot bring themselves to
bet against a strategy which has worked so well in the post-2008 world.
This impact of low interest rates and their effects on
equity markets has once again raised questions of whether the traditional 60/40
portfolio rule is fit for purpose. This famous investment rule of thumb
suggests investors should hold 60% of their portfolio in stocks and 40% in
lower risk securities such as bonds. In theory this should produce long-term
average returns which match equities but by allocating a sizeable chunk to
bonds it smooths out the extreme highs and lows associated with an equity-only
portfolio. The evidence suggests that this strategy has outperformed over the
past 20 years. Using a portfolio in which the available assets are global
equities, US Treasuries, the GSCI commodity returns index and an estimate of
cash returns in the industrialised world, the 60/40 portfolio generated an
average annual return of 4.9% between September 2000 and June 2020.
It has not always been the optimal portfolio. Immediately
prior to the Lehman’s crash, the 60/40 portfolio was one of the poorer
performers largely because it took no account of the commodity boom that was
building at the time. Indeed, I well remember being told in 2006-07 that no
self-respecting portfolio manager could afford to ignore commodities because
returns were uncorrelated with other financial assets and consequently they
enhanced portfolio risk diversification. How times change: Commodities are down
84% from their peak achieved in summer 2008 and they have proven poisonous to
investor returns. The 60/40 portfolio has outperformed both safe and risky
structures which assign varying non-zero weights to commodities and cash.
Moreover, as the Credit Suisse hedge fund returns index shows, this simple
strategy has matched hedge fund strategies in recent years which – given what
investors pay hedge funds to manage their money – is a poor show on their part (chart 2). All
told, on a 20 year horizon the 60/40 strategy has generated higher returns once
hedge fund fees are taken into account.
This is not the first time the 60/40 strategy has been
called into question – it seems to arise every time one or other of the markets
appears out of whack. On this occasion low interest rates mean that the returns
from bonds are likely to look very poor for years to come. But investors
tempted to overweight equities, which are likely to benefit as a consequence,
run the risk of getting caught out by volatility as markets continue to
question whether current price valuations are justified (we can expect quite a
lot of that in the months ahead). Since the intention of 60/40 is to offset the
extreme highs and lows of equities, it may be worthwhile sticking with it for a
bit longer. It is after all, a tried and trusted method and that is not a bad
thing in our new, uncertain investment world.
Saturday, 4 July 2020
Looking at lockdowns
The reopening of pubs in the UK this weekend marks an
important milestone in the easing of lockdown conditions (though the Scots will
have to wait until 15 July). It is 103 days since English residents have been
able to take advantage of their inalienable right to drink alcohol in their
local pub. This is historically unprecedented: As far back as anyone knows,
pubs have always remained open. The last time there was an assault on people’s right
to buy alcohol on licensed premises was during World War I when the government
reckoned that drunkenness was undermining the war effort (a highly questionable
assertion). This led to the imposition of limits on opening times, which lasted
until the 1980s, but the pubs nonetheless remained open.
There is little doubt that the lockdown has been the most stringent imposition on individual freedoms in living memory and it has been repeated across the world, with news bulletins showing pictures of empty shopping malls and motorways that would normally otherwise be packed. In an attempt to compare the extent of the lockdowns across different countries, I am indebted to the work of academics at the Blavatnik School of Government at Oxford University who have constructed lockdown indices across more than 160 countries. The index is composed of a series of individual policy response indicators based on a range of indicators (interested readers are referred to the working paper for more detail, which can be found here).
There is little doubt that the lockdown has been the most stringent imposition on individual freedoms in living memory and it has been repeated across the world, with news bulletins showing pictures of empty shopping malls and motorways that would normally otherwise be packed. In an attempt to compare the extent of the lockdowns across different countries, I am indebted to the work of academics at the Blavatnik School of Government at Oxford University who have constructed lockdown indices across more than 160 countries. The index is composed of a series of individual policy response indicators based on a range of indicators (interested readers are referred to the working paper for more detail, which can be found here).
The data are collated over the period since 1 January 2020
and chart 1 shows the maximum value of the index over the course of this year-to-date.
Based on the random sample of 16 countries used here, the UK ranks fairly low
down in terms of lockdown stringency. It is notable, however, that it is
slightly ahead of Germany yet Germany had a very low death rate from Covid-19
infections[1]
(10.8 per 100,000 of population versus 65.6 in the UK). Italy introduced the
most stringent set of measures and recorded a high number of deaths (57.6 per
100,000). As has been well documented elsewhere, Sweden’s lockdown was
relatively relaxed and although the death rate is still relatively high it is
still below that of the UK and Italy at 52.1 per 100,000. Clearly, the maximum
extent of the lockdown is not very meaningful as an indicator of the severity
of the Covid-19 outbreak.
A more useful indicator might be the average measure of the
index which also takes duration into account. But here, too, there is no
ordinal ranking from lockdown severity to Covid-19 mortality rates. Chart 2
indicates that Italy’s average lockdown is significantly higher than that of
Germany but mortality rates are too. To make the point more clearly, the scatter
plots in chart 3 clearly indicate only a limited negative relationship between
the extent of the lockdown and Covid mortality or infection rates.
This obviously raises the question of how useful have the
lockdowns been as a defence mechanism against Covid-19. The trick is not to
think in terms of levels but rates of change. Or to put it another way, how
much worse would infection rates have been in the absence of lockdowns? Here we
seem to be on safer ground for there is a very strong relationship between the
extent and duration of the lockdown and the rate of infections (chart 4). In
the three European examples chosen here, it is notable that Italy introduced
the lockdown long before infections peaked whereas the UK clamped down quite
some time after infections started to pick up, thus supporting the view that
the UK was late in acting which contributed to the surge in mortality.
Lockdowns do, of course, have a significant economic cost. The
lockdown indices on their own are not particularly useful and have to be
augmented with other indicators such as mobility trends and specific country
characteristics to render useful information. The Bank of England has done some
sophisticated modelling work using the lockdown index as one input and
concluded that the data across a range of countries is consistent with a
decline in world GDP of around 15% over the first half of 2020 (chart 5).
Prior to this weekend the UK lockdown index was still fairly
high in comparison to a number of other countries. That is appropriate given
that Covid-related deaths are still high in a European comparison. However, they
are well down from their previous highs and given the improvements in recent
weeks, it is probably appropriate to begin a limited form of easing. But
striking the right balance is virtually impossible. Some think that the
infection rates are too high to justify any form of lockdown whilst others believe
it should have been lifted long ago. We will only know whether the current
policy stance is the right one when we can assess the trends in Covid
infections.
[1] I
use mortality rates rather than the number of reported infections because this
is dependent on the breadth of the testing programme which differs across
countries.
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