Tuesday 4 November 2014

Our ping-pong recovery

It was exactly three years ago when I was advised that ‘being on the brink is the new normal’ for what, at the time, was the foreseeable future. In 2011, many weren’t willing to assign a specific number of years to ‘the foreseeable future’ but I think we can say that, three years on, we are back from the brink, economically.

Yet as many economic and financial commentators judge, the country is still in a strange state of being where one set of indicators suggesting positive news is offset by another giving a gloomier gloss to our recovery. Yes, the economy is growing but there will be a shortfall on the deficit above £100 billion by the end of this year.

One Eurozone economist recently characterised the UK’s growth as ‘the wrong type of growth’. Much like the seasonal ‘leaves on the line’, it’s probably the best explanation for the feed of ping-pong, back and forth, contradictory economic data this autumn and the balancing act those politicians charged with running the country are having to perform day-in and day-out as our recovery plays out.

Perhaps the bruising economic experience the UK has endured since 2008 has changed our perceptions of what amounts to recovery. Pre-crisis, debt-levels being 40 per cent of national output were considered high but now it’s 80 per cent which is the trigger point at which the credit rating agencies talk about withdrawing our triple AAA status.

The shortfall on the deficit by this year’s end would have been considered big in times past at 6-7 per cent of national output but it is not as big as it was at its 9-10 per cent peak in 2008/2009.

In October, published figures recorded that unemployment had fallen below the 2 million mark for the first time in six years. But in this current tax year of 2014/15, income tax receipts are up by just 0.1 per cent yet outlay on social benefit payments has gone down.

Wage inflation runs at just 1 per cent at this point in our recovery but the Bank of England is anticipating 3 per cent wage inflation by the end of next year and therefore tax receipts will be up.

It may feel like a heavy trudge through the recovery now but many analysts are convinced there is good news in the pipeline and, thankfully, the wisest market operators will always invest for the long term.

Before that, we have the General Election in May and all bets are off that the Chancellor of the Exchequer’s Autumn Statement – scheduled for early December – will be anything else but a necessary political and economic balancing act of ‘Austerity Lite’. There is likely to be further squeezing of public expenditure but the pinch will not be as nippingly sore as it was in the early years of this administration.

In this ping-pong recovery of ours – in which we are growing faster than Germany - whether it’s politics which is the foil to economics or vice versa, balancing is not an act: it is the reality.

Much as we did in 2011, we are going to have to accept this new reality of our recovery for the foreseeable future.


Will Mooney MRICS
Partner

Commercial, Cambridge

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