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April 2011

The challenges facing the UK economy – A review after the Budget Neil Parker – RBS Market Strategist. April 2011. Contents. The Budget – some standouts/little solace on government spending The challenges of the fiscal environment/lessons from Euroland Inflation – higher wages or not?

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April 2011

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  1. The challenges facing the UK economy – A review after the BudgetNeil Parker – RBS Market Strategist April 2011

  2. Contents • The Budget – some standouts/little solace on government spending • The challenges of the fiscal environment/lessons from Euroland • Inflation – higher wages or not? • Monetary policy – a potential landmine to growth • 2011/2012 – challenging conditions • FX markets • Summary

  3. The UK Budget – little solace on government spending • After the UK Budget the fiscal mix remains the same, with the emphasis on deficit reduction. The bulk of measures comes from current spending cuts and reductions in net investment spending. • The positive Budget measures introduced were predominantly targeted towards the science, engineering and manufacturing sectors. • Deficits expected to be slightly larger because of slower economic growth – could mean larger spending cuts in the future.

  4. The UK had to go further than originally planned to protect its ratings Source: OECD The challenges of the fiscal environment/lessons from Euroland • In FY 2009/10 the UK was in a worse position than Spain or Portugal, and both of those countries have suffered as investors lose confidence in their ability to reduce deficits. • Spain and Greek 10y bond yields have risen sharply subsequently (Spain from 3.8% to 5.2%, Portugal from 4.3% to 8.8%). The UK’s 10y bond yield has dropped from 4.0% to 3.75%). • The UK’s ratings have held at AAA (outlook improved to stable). Portugal has been cut from A+ to BBB- since the beginning of FY 10/11, Spain has been cut from AA+ to AA.

  5. Inflation – higher wages or not? • UK CPI inflation has bolted higher on the back of higher taxes and duties, and commodity price inflation. • Core CPI has risen due to the effect on service costs from those rises (restaurant & catering, transportation costs pushing up goods prices etc). • Though both are above the upper limits, stripping out the effects of taxes brings the CPI rate down to 2.7%. • The effects of massive factory gate inflation from China and India (10%+) is also a major factor. • Higher UK inflation is not expected to persist. • UK wage inflation is negligible at best currently. • Average earnings growth a subdued 2.3% in the latest figures. Public and private sector wage growth both running substantially sub-inflation. • Rising unemployment acts as a major roadblock to wage increases. Average earnings

  6. Monetary policy – a potential landmine to growth • The March MPC minutes saw Chief Economist Spencer Dale and Martin Weale vote for a 25bps rate hike (Andrew Sentance voted for 50bps). • However, the Governor, Mervyn King is far more dovish, and the data/surveys certainly back up the Governor’s viewpoint. • None of the committee have adequately explained their position on inflation or the causes of inflation. • With fiscal austerity measures biting hard over the coming years, monetary policy can be looser for longer. • Higher rates at this juncture, risks STAGFLATION and a Japanese style lost decade. • WHILST, the process of policy ‘normalisation’ must begin at some point, it would be wiser to do so once economic growth recovers sufficiently. The biggest danger for the UK economy is not inflation, it is the destruction of disposable income that results from inflation. Raising rates could compound this damage. Source: RBS

  7. 2009 2010 2011 2012 %y/y Consumers' expenditure -3.3 1.2 0.7 1.8 -4.9 1.4 1.6 1.7 GDP see column for measure Unemployment rate (%) 7.6 7.9 8.2 8.4 CPI (%y/y) 2.2 3.3 4.0 2.1 Policy rate (%) 0.50 0.50 1.00 1.50 Source: RBS 2011/2012 – challenging conditions UK economy expected to struggle for traction under dual influences of higher rates and fiscal austerity • Unemployment is expected to rise further throughout the remainder of 2011 and into 2012. • Inflation is unlikely to fall back much until the latter months of 2011, and substantially in Q1 ‘12. • Growth unlikely to be above trend at any point in the next 2 years.

  8. 2011/2012 - challenging conditions Source:Office for Budget Responsibility The fiscal austerity will cut 0.5 percentage points from UK growth over the next 3 years (from 2012 onwards). UK growth would have been far faster otherwise.

  9. FX markets • Recent moves in FX markets have been USD weakness driven. • Central banks/sovereign wealth funds have been bailing out of US Treasuries etc. • The US’s deficit reduction strategy is seen as non-credible and the US Fed’s strategy of printing money is weakening the currency. • But the UK and Euroland have problems of their own, which could cause the GBP and EUR troubles later in the year. • The shift in the global economic growth engine to Asia and LatAm should lead to further strength in these currencies. • Commodity currencies are expected to continue to perform well. Source: RBS

  10. Summary • The current strategy of deficit reduction in the UK was a necessary stepto maintaining our credit rating as well as preventing a sudden loss of investor confidence and capital. The Budget cemented those moves. • Doing nothing was not an option on the public finances, as Greece, Ireland and Portugal have found out to their cost (particularly Greece and Portugal). • The path of UK interest rates is likely to be higher, but caution should be the watch word. The BoE should not be suckered into raising rates on ‘credibility’ issues. • Our forecasts of the yield curve see a significant increase in rates out to 10 years, but far less movement in rates further along the curve (risks are for higher rates in the longer dated maturities if sovereign debt risks re-emerge). • The state of the UK economy is one of a work in progress, with growth expected to have returned in Q1, albeit at a far slower pace than we became used to in Q2 & Q3 ’10. • UK growth is set to remain solid in 2011, with upside risks in 2012 (Olympics etc). • The shrinking of the public sector will reduce growth by 0.5 percentage points for the coming 3 years (from 2012 onwards). That makes the predicted UK growth rates all the more remarkable! • Currency markets are volatile and sterling’s strength against the USD is unlikely to last.

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