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It may
become the most calamitous premiership for at least 100
years. Less than six months after taking over from Tony
Blair as UK prime minister, Gordon Brown has already
stumbled through a series of disasters. He is, to use a
popular word in the financial markets, a subprime
minister and he leads a subprime economy.
Brown
has taken a beating. As he knows from his 10 years as
chancellor, so long as you can deliver a prosperous
economy and keep public spending flowing, you can
survive just about anything. If you can’t, you start to
look like sliced sausage.
Whether
Brown or not succeeds may well depend on
foreign-exchange markets. If the pound stays strong, the
United Kingdom
can ride through some choppy waters. If the currency
weakens, the economy will start to decline and take
Brown down with it.
There is
little doubt that the outlook is grim.
Brown is
embroiled in a scandal over secret donations to his
ruling Labor Party. The Electoral Commission last week
said it will ask police to investigate Labor financing.
A week earlier, Chancellor Alistair Darling was forced
to make two emergency statements to the House of
Commons: one explaining its failure to sort out the mess
over failed bank Northern Rock Plc., the other
explaining how the government managed to lose two
computer disks containing the financial records of 25
million people.
That
came after the saga of the election that wasn’t: Brown’s
aides spent the fall discussing a snap election, only
for Brown to cancel it at the last moment when the polls
turned against him.
Tarnished reputation
Within a
few weeks, Brown has blown his reputation for leadership
(the election), competence (the disks) and now integrity
(party funding). It is no big surprise that he’s
trailing in the polls. A YouGov survey last week in the
Daily Telegraph put the opposition Conservatives 11
percentage points ahead. Labor’s popularity is at a
19-year low, another poll said. And all of that happened
while Brown was still meant to be in his “honeymoon”
period.
Unfortunately for him, he hasn’t faced his real crisis
yet: the economy.
The
Nationwide Building Society reported last week that
house prices dropped the most in 12 years in November,
recording a 0.8-percent fall. Meanwhile, debt has soared
out of control. Almost a third of British home owners
face “serious financial difficulties” as mortgage
lenders raise rates on borrowers that they consider
“high risk,” the market research group Mintel said last
week.
Interest
rates
Whether
the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee responds
to that with a cut in interest rates this week remains
to be seen. “They continue to view activity in relation
to the performance of the economy in the first three
quarters of the year rather than recognizing that the
credit crunch has produced a decisive break with this
performance, and over-indebted consumers do not have
access to the same amount of credit as before,” Stuart
Thomson, who manages 23 billion pounds ($47 billion) in
bonds at Resolution Investment Management Ltd. in
Glasgow, Scotland, said in a note to investors.
In
reality, the British economy has been kept afloat by a
housing bubble, which has been supported by a currency
bubble.
That may
be about to change.
So long
as sterling remained strong at more than $2, the British
economy could maintain an appearance of strength. With
the pound still high, the Bank of England can engineer a
couple of cuts in interest rates from their current 5.75
percent. That should at least stabilize the housing
market and keep consumers confident enough to keep
filling up the malls.
Inflation impact
But what
if sterling started to fall—not dramatically, but to a
more realistic $1.60 to $1.70?
If that
happened, the
United Kingdom
would be stoking inflation: Britain relies on imports,
which would become more expensive, if sterling fell. The
Bank of England would be forced to keep interest rates
on hold. It might even have to boost them to defend the
currency. That would have a ruinous impact on the
housing market and consumer confidence. It could tip the
economy into recession, which would encourage currency
markets to punish sterling even more. A vicious circle
would have started, and that can be impossible to break.
Could it
happen?
Many
economists see sterling as suspended in mid-air. Britain
has massive trade and budget deficits. For the past
year, the markets have been pummeling the dollar. That
will stop soon. Already, the US trade gap is narrowing,
and soon a German-style export-led recovery will be
under way in the United States. The currency markets
will need a new target—after all, traders have to sell
something to stay in business. Sterling looks like a
sitting duck.
It might
well be the fragility of Brown’s government that
provides the trigger for an attack on sterling. Brown’s
problems are only just starting. It will be the
foreign-exchange markets that finish him off. |