Déjà vu vibes here in the UK this morning, as Gilts sell-off across the curve, sterling slides against most major peers, and confidence in the fiscal stewardship of the economy wanes even further (if that was possible).
There has been little by way of fresh concrete information on the fiscal front in recent weeks, though that in itself is hardly worth cheering, as the backdrop remains a fragile and worrying one. The ‘black hole’ continues to deepen, with Chancellor Reeves likely now needing to find somewhere between $30-$40bln of increased revenue or spending cuts in the autumn Budget to restore fiscal headroom to its spring level. Meanwhile, the growth backdrop remains anaemic, and inflation continues to rise towards a likely 4% peak in the autumn.
How does this all get fixed? Frankly, there are no easy answers.
So, how can the Government get a grip of the situation? It’s drastic, and the political environment right now isn’t conducive to it, but here’s my five step plan:
While the above mix would make for a rather downbeat, and volatile, few months, it seems the only way in which the UK can finally move away from the short-sighted ‘sticking plaster’ approach to balancing the books which has been taken for the last 18 months, once and for all returning the economy to a more sustainable fiscal footing.
In the meantime, however, and if drastic action is not taken, it seems highly unlikely that the trajectory for UK assets will change any time soon. To be clear, that means further pressure on long Gilts, and further pressure on the GBP as well, with recent gains having been built on foundations of sand.
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