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Free AccessREPEAT: MNI: UK Budget: Housing Assoc, TFS To Aid Debt Profile
Repeats Story Initially Transmitted at 18:47 GMT Nov 21/13:47 EST Nov 21
--Reclassifying Housing Assocs, Ending Of BOE TFS To Soften Debt Outlook
By David Robinson
LONDON (MNI) - The UK Budget, to be delivered by Chancellor of the
Exchequer Philip Hammond Wednesday, has undergone last minute changes as he
wrestles with fiscal and political constraints, people familiar with the process
have told Market News, but recent developments will flatter the debt profile.
On Monday, Hammond was asked by Bank of England Governor Mark Carney if the
Treasury would indemnify a stg25 billion increase in the BOE's Term Funding
Scheme (TFS). Hammond's decision to approve it pushes up current debt but lowers
debt levels four years out, helping meet the Treasury's goal.
Earlier this month, English housing associations were reclassified as
private sector entities, knocking more than stg60 billion off the UK
government's debt pile.
When parliament approved changes to English housing associations, this
paved the way for them to be moved from the public sector to the private sector
as of November 16.
A National Statistics official said that English housing association debt
at the end of March had been estimated at stg63.5 billion with net borrowing
from the sector at just stg3 billion for the 2016/17 fiscal year, with the
associations adding stg2.7 billion to the net cash requirement.
The reclassification will show up in the December 21 public finances
release, with the removal of housing association debt alone reducing the level
of debt by more than 3% of GDP.
The reduction in the debt level will be partially offset by the extra stg25
billion increase in the TFS, but the important thing for Hammond is that lending
through the TFS is due to be repaid in four years' time, which is timely as the
Chancellor has a fiscal goal of reducing debt from 2020. Extra lending now
simply boosts repayments around the time Hammond wants the debt-to-GDP ratio to
be heading lower.
Ross Campbell, Director, Public Sector at the Institute of Chartered
Accountants of England and Wales, previously told Market News that because of
the TFS "the Chancellor has a much better chance of achieving his 2020 target of
a falling debt to GDP ratio than might be the case without this effect."
The smoke and mirrors on the debt arithmetic does little, however, to help
Hammond with deficit reduction and he is likely to stick to his previously
loosened aim of getting the public finances into balance in the next parliament.
Faced with a resurgent opposition Labour Party that is championing
investment spending, Hammond is expected to continue to differentiate himself by
arguing in favour of prudent management of the public finances.
Hammond's fiscal objectives, as set out in full in the March Budget, were
to "return the public finances to balance at the earliest possible date in the
next Parliament," for the structural deficit to be below 2% of GDP by 2020-21
and for net debt to GDP to fall in fiscal year 2020-21.
The Office for Budget Responsibility provides a five year forecast, two
years longer than the BOE publishes. Nevertheless, with the next parliament not
set to start until 2022 this means that the OBR on Wednesday will state that it
will not be be able to fully assess the likelihood of the balanced budget goal
being met.
What it can do is assess the likelihood of Hammond meeting the interim
target, of getting the deficit below 2% of GDP by 2020-21, and in March it
estimated that the deficit would fall from 2.6% of GDP in 2016-17 to just 0.9%
of GDP in 2020-21.
Robert Chote, The head of the OBR, has set out why it is likely to cut its
productivity estimate, which would reduce growth and projected revenue
throughout the five year forecast.
Analysts expect the OBR to lower its productivity estimate to around 1.5% a
year, as it follows the BOE in assuming that growth rates of around 0.4% a
quarter are sufficient to nibble into economic slack.
Carney seemed to give the game away when he said at the November Inflation
Report press conference that "I think you'll find that our productivity forecast
is not that dissimilar from the OBR's."
The Bank downgraded its productivity estimate because labour supply, with
unemployment at 4.3%, is getting tight, Brexit is expected to disrupt supply
chains and investment growth has been relatively slow.
Hammond could simply leave fiscal policy pretty much unchanged and allow
the hit to projected revenues from the lower productivity projections to reduce,
but not eliminate, the margin of slack he has to meet his fiscal goals.
This, largely, is what analysts expect him to do. The competing pressures
on him to come up with measures to try and improve the ruling Conservative
Party's opinion poll standings -- it has trailed Labour on average by one or two
percentage points in recent polls -- while sticking to his previous commitment
to balancing the budget means Hammond has little room for manoeuvre.
As Fabrice Montagne, economist at Barclays said in a note, what Hammond is
likely to be able to do is avoid further austerity measures and for that at
least the chancellor will be grateful.
The absence of any leaks of eye-catching fiscal measures suggests that "the
government will allow borrowing to creep up in response to forecast downgrades
and will not try to offset that drift by announcing new austerity measures,"
Montagne and colleagues stated.
When the Budget is unveiled at 1230 GMT Wednesday that certainly seems the
most likely outcome.
--MNI London Bureau; tel: +44 203-586-2225; email: les.commons@marketnews.com
[TOPICS: M$B$$$,M$E$$$,MFB$$$,MGB$$$]
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Why MNI
MNI is the leading provider
of intelligence and analysis on the Global Fixed Income, Foreign Exchange and Energy markets. We use an innovative combination of real-time analysis, deep fundamental research and journalism to provide unique and actionable insights for traders and investors. Our "All signal, no noise" approach drives an intelligence service that is succinct and timely, which is highly regarded by our time constrained client base.Our Head Office is in London with offices in Chicago, Washington and Beijing, as well as an on the ground presence in other major financial centres across the world.