How to cut the debt – and inflation – at a stroke

We’ve written here in the past about the various ways the government might use to try and cut the Retail Price Index. There are all sorts of reasons why this would work for them.

First and most obviously, low inflation is better than high inflation; so the lower you can make the RPI look, the better. Second, it would make the liabilities of private sector occupational pension schemes look less bad – many of their payouts are linked to RPI, so the lower RPI is expected to be, the better they look.

However, possibly the most important reason to keep RPI down from the government’s point of view is to keep the returns the Treasury has to pay out on index-linked gilts (which are linked to RPI) down.

There was a suggestion that the Treasury might deal with the high cost of index-linked bonds by starting to issue CPI-linked bonds rather than RPI-linked bonds (CPI has been about 0.7% lower than RPI over the last two decades). See last year’s consultation paper on this.

But the release of minutes from a meeting of the Consumer Prices Advisory Committee (CPAC) suggests that there is now the beginning of a new plan underway – to adjust the RPI formula to bring it in line with the CPI.

Peter Warburton, writing in the Halkin newsletter, notes that the committee discussed the “identification, understanding and elimination of unjustified causes” of the difference between the two measures, something which is known as the ‘formula effect’. Were this to happen – ie the formula effect to be eliminated – and the RPI to fall near to CPI, this could, says Warburton “slice off perhaps 25% of the inflation-linked element of the return to redemption on a bond.”

Ben Lord of M&G thinks it could be even more significant than that. Commenting in the FT’s FTfm section earlier this week, he claims that were the RPI to be calculated on a geometric mean as the CPI is (rather then the current arithmetic mean) and that calculation was applied to all goods and services, the RPI would fall in the region of 0.9%. That, he says, would wipe off around 40% of the value of the typical linker.

The move would, Lord says, not be particularly different to the way in which the government cut the coupon on War Loans from 5% to 3.5% in 1932 (I’ve written about this here). It might not be an official default, but it would still be one. Is it likely? Hard to say.

The Bank of England has 80% of its pension fund in index-linked bonds, and also has the right to object to any changes it considers to be “materially detrimental” to holders of them. On the other hand, if the UK government is hoping to reduce its debt burden via inflation, having a huge proportion of its debt in instruments linked to the RPI – the highest level of inflation it calculates – really isn’t very helpful at all.

15 Responses

  1. 1

    07/06/2012, Robin wrote

    Moving goal posts! The CPI calculation is already a hack by government to escape from its obligations. Just because someone with a phd in economics says something about a economics technicality does not excuse government. What was a yard ten years ago is still a yard today. If government and the central bank maintained the money supply using one set of measures 20 years ago, then why can't they continue? This changing-of-the-rules is a swindle!

  2. 2

    07/06/2012, Georoy wrote

    I agree with Robin its bad practice to keep changing the way you measure things you end up not knowing what the truth is, it also gives the public another reason not to trust government it's called being dishonest.

  3. 3

    07/06/2012, Nick wrote

    So have we really dropped to the level of "fixing" the ratios? Surely this is not UK but some 3rd world dictatorship?
    Shall we print notes with Mervyn King's photo now?
    Do we need to rename the pound to the Osborn?
    Shall we rename london to camerdon?

    Where does the buck stop now?

    Have heard this week proposals:
    -Debt jubilee
    -"Fixing" the RPI (the cpi is already fixed)
    -Erasing the bonds bought by BoE


    Really economics is not a science and UK reputation is going down the drain...

  4. 4

    07/06/2012, Boris MacDonut wrote

    From 191970 to 1990 Governments stood or fell based on umemployment figures.......so they fiddled with the way this was measured to massage the headline downwards. In the 1990,s and until 2007 they stood or fell on inflation and hence fiddled with and massaged those figures. Since the Crunch it is debt levels that hold sway so reducing debt through smoke an mirrors will be the new imperative. As wea re already used to sundry changes to inflation measurement if they can fiddle that and also reduce the debt, rest assured it will be done.

  5. 5

    07/06/2012, CKP wrote

    will be bonanza for lawyers should this occur, as every man and his dog will challenge the retrospective change in the terms of contracts. Would serve the BoE right though, my recollection is they they moved their pensions heavily into index-linked investments shortly before they began QE, and they still expect us to swallow their drivel about impeding deflation.

  6. 6

    07/06/2012, Nick wrote

    CKP,
    And strangely the FSA has not investigated why BoE was mentioning deflation as a problem and the same time buying only index-linked bonds.
    Is this not insider trading?

  7. 7

    08/06/2012, David wrote

    If the RPI is recalculated those of us who bought index-linked annuities will suffer yet another cut to our retirement income and presumably the companies from which we bought them will make a windfall profit at our expense. Yet another reduction in the living standards of people who can no longer re-shape their finances to save more or work harder or make up the shortfall in any other way. What price forward planning and saving?

  8. 8

    08/06/2012, dr ray wrote

    Seems a complicated way to fiddle the inflation figures. Why not just make them up and lock up anyone who disputes them. Works in Argentina.

  9. 9

    08/06/2012, Roberto Birquet wrote

    CPI has been 0.7% lower than RPI over the last decade. Do you mean 0.7 percentage points lower, as that would be rather significant, but 0.7% not. Sorry to be so pedantic, but there is a big difference.

    And I noticed that int he last budget, the government shamlessly tried to claim a lot of credit for being "generous" as it had raised pensions in nominal terms more than any government for about a century. Of course, it had simply raised pensions in line with RPI, thereby keeping real pensions the same as before - no rise.

    So if they can get away with lying about being generous, maybe they would like to keep inflation high. The added bonuus is that it bails out banks even further, by reducing everyone's real debt. And that has been the main policy plank of this and the last government. And added added bonus, reducs govt debt/deficit too.

  10. 10

    08/06/2012, Roberto Birquet wrote

    From 1970 to 1990 Governments stood or fell based on umemployment figures.......

    Boris, that is not true. Unemployment figures - even after extensive fiddling - showed that unemployment had trebled in the 1980s. But Thatcher's conservatives won in 1983 and 1987 comfortably. We learned that the poor tend not to vote, and those feeling secure in jobs did not care.

  11. 11

    08/06/2012, NeutronWarp9 wrote

    Earth to 3 - Nick, everything is a fix: school exam results, crime figures, RPI, Eurovision.... The trick is fixing the system to your advantage.
    My problem with Merryn's argument is that I naively perceive a liability as somebody elses asset, so for every smiling debt-junky being let off, a-nother is taking the hit. Of course, QE appears to magically solve everything whilst in reality it simply passes the buck, pound and euro onto the next generation. Sort it out Jean Luc.

  12. 12

    08/06/2012, Nick wrote

    Hi Earth,
    It is all abit of a big mess..

    And the politicians dont have the courage to take the right decisions.
    They are:
    -Afraid of the SUN
    -Afraid of the interest rate
    -Afraid of the unions
    -Afraid of the pensioners.

    But dont care at all about
    -Tennants
    -Future FTB
    -Savers..

  13. 13

    08/06/2012, Boris McDonut wrote

    #10 RobertO. I guess that is correct. Governments did not in reality fall,but they felt sufficiently spooked to fiddle the figures, as now. I suppose Cameron needs to pray that the indebted do not vote and that those with savings do not care.

  14. 14

    11/06/2012, Stephen Watson wrote

    Inflation, of course, isn't a "real" measurable quantity like mass or temperature. The value of money depends entirely on what you compare it with, and that is always a subjective decision. It isn't a question of whether it's being measured accurately. It's only a question of how you make it up. So nobody should be surprised if governments make it up in a way that suits themselves - that's the whole nature of the game.

    By the same token, GDP and economic growth, whose measurements have to account for inflation, aren't real measures either. Gold is real; land is real; kilowatt hours are real; the level of CO2 in the atmosphere is real; but money, and everything associated with it, is just a computer game. The problem is we're letting the gamers run the world.


  15. 15

    15/06/2012, David Quinn wrote

    The most worrying thing about this is that the government have subverted our institutions. ONS is supposed to be independent of government yet have been enthusiastic about CPI which they must know to be a fidlle. The Royal Statistical Society has been very strongly opposed to CPI and its use of Geometric Mean, correctly recognising it as an economists' theory rather than good statistics. CPAC, which has been pushing for reform of CPI, has an number of members from the RSS., yet now seems to be collaborating in the subversion of an honest RPI. The press seems oblivious to all this. I suspect journos simply cannot count.

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