Baby-Steppin'
Back to the '70s
by
Adrian Ash
BullionVault
Friday, 11 April 2008
"...A short-back
and sides for the value of Sterling – Trim, trim! Snip, snip...!"
"ON THE DOWNSIDE,"
said the Bank of England when it trimmed UK
interest rates by 0.25% on Thursday, "the disruption in financial markets
could lead to a slowdown in the economy sufficiently sharp to pull inflation
below target."
Note the Old Lady's choice words; the banking crisis
"could lead" to lower inflation.
Note also her logic – that an economic slowdown can do her
work for her. And she is 314 years old, after all, poor thing. Defending the
value of Sterling for more than
three centuries (the real meaning of her "inflation targeting" task) would
wear out the toughest old boot!
But with the British Pound now worth less than half what it
bought twenty years ago, the Bank will need all the help it can get in pulling
inflation back below target.

Just like the United States,
the UK is now
suffering the worst inflation in industrial costs since the runaway inflation
of the late 1970s.
Only this week, the UK's
official data agency pointed to 21% year-on-year price hikes on average. The
Bureau for Labor Studies said US
import costs rose 14.8% in March, up from 9.1% six months before.
Now you might counter that both countries – both dependent
on imports for much of their industrial input,
including crude oil – are also suffering on the currency markets. Both the
Pound and the Dollar have been hammered vs. the Euro and Yen, not to mention
the Chinese Yuan.
But that would only be to say just the same thing. The value
of money is precisely the inverse of your rate of inflation. Currency traders
only add to the pressure; they don't create it.
Back on Threadneedle
Street meantime in the City of London,
let's finally recall the Old Lady's decision this week: the Bank of England cut
interest rates, albeit by a slim 0.25%, in the hope of forestalling the very
same slowdown it hopes will ease the UK's
inflationary pressures.
Okay, so Mervyn King and his interest-rate
trimmers are less melodramatic than Ben Bernanke's
crowd in Washington. But can they
really have it both ways? Just what do they want – a slowdown or not?
Snipping and trimming at the value of Sterling,
we fear here at BullionVault,
the UK will get
a slowdown regardless, plus persistent inflation, taking us straight back to
the stagflationary '70s.
Yet so far, at least, British savers and spenders still seem
happy enough!
"We will have to lower our expectations of what
property we can afford," grin a young couple splashed across the front
page of Friday's Times. The credit
crunch starting last summer has kept them and their baby locked out of the UK's
decade-long property boom. Merely tinkering with the cost of money looks
unlikely to change that. Four major mortgage lenders actually raised their fixed-interest deals on the
Old Lady's decision.
"It's not just the cost of hotels, it's the weak
Pound," adds a young father, also snapped for The Times. Already planning his family's summer vacation in Europe,
he's spotted the link between a currency's value and power. Yet he too smiles
like inflation's not really a worry.
"My household bills are creeping up every day,"
agrees a young medical doctor with another soft smile, seemingly happy with the
snail's pace of Sterling's
destruction. Perhaps the average GP's pay-rise of 58% since 2004 helps raise
his spirits, up there at £113,164 per year ($221,800).
So it's left to two pensioners, Frank and Dorothy Beevers of Bexley, London, to
bring true gloom to The Times'
doom-laden headline – "Consumer Crunch".
Trying to get by on the state pension – plus a private
pension worth £4,000 per year ($7,850) – "it's not just the price of
diesel that's going up," they mutter glumly. "It's more expensive for
us to heat our home.
"Inflation is having a real effect," they add. And
for them of course, aged over 65, it always has.

Back at the
start of the 1970s – that most inflationary of decades – the United Kingdom got rid of its boring old Pound and
its boring old pennies.
Out went
the 240 pence of pre-decimalization. In came the new 100 pence of the decimal
Pound. And funnily enough, the Pound has indeed been decimated since decimalization!
It buys barely 9% of what the brave new Pound first bought back in 1971.
But the fastest
destruction of Sterling's spending power came in the nine years ending
1980, when the Pound lost three-quarters of its value at an average annual clip
of 12% annually.
Now throw
in that decade's disastrously high tax rates, and
cash-in-the-bank just couldn't keep pace either, despite the record-high
interest rates of the mid-to-late '70s.
In 1976
alone, even basic-rate taxpayers gave away one-sixth of their savings to tax
and inflation if they dared save for the future by putting cash on deposit. Which incredibly is just what most people did...

The cost of
borrowing soared as the cost of living shot higher.
Encouraged by
these apparent great rates of return, British households piled their cash into
savings accounts. As you can see, the ratio of savings to disposable income mapped
the gross returns paid to cash pretty much tick-by-tick.
But what
nobody told them – and what headline interest rates still keep hidden from view
– was the true cost of saving £1 today to provide for the future.
One hundred
New Pence tucked away in the bank during Jan. 1975 bought less than 63p worth
of goods at '75 prices by the start of the '80s. That loss of more than
one-third came despite interest rates averaging almost 11%.
Yes, things
were very much worse three decades ago. But there's scant hope the Bank of
England will avoid a repeat if it keeps snipping at base rates with its
patented "baby step" cuts.

With the Old Lady now running interest-rate policy in line
with both bond-market forecasts and the government's public instructions, the
net loss to cash savers only seems set to grow worse.
"If you look at [the financial crisis] situation,"
said Gordon Brown, the prime minister, ahead of the BoE's
vote, "because we've got low inflation we can cut interest rates."
If not quite a lie, it was a woefully misinformed claim. And
either way, cash savers in Britain
– as in the United States
– might soon start to wonder:
Just what's the point of prudence?
Adrian Ash
BullionVault
Gold
price chart, no delay | Free Report: 5
Myths of the Gold Market
Formerly City correspondent for The Daily Reckoning in London
and head of editorial at the UK's
leading financial advisory for private investors, Adrian Ash is the editor of Gold News and head of research at BullionVault
– where you can Buy Gold Today
vaulted in Zurich on $3 spreads and
0.8% dealing fees.
(c) BullionVault 2008
Please Note: This
article is to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best
place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk.
Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events –
and must be verified elsewhere – should you choose to act on it.