Household Deleveraging: Are We There Yet?
By: Adrian Ash, BullionVault
-- Posted Wednesday, 31 October 2012 | | Source: GoldSeek.com
Who killed the UK recovery? UK households of course...
DELEVERAGING, like Hamlet's nothing, is only good or bad when you come to think about it.
And what view you choose speaks to your moral view of the world too, and so to your economic theory as well, whether or not you know it. Because for every "liquidationist" saying the debt must be paid down, and savings must be built up before a new cycle can begin, there is another economist urging government and central banks to take on releveraging themselves, so the net effect is nil. Otherwise we're doomed to a permanent depression.
UK
households care little for such chatter, however. By September 2008,
their net debt – their total savings minus their borrowings – were equal
to 20% of the UK's annual economy. People owed the banks £300bn more
than the banks owed to them.
How things change! Banks won't lend, and people won't borrow even at 0% interest rates. Net result?
Over
the last four years, UK households have cut their debt and grown their
savings faster than any time on record. They have delevered by more than
15 whole percentage points' worth of GDP – a "cost" to the economy of
£235bn in current spending. Or if you prefer, a long-needed boost to
household assets after two decades of spending beyond our means.
Of
course, the savers and the debtors aren't all the same people. Poor
pensioners still trying to pay off their mortgage are very different in
spending and financial behaviour from young City workers struggling to
spend last year's bonus. Yet across the UK as a whole, people's response
to the financial crisis – or rather, their role in creating the
economic fallout – has been the same: to cut spending as never before.
The retained money has either gone to paying down household debt (some £104bn on the Bank of England's figures)
or building household savings (which have risen by £133bn). Anyone
wondering why the UK economy has failed to recover as rapidly as after
previous post-war recessions has a good part of their answer. The
question now is how much further this deleveraging could run.
Fifty-odd
years ago, net banks savings amongst UK households totaled some 26% of
GDP on average. That cushion (or "dead money" depending how you see it)
got chewed up by the 1970s' inflation, itself tied up with the surge in
consumer debt which credit cards and the mass commercialization of
hire-purchase wrought.
By the end of the 1980s, we'd tipped from
net savers to net debtors. But it wasn't until 15 years ago that the
second-leg of Britain's household leveraging got started. That swoon
took 10 years to reach the record net debt of 2008. It's been unwound in
less than half the time, despite the Bank of England urging people to
borrow with zero interest rates, and urging others not to save with
quantitative easing.
Can the UK bear another 15% of GDP in
household deleveraging? That would only take us back to 1983's level of
net savings. But it would likely gut the UK banking sector, let alone
the shopping malls.
Again, whether that's good or bad is your
personal choice. Policy-makers – right or wrong – have so far been
powerless to prevent it. Doesn't mean they won't try again. And again.
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