Richard Murphy Profile picture
Oct 12, 2022 18 tweets 4 min read Read on X
It is not clear what the Governor of the Bank of England wanted to achieve through his intervention in markets last night. The signals overnight are confusing and deeply worrying. The likelihood of a massively turbulent and costly day is very high. A thread…..
By turbulent I mean politically and economically. The second part is the easy bit. Given the total confusion the pound may well fall again and interest rates may rise. Politically, Truss and Kwarteng have been left with no choice but withdraw their budget by Bailey.
Whether Bailey intended that is not, however, clear. As @D_Blanchflower has said, his intervention saying that pension funds must sort themselves out by Friday was as logical as a doctor saying get better in three days or I will withdraw your drugs, which were working.
What is likely is that Bailey implied that he does not believe in QE and does not wish to use it when its use is essential this coming year to help fund the energy price support package. If so then he is playing deeply dangerous political games. The City is demanding austerity.
I think it likely that there is a power struggle going on. Bailey says his, the Bank, and the Treasury view, that the economy is like a household must prevail and politicians must not fight the misery recessions cause, but most tell the country to live with the pain.
We have seen Bailey doing this all year, telling people that they must not ask for inflation matching pay rises. Now he is saying if pension funds fail, so be it. That is a price worth paying to prevent QE and to let him actually reverse it, which was his stated plan on 22 Sept.
I stress, Bailey could not be more dangerous in saying this. He clearly does not understand QE. He is not consulting the monetary policy committee, so is acting beyond his remit. I suspect he is seeking to deny that the Bank can even create the money to solve this problem.
Intellectually Bailey is also denying the role of a modern central bank in that case. He also appears to be shredding good governance at the Bank, which markets will not like. It is as if he is staging a coup for an old guard City elite.
By staging this coup he is saying that his view must prevail over the decisions of elected politicians. As a result he has deliberately refused to use the powers he has to force them to back down instead. I think that the most massive abuse of his position.
Section 19 of the Bank of England Act 1998 lets Truss and Kwarteng over-rule him. But I think he is gambling on them not doing so, due to their weakness in office, which is very obviously real.
I strongly suspect Truss and Kwarteng will cave in. But if so, have no doubt that power will have shifted to the City. The result will be even higher interest rates, the imposition of massive austerity, and deep recession.
Neoliberal madness, beyond the wildest dreams of Tufton St will prevail if Bailey, a man of remarkably little intellect and even less apparent understanding or empathy prevails.
What if Labour replaced the Tories? Rachel Reeves is a Bank of England person to her core. Would she challenge this or play the role of the National Government in 1931, with all that followed? I can’t be sure, but nor am I optimistic.
If Labour caves Truss and Kwarteng’s legacy will be a depression in the UK, imposed by a callous City on this country as a whole, unless there was civil unrest to stop it. Things are that serious now.
The furthest right economic right wing in the form of Bailey is fighting the economic right wing in the form of Truss and Kwarteng today. No one else will get a look in. The idiots are in charge. It’s very hard to find anything optimistic in this scenario.
Bad as Truss and Kwarteng are, Bailey is intent on using the Bank to make things very much worse for people in this country. This is a madness that is almost incomprehensible but for me this is the only explanation that makes any sense.
Watch events today, realising you may well be watching a coup in real time as the age old rivalry between the cities of London and Westminster play out, with the scale of suffering they can impose being the prize they wish to win.
This is worse than I ever expected, and detest Truss and Kwarteng as I do, they have to beat Bailey. That is some indication of my concern, and what I suspect is that they won’t do that. Worry, because Bailey wants to ruin us all.

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More from @RichardJMurphy

Mar 1
Rishi Sunak is standing outside Downing Street saying that the newly chosen MP for Rochdale, elected yesterday, is the reason why he must crush our democratic freedoms. In the process he appeals to theocracy whilst totally undermining the democracy he claims to support.
The reality is that if there are extremists in the country it is those members of his party who want to create divisions in this country for their own small minded gains.
Worse, he appeals to our history as imperialist colonisers and deniers of freedom to billions to justify his position. If he wished to cause offence, that commentary is clearly intended to deliver it and is utterly blind to the prejudice created by economic and social division in our society,
Read 8 tweets
Feb 10
Quite extraordinarily, leading politicians, including Kier Starmer and Rachel Reeves have in the last few days returned to talking about the country maxing out its credit card, just as David Cameron did in 2015. This is utterly absurd. A thread…
[This is a long thread. If it appears to stop part way through, push the button to ‘see more replies’ and the rest should appear.]
As a matter of fact, a country can’t have a credit card. It’s even questionable whether the UK has a national debt when what politicians describe as such is made up of all our notes and coins plus all the savings accounts that people have with the government.
Read 36 tweets
Feb 9
Labour says it cannot now afford to spend £28 billion a year to deliver the investment in the climate transition that we all know we need. Let’s leave the politics and even the climate bit aside. Let me just look at the affordability bit. A thread….
Labour announced its green investment plan in 2021. And nothing much has changed since then, to be candid. For example, by the time it gets to office inflation will have been and gone.
Growth will also be non-existent then, as it was in 2021. Borrowing will be high, as it was back then. But government borrowing costs will be tumbling this year. They may not be at 2021 levels. But they really won’t be an obstacle to spending.
Read 23 tweets
Jan 14
There is justifiable outrage right now about the fact that the Post Office has been able to prosecute sub-postmasters itself based on data it generated. I get that anger, but we should remember that HM Revenue and Customs do this every day to thousands of people….
[This is a long thread. If it appears to stop part way please press the ‘See more replies’ option below the tweet where it appears to run out and the rest should appear]
HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) is, when it comes to imposing fines, quite literally a rule unto itself. It imposes millions of fines a year. Many of them are for not submitting tax returns, and many of those are on people who had no taxable income, or none to declare.
Read 38 tweets
Jan 12
War, of some sort, has begun in the Red Sea and Yemen. The UK is involved. It is likely that there will be action for a while. Ignoring the ethics of the engagement, for now, what are the economic consequences? A thread……
Because this war is going to make passage of the Red Sea more, rather than less, dangerous for the time being it is inevitable that for an unknown period the cost of shipping goods and raw materials from the Far and Middle East will rise. Suez is going to be out of action.
But let’s be clear: the diversion of shipping around the Cape of Good Hope has already begun. And whilst there are costs, and delays, in that they are not on a major scale. Saudi cuts to the price of oil might more than compensate for them.
Read 15 tweets
Jan 7
Without wishing to oversimplify things, there is a binary choice in politics. You can either emphasise the needs of the individual or of society. For the first time in more than a century, the UK's two leading political parties are emphasising the individual and not society.
No wonder so many are disenchanted with politics. Only those who are willing to turn a blind eye to the needs of others are now represented by the mainstream choices presented to us. Anyone who cares about society has no one to represent them.
This is not healthy for politics, democracy, society or those whom it should be supporting, from the young to the elderly, to the sick, to those with a disability, or who are on low pay, or who simply need a helping hand.
Read 14 tweets

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