Robert Peston Profile picture
Oct 19 20 tweets 3 min read
On Monday the prime minister said: “I’ve fixed the mistakes”. That’s not quite right. What she might more properly have said is “my new chancellor is trying to fix my mistakes, but lasting damage has been done”. 1/20
The point is that the mini budget has increased the hole in the public finances by more than the direct impact of the mini-budget’s unfunded tax increases. 2/20
By undermining investors’ confidence in the government’s economic competence, the mini-budget increased the relative interest rate the government has to pay to borrow - and that caused an indirect but significant deepening of the hole in the public finances. 3/20
That is partly why simply reversing the mini-budget’s tax cuts and limiting the energy subsidies isn’t enough to fill the hole. 4/20
The appearance of a chancellor and pm giving away money in tax cuts the country didn’t have undermined the confidence of investors in the economic competence of the government. 5/20
That is one important reason why market interest rates soared, why the price of government bonds collapsed. 6/20
Those bond prices have recovered to an extent; interest rates have fallen. But - and this is the important point - those market interest rates are higher than they would have been had the mini budget not happened. 7/20
One way of seeing this is that in the years after Brexit, the yield on 10-year UK government bonds or gilts was significantly less than the yield on US ten-year Treasury bonds, often a full percentage point lower. And see attached 8/20
So for years it was massively cheaper for the UK government to borrow than it was for the US government. 9/20
Immediately after the mini-budget debacle, it suddenly became massively more expensive for the UK to borrow than for Washington. 10/20
Today, after the u-turns and sacking of Kwarteng, the interest rate the UK government has to pay to borrow for 10 years is roughly the same as what Washington pays. 11/20
That is the lasting damage for the public finances and the economy. It means the government will more in interest to raise the hundreds of billions of pounds it will need in the coming years than would have been the case. 12/20
It also increases the interest rate we all pay and slows economic growth. 13/20
So part of the residual £40bn odd hole in the public finances is harm inflicted by Truss’s mini budget. It will take years of steady economic stewardship to remove the underlying harm. 14/20
In the jargon, she and Kwasi increased the risk premium attached by investors to the UK. That is the mistake they made that cannot easily be corrected. 15/20
Hunt is doing his best. Every time he does a u-turn on their policies - pushing up taxes, cutting public spending - the Office of Budget Responsibility sends him a new updated forecast of the fiscal hole he is yet to fill. 16/20
Day after day between now and 31 October, when he announces the overall rescue package, he will tell the OBR “this or that benefit won’t be fully updated by inflation” and “this or that public service will be squeezed”, to fill the hole. 17/20
That is the cost of the mini-budget’s incompetence and incontinence. It is a price that falls disproportionately on those on lowest incomes, who rely most on public services. 18/20
And when Tory MPs recover from the shock they feel at the scale of their party’s humiliation, they’ll grasp the magnitude of the harm inflicted on them too. 19/20
Because at the next election, and maybe for a few elections, their traditional mantra that only the Tories can be trusted to manage the public finances will sound like a bad joke. 20/20

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More from @Peston

Oct 20
Talking to member of the cabinet last night, it’s clear there is a collective will among ministers to try to keep Liz Truss in office till 31 October, so that the chancellor can determine which further taxes need to rise and what spending should be cut in that de facto budget,…
the medium term fiscal plan, without the instability of not knowing who will be next PM. But their loyalty to her extends no longer than Hallowe’en, and this minister also told me the cabinet’s support couldn’t even be guaranteed for just those seven days. For Truss, of…
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Read 5 tweets
Oct 19
Here is Downing Street's version of why @SuellaBraverman's security breach was a sacking offence. 1) the information she sent out related to a new policy to let in more high skilled workers, and stimulate growth - which was relevant to the @OBR_UK assessment of...
how fast the economy will grow and was therefore price sensitive (it was highly confidential till announced by Jeremy Hunt on 31 Oct says source); 2) it was sent out using the private email server on Braverman's phone (an accident, says Braverman); 3) it was sent to a...
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Read 4 tweets
Oct 17
Here is one way of seeing the price of the mini-budget’s incompetence. 1/20 🧵
The interest rate set by the Bank of England may now peak at 5% rather than 6% - IF all goes to plan with Jeremy Hunt’s unwinding of that mini-budget’s tax cuts today and imposition of public spending reductions in two weeks. 2/20
That means the interest rate paid by all of us - on mortgages, on personal and business loans - would have been a full one percentage point higher than it needed to be without Hunt’s humiliating evasive action. 3/20
Read 20 tweets
Oct 16
I have taken soundings of many Tory MPs, and of those whose business is to know the minds of Tory MPs. All think Liz Truss will have to resign, that she has failed so comprehensively in these opening weeks that there is no route to redemption. 1/6
Their conversations are largely about how long till she goes, how long the process to find a successor would need to be and who that successor should be. 2/6
They say there are two or possibly three credible candidates: Sunak, Mordaunt and (if he wants it) Wallace. 3/6
Read 6 tweets
Oct 15
I completely understand the argument that it would be insane - contempt for the way we do democracy - for a political party to change its leader TWICE after a general election. It is why till recently I assumed Liz Truss would surely lead her party into the next…
election. But. Liz Truss has today - via her new chancellor - renounced the core of her leadership manifesto. And in the preceding few weeks, she damaged the British economy and wrecked her party’s reputation for fiscal competence. If you recall, Cameron resigned…
having been told by a slim majority of voters that he was wrong to have backed staying in the EU. By contrast opinion polls indicate that an overwhelming number of voters disapprove of Truss’s economic policies and of Truss’s leadership. You could argue that Black Wednesday…
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Oct 15
When Jeremy Hunt received a message early yesterday morning from a “Liz Truss” wanting to talk to him, he assumed he was being pranked. He later found out it was indeed the prime minister and she wanted to make him Chancellor. He has totally reset…
her economic policy this morning, so maybe the prank is on her. I have just interviewed him, and what he told me is that in what he now says will in effect be a “full budget” on 31 October, he will announce public spending plans that are lower than those previously announced…
(otherwise known as spending cuts), plus tax rises and some taxes not falling as fast as hoped (that promised 1p reduction in the basic rate of tax is at risk). There will be a panoply of painful consolidating measures to eliminate a…
Read 7 tweets

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