If the project works, it destroys the socialist ‘take all
and provide for all’ model; but if it fails, how many might opt for shabby
security over potentially ruinous freedom? The jury is still out, but I dread
the verdict.
The stock market has
become a rollercoaster in recent years. Here is a graph of selected days – the high
of the tech boom of the ‘90s, the low points of 2003 and 2009, and where we are
now. To give some idea of ‘real terms’ I also supply the figures adjusted by
the official RPI index https://www.ons.gov.uk/economy/inflationandpriceindices/timeseries/cdko/mm23
(June’s market close is deflated by May’s RPI, the latest available):
As you see, the magic 7,000 figure around which the market is now circling – above the historic high point of 6,930.2 on 20 December 1999 – is actually worth about half what it was then. Yes, you might do better by picking particular stocks or funds, but yesterday’s star could be today’s dog, as for example we see in the legal-vulture-besieged Neil Woodford https://www.ft.com/content/2f077ae2-f19e-11e9-bfa4-b25f11f42901 . At least with Prince Ras Monolulu’s racing tips https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/horse-racing/54695641 you got a result the same day.
Most people aren’t gamblers, at least not with their life
savings, which is why they used to like with-profits funds, getting an annual
statement from the insurance company to say how much their holding had grown
since the year before. However such funds found it difficult to cope with the volatility
of the last decades, sometimes having to impose ‘market value adjustments’ to stop
investors running away en masse in a bad year.
The uncertainty is compounded by what’s happened in the bond
market. The unimaginable levels of debt in our system have forced the
government to drop interest rates to near zero; when a personal pension plan
holder wants to retire with an annuity, it has to be secured with bond
investments on which the annual yield is now pitiful, so that one needs a far larger
fund to get the same income. The alternative is to leave one’s pension
investment in equities, with their associated risk.
This dilemma was not anticipated in the good old days, when (for
example) Equitable Life https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Equitable_Life_Assurance_Society
sold pensions with a Guaranteed Annuity Rate at retirement age of up to 12 per
cent. When EL were caught out by the rates collapse at pay-out time they tried
to reduce the investors’ fund value to compensate, but the court ruled that out;
hinc illae lacrimae https://www.latin-is-simple.com/en/vocabulary/phrase/749/
.
The investment boom of the 1980s lit expectations that were
fanned by regulators. It’s understandable in a way – there were cases of maturing
mortgage endowment plans that yielded six times their target value – but only
if you think good times go on for ever. At one point the illustrated yearly growth
on pension funds was in the bracket 8.5 – 13 per cent. However by the beginning
of the 90s even the best funds run for our insurance company weren’t showing
anything like that higher figure.
As with so many issues, instead of looking for cat-stroking
villains we need to understand that the roots of our problems are systemic. Britain
threw away the wealth of generations in two world wars with a great depression
in between – there was no Roaring Twenties here. Post World War Two America –
seizing the chance to finish off the British Empire - turned off the financial
tap to us even as it poured money into western Europe to rebuild it and prevent
an outbreak of communism. The terms on which we joined the EU withered many of
our industries for over forty years. Meanwhile the Third World gained our
technological know-how and exploited it with desperate urgency as only the poor
can – one company I used to advise specialised in exporting large machine tools
from our closing factories. Is it a surprise that money-making seems to centre
around housebuilding these days, rather than industry? It is as though Stone
Age men could eschew hunting in favour of selling each other caves.
Well, now we’re out of the EU, though it seems that like
jilted lovers they still try to make as much trouble as possible; but there’s
no going back to the status quo ante; it’s a different world now. Although it’s
nice to hear a PM who makes optimistic noises, we’re already seeing that ‘free
trade’ is not an unmixed blessing; we have exchanged the mini-globalism of
Europe for the maxi-globalism that has done so much for the multinationals but
whose benefits have not really trickled down to the rest of us. If we really
are de-industrialising and also turning expensively and erratically green in
various ways, how are we going to support our over-large population, especially
when we are still expanding it with further influxes of people?
We are long overdue a consideration of how to cut our coat
according to the cloth we still have; otherwise people will start to contemplate
a different system.
2 comments:
“ especially when we are still expanding it with further influxes of people”
Diplomatically put. :)
@James: just people - so many to feed, water, house etc. 70 million hostages to fortune.
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