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The impact of the credit crunch on British workers
By Chris Talbot
18 February 2008
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Indications of the severity with which the credit crunch is
likely to hit working people in Britain are contained in a number
of recent reports and press articles. These focus, firstly, on
the impact of credit becoming more difficult to obtain and, secondly,
on the cost of mortgages.
Significant levels of short-term debtunsecured or secured
against property, as well as credit cardsis widespread.
Over the last ten years the economy under the Labour government
has grown in large part because of consumer spending financed
by debt.
According to the National Institute of Economic and Social
Research, the ratio of household debt to national income is 1.62
in the UK, the highest for a major economy. It compares to 1.42
in the United States, 1.36 in Japan and 1.09 in Germany. Last
year, for the first time, the total stock of consumer debtat
£1,325 billionwas greater than Britains GDP.
It has trebled over the last ten years.
Figures put out by the Office of National Statistics last June
show that British people are saving the smallest amount of their
wages since 1960. Real household disposable incomewages
after tax, interest payments and pension contributions, adjusted
for inflationfell for two successive quarters.
A recent report by the independent price comparison and switching
service uSwitch.com shows that over the last ten years the average
net income has gone up by 48 percent, only slightly more than
essential living costs (43 percent). But average debt repayments
have more than doubled, with an increase of 105 percent.
Out of an adult population of 47.5 million, uSwitch found that
4.8 million spent more than they earned last year, nine million
just broke even, and the average consumer only had £157
($309) left in the bank at the end of the month.
This reliance on credit means that millions are now feeling
the squeeze. The financial information firm Moneyfacts said at
the end of last year that the credit crunch has caused the
personal loan market to tighten, lenders have withdrawn from the
market and rates have seen a continuous increase throughout 2007.
Last November alone the number of unsecured loan providers fell
by 10 percent.
In the first such action to be taken, the credit card company
Egg, which is owned by the US bank Citigroup, withdrew credit
cards from 160,000 of its customers. Citigroups press statement
says that customers affected had a higher than acceptable
risk profile.
Signs that the collapse of cheap credit is beginning to affect
mortgage repayments is contained in a January report from the
governments Financial Services Authority (FSA). House prices
in Britain have been part of the global bubble, with
the average price now standing at over £182,000some
seven times the average income of about £26,000 a year.
In 2004 the ratio was five times the average income, whilst back
in 1969 it was only two and a half times.
The proportion of houses which are owner occupied is now 70
percent (out of a total of 25 million homes), with some 12 million
of these paying mortgages. Public or so-called council housing
was largely sold off in the 1980s under the Thatcher government
and now accounts for only 10 percent of the total. There is a
severe shortage of affordable houses, especially for families
and first time buyers. According to charities there are already
526,000 families, including 900,000 children, living in overcrowded
accommodationwith 80,000 homeless families in temporary
accommodation and 1.6 million on waiting lists for council houses.
Although they do use the term sub-prime, the FSA
more often refer in their report to product innovation
and state that new loans have been concentrated in groups
which historically have not been homeowners.
The FSA examines the risks now facing homeowners, looking at
three categories: 1) the loan was taken out for more than 25 years;
2) it was worth more than 90 percent of the house value when sold;
or 3) it was for more than 3.5 times the income of the purchaser.
The FSA considers the two million people who have taken out mortgages
in the two and a half years before September 2007 that fall into
just one of these categories may not represent significant
consumer risks. But with more than one million people who
fall into two or more of these categories, it considers there
is a greater cause for concern. Some 150,000 homeowners
fall into all three categories and the FSA consider these most
likely to default on loans.
These figures are probably an underestimate. There were 27,000
house repossessions in 2007, an increase of 21 percent on the
previous year and the highest since 1999. But the figure for repossession
represents only a fraction of the total number of people who have
run into difficulties with their mortgage repayments. In these
circumstances most people manage to negotiate an arrangement with
their mortgage provider. They do not, therefore, appear in the
figures for defaulters. Shelter, the homeless charity, says it
took more than 80,000 calls in 2007 from homeowners concerned
about falling behind with payments, eight times the number in
2006. As credit conditions become tighter, mortgage providers
may be less willing to agree to such arrangements.
Even if the million or so at risk do not end up defaulting
on mortgages, the FSA point out that they may be unable to meet
payments on other debts: We are concerned that many consumers
are ill-prepared for a deterioration in economic conditions and
may have placed too great a reliance on their ability to depend
on cheap credit and housing wealth to sustain their consumption
levels and investment plans.
The FSAs head of financial strategy and risk, Lyndon
Nelson, emphasised this point when he told the Guardian,
It is not necessarily the affordability of the mortgage.
It is their other debt. Customers with other borrowing in addition
to the mortgage are struggling.
The other borrowings tip them over the edge, he
said.
The FSA point out that many of the current mortgages were taken
out before the interest rate rises of 2006 and 2007. When mortgages
were taken out in 2005 the median repayment was about 24 percent
of net income. Current standard rate mortgages take up 27-29 percent
of income and will rise to 30 percent should interest rates rise
by one percent. This year some 1.4 million mortgages that were
taken out on short term fixed rate, i.e., before the rises over
the last two years, will have to be re-negotiated. The FSA calculate
that moving back to a standard rate would add an average of £210
a month to repayments. This is likely to hit many of the million
or so homeowners who fall into two or more risk categories.
Neither the Bank of England nor the government have any room
to manoeuvre in this situation. The Bank of England has lowered
its base rate a little, but it has been unwilling to follow the
sharp cut in the US. Well aware that the British economy is moving
into recession, the Bank does not dare boost the economy with
more cheap credit because of the threat of inflation.
At a press conference this week presenting the quarterly report
of the Bank of Englands Monetary Policy Committee (MPC),
the Banks governor, Mervyn King, said that predictions were
not inconsistent with two quarters of zero or negative
growth, the technical measure for a recession.
The MPCs main concerns were that the credit crunch would
weigh down on demand, as in the rest of the world, but rising
food and energy prices would push up inflation. Both developments
are now more acute than in November, said King. As
a result the near-term outlook is one of inflation rising sharply
alongside a marked slowing in growth.
Nor is the UK government in a position to stimulate the economy
as it has done in the past. In the global downturn following the
dot.com crash at the beginning of the century, Chancellor Gordon
Brown pumped money into the economy through public spending. Now
Prime Minister Brown faces a budget deficit that is likely to
reach £43 billion ($84 billion) in 2007-8.
The Economist has warned that Britain will be
hit hard by the credit crunch. It points out, Lenders
slashed the amount of credit they were prepared to make available
late last year, and they intend restricting it again in the first
quarter of 2008.
It comments on the significance of the housing price bubble
as follows: The housing market is already wilting, as banks
tighten the terms on which they make mortgage loans and would-be
buyers take fright at the possibility of instant losses on their
purchases. That augurs ill for consumer spending, which has been
buoyed over the past couple of years by another bout of rapid
house-price inflation. Rising housing wealth has offset a dismal
period for living standards as, despite a strong economy, rising
inflation, taxes and interest payments have eroded growth in real
disposable incomes. Now this prop is about to be removed. Indeed,
the first signs of a consumer slowdown are already apparent.
See Also:
Britains foreign secretary urges
no retreat on imperialist militarism
[16 February 2008]
NATO security conference: US demands
more European troops in Afghanistan
[13 February 2008]
Britain: Liar loans
drive hundreds of thousands into debt
[22 January 2008]
Britain: Northern
Rock crisis deepens
[21 December 2007]
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