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'UK can't bank on financial services to revive economy'

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Published Date: 11 June 2009
BRITAIN faces tight fiscal policies "for five to ten years" and will need to reduce its dependence on financial services to rebalance its economy, a leading member of the Bank of England's monetary policy committee warned in Scotland last night.
Economist Dr Andrew Sentance, an independent member of the MPC, said that we cannot expect financial and related activities "to be such a powerful engine of growth in the coming recovery. Other sectors will need to take up the running".

His rema
rks, coming on the day when First Minister Alex Salmond opened the headquarters of Tesco Personal Finance in Edinburgh, will be seen as a direct challenge to recent remarks by the Scottish Government and in particular its Financial Services Advisory Board (FiSAB) which have sought to downplay the impact of the global credit crisis on Scotland's financial sector.

Sentance, speaking at a Scottish Council for Development and Industry (SCDI) dinner in Aberdeen, warned that the two main growth engines of the UK economy over the past decade – consumer spending and financial services – are likely to be much weaker sources of growth as the economy rebalances over the coming recovery.

"Other internationally trading sectors will need to pick up the baton from financial services – notably manufacturing industry. And the prospect of weaker consumer demand means that the UK recovery is likely to be more dependent on overseas demand and the growth in investment," he said.

The late 1990s and early to mid 2000s, he said, saw not only a global credit boom, but also a broader expansion in the size of the financial sector and related business activities. During this period, the share of financial and business services in UK gross domestic product rose from 17 per cent to about 25 per cent.

"As the financial sector and related activities adjust to the changed circumstances in the wake of the current financial crisis, we cannot expect these sectors to be such a powerful engine of growth in the coming recovery. Other sectors will need to take up the running."

Sentance's speech is set to ignite scrutiny of Scottish Government and Scottish Enterprise policies which have remained broadly unchanged since the onset of recession.

Critics argue that insufficient new thinking has been done on the new growth areas that could play a decisive part in leading us out of recession.

He also made clear that no early return to the pre-crisis years, when private consumer spending rose at an annual average rate of 3.5 per cent, can be expected. This, he pointed out, was a full percentage point over the longer run trend and represented the strongest ten-year period of household consumption since the war.

"In the wake of the current financial crisis," he argued, "we should expect to see a move in the opposite direction – subdued growth of private and public consumption.

"Fiscal consolidation will require restraint on the growth of public spending and, if taxes have to rise, it will have an impact on private consumer spending too. Given the scale of excess consumption which has built up over the last decade, and the large fiscal imbalances now apparent, tight fiscal policies are likely to need to be sustained for five to ten years."





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  • Last Updated: 10 June 2009 8:40 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Economic indicators
 
1

Hamilton,

11/06/2009 10:31:29
Scotland cannot expect financial and related activities to be a powerful engine of growth in the future, warned a leading member of the Bank of England's monetary policy committee in Scotland last night. Economist Dr Andrew Sentance added "Other internationally trading sectors will need to pick up the baton from financial services – notably manufacturing industry."

However this seems unlikely. Sunday's Scottish ITEM club report told us of a grim outlook for manufacturing jobs, with a rapid fall in jobs by 2011 - down from 220,000 before the recession to only 160,000 by 2019.

Bill Jamieson says: "Sentance's speech is set to ignite scrutiny of Scottish Government and Scottish Enterprise policies which have remained broadly unchanged since the onset of recession." However the debate in policy circles here is about managing decline, not future growth.
2

Sedov,

11/06/2009 11:56:36
The so called captains of British industry sowed the seed of their own destruction from the 1960’s onwards by failing to use their profits to improve and invest in their own industries. Instead they took the short term view that investing in the money markets was a better return than trying to keep up with German and Japanese manufacturing and their streamlined mode of production.

At the same time they blamed trade unions for their demise rather than their own pitiful management skills. An economy based on fictitious capital, as Karl Marx explained many years ago,is an economy living on false pretences and is doomed to failure.

The chickens have came home to roost with our “world famous” financial and service sector collapsing through greed and stupidity with money based on bits of paper rather than real commodities and products. British manufacturing is near enough on its knees and the answer by those who caused the crisis in the first place is more regulation!

It’s the system stupid!...... Capitalism cannot be fixed! It’s on its way down and will never recover to its former "glory"

We need a planned socialist society before we go completely bust and the planet dies a death through global warming and the pursuit of more and more profits at the expense of the workers.

3

Willie Mor,

11/06/2009 12:36:43
I thought that according to reports today that Britain was out of recession and leading the world.

Must be Mr Brown's new cabinet of the unelected.

Thank goodness for the end of boom and bust.
4

Hamilton,

11/06/2009 14:41:18
On a move towards manufacturing [#2], it was also reported: "The recovery will require the economy to rebalance toward manufacturing and away from banking, Sentance said. A weaker pound relative to the currencies of export markets will help the process, and give producers a competitive advantage."

Little new here.

'Doha' therefore seems the best hope.
5

Fletty73,

Stirling 01/07/2009 02:28:26
Boom and bust got abolished. Read it in the Scotsman a couple of years back.

 

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