Wednesday, October 05, 2022

Australia under pressure to revise tax cuts following UK chaos

CANBERRA (Oct 5): The Australian government is under pressure to reconsider tax cuts for high-income earners due in mid-2024 after the chaotic fallout from the UK's planned fiscal boost via the abolition of its top rate.

Australia intends to scrap its 37% tax rate in favour of a 30% bracket for people earning between A$45,000 and A$200,000 (RM134,723 and RM598,769) annually at an estimated cost of more than A$200 billion over 10 years. The upper 45% tax rate would remain in place.

The cuts were legislated in 2018 and 2019 under the previous centre-right Liberal-National government and the Labor party pledged to keep them prior to winning the May 2022 election.

Pressure to scrap or revise the cuts intensified after the UK was forced to abandon plans to abolish its 45% top rate shortly after Prime Minister Liz Truss took office.

Her government's unfunded proposal sparked a plunge in the pound and criticism from the International Monetary Fund as it threatened to exacerbate inflationary pressures that central banks are rapidly hiking interest rates to try to rein in.

The Australian Financial Review reported on Wednesday on growing pressure inside the Labor government to at least modify the tax cuts in the budget. Left-wing parties that hold the power to pass or block legislation in the Senate, or upper house, have been calling for the policy to be ditched since May.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers, who delivers his first budget on Oct 25, said this week that the UK was a "cautionary tale" about what happens when fiscal and monetary policies run at cross purposes.

Chalmers said while he was standing by the tax cuts for now, "any responsible government sees what's happening in the UK and factors that into their own considerations".

Rate hike bonanza among major central banks hits two decade peak in September


Tue, October 4, 2022 
By Karin Strohecker and Vincent Flasseur

LONDON (Reuters) - Major developed central banks delivered in September rate hikes at a pace and scale not seen in at least two decades, ramping up their fight against multi-decade high inflation with little let-up in sight.

Central banks overseeing eight of the 10 most heavily traded currencies delivered 550 basis points of rate hikes between them last month, bringing the total volume of rate hikes in 2022 from the G10 central banks to 1,850 basis points.

"For sure, central banks are focused on killing the inflation beast," said Vincent Chaigneau, head of research at Generali in a quarterly outlook.

"But inflation lags the economic cycle. The risk is that hysteresis forces in the inflation cycle keep central banks on a war path for too long, causing policy overshooting."

Graphics: Developed markets interest rates https://graphics.reuters.com/GLOBAL-MARKETS/byvrjzkylve/DEVMKTWDGT220930-1.1.gif

Growth fears over major central banks ramping up rates too fast and potentially too far had seen markets gyrate in the third quarter and cast a pall over the month ahead.

September central bank decisions did little to soothe these fears with the Federal Reserve hiking interest rates by 75 basis points for a third straight time and chair Jerome Powell vowing to "keep at it" while the Bank of England also raised rates.

Both the European Central Bank and Canada lifted benchmark rates, while policymakers in Switzerland effectively ended a decade of negative interest rates in Europe with their rate hike in September while Sweden's central bank delivered the biggest rate increase in four decades.

There are signs though that some are looking to take the foot off the pedal. Norway predicted smaller hikes ahead after delivering a 50-bps rise on Sept. 22, while Australia, having lifted rates to seven-year highs in early September, surprised markets with a smaller-than-expected move in October, the first bank out of the starting block in the fourth quarter.

Across emerging markets, signs of the rate hike cycle coming to an end were more prominent. Ten out of 18 central banks delivered 600 bps of rate hikes in September, well below the monthly tally of 800-plus basis points in both June and July.

Graphics: Emerging markets interest rates https://graphics.reuters.com/GLOBAL-MARKETS/jnvweqxdqvw/EMRGMKTWDGT220930-1.1.gif

Hungary delivered a larger-than-expected 125 bps rise to end its tightening cycle in September while uber-hiker Brazil took a breather in September. Both central banks have delivered around 1,200 bps each of hikes since early 2021, emblematic of the early hiking efforts undertaken by policymakers in both emerging Europe and in Latin America, while Asia was still somewhat earlier in the cycle.

In total, emerging market central banks have raised interest rates by a total 6,340 bps year-to-date, more than double the 2,745 bps for the whole of 2021, calculations show.

"Emerging markets are way ahead of many developed markets' central banks including the Fed, the ECB and Bank of England," Claudia Calich, head of emerging markets debt at M&G Investments.

"From the rates perspective, we are towards the end of the tightening cycle."

(Reporting by Karin Strohecker and Vincent Flasseur in London, additional reporting by Jorgelina do Rosario in London; Editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise)



Analysis | The Bank of England Promotes Moral Hazard — Again.

Back in the 20th century, banks formed the foundation of the global financial system. No more. If there were any doubts about the shifts that have taken place in finance in the past several decades, recent events in the UK should dispel them.


The Bank of England made two important interventions in the past two weeks to support financial stability; neither of them directly involved banks. In response to violent moves in long-dated gilts — following the government’s since-discarded proposal to cut income taxes for the highest earners — the central bank hastily rolled out a program to buy up to £65 billion ($74 billion) of the government bonds. And, in partnership with the UK Treasury, it announced £40 billion of emergency funding for energy companies struggling to meet margin calls.


Together, they reflect the evolution at the heart of the global financial order: No longer is the system based around banks; rather, it is increasingly centered around markets. It’s an important distinction, with wide-ranging implications.


When banks served as gatekeepers, central bankers had a simpler life. To fulfill their obligation to ensure financial stability, they served as lenders of last resort to banks – a role they fulfilled extensively during the global financial crisis. By restricting the number of banking licenses, they maintained control of the sector and by extension the financial system.


But over the years, lenders ceded market share to a diverse roster of financial institutions. Twenty years ago, banks held 46% of global financial assets, according to data from the Financial Stability Board; that’s now down to 38%. In contrast, non-bank financial institutions – comprising insurance companies, pension funds and others – make up 48%, up from 41% in 2002. While the trend reversed briefly during the global financial crisis of 2008, it resumed its prior course at an accelerated rate shortly afterward.


To fund their operations, non-bank institutions rely on wholesale markets and, in particular, government bonds, which serve as collateral allowing them to borrow. Many also use the same collateral to support hedging programs.


The system has many merits, providing institutions ready access to financing and hedging solutions using the security of a safe, liquid asset. But it does have an unfortunate tendency towards pro-cyclicality: periods of market turbulence can drive sharply higher collateral requirements, which can prompt more turbulence if that leads to forced selling – such as we saw in the UK last week.


In the past, banks may have stepped in to manage the fallout, but due largely to tighter post-crisis rules on trading and capital, their balance sheets have been left very small relative to the size of collateral markets. In the UK, for example, the assets of UK government bond market makers have fallen by 25% since 2008 at the same time as the stock of UK government bonds outstanding has increased by 2.7 times.


So when the gilt market wobbled last week, there was no one left other than the Bank of England with the firepower to intervene.


Fortunately, the BOE had already laid the groundwork. In January 2021, its executive director for markets, Andrew Hauser, made a speech in London outlining a case for its role as “market maker of last resort.” Central banks had already broadened their focus from backstopping banks to backstopping markets. But given the shifting sands under the overall system, he warned that the pace may increase: “There is every reason to believe that, absent further action, we will see more frequent periods of dysfunction in the very markets increasingly relied on by households and firms.”


When it came, that dysfunction didn’t show up only in gilt markets but in energy markets, too, where greater volatility strained funding among participating companies. Here, the bank had a ready-made solution borrowed from its traditional playbook: Any energy company “in sound financial health” would be able to approach the bank as a lender of last resort.

All the features of Walter Bagehot’s famous dictum are evident in the scheme: The bank will lend freely, to sound institutions, against good collateral, at rates materially higher than those prevailing in normal conditions. The only difference is that banks won’t be the ultimate beneficiary of the funding (even though they may be used as conduits) – rather, it’ll be firms that “make a material contribution to the liquidity of UK energy markets.”


While central banks have adapted to the new reality of markets, other participants remain fixated by the old paradigm, where the vulnerability lies with intermediaries rather than markets themselves. The widening of Credit Suisse Group AG credit spreads and the plunge in its stock price aren’t great news for its investors, but they are unlikely to presage a “Lehman moment.” Similarly, the selloff in UK life insurance stocks when the UK government bond market sold off last week reflected their role as intermediaries. BlackRock Inc., one of the largest managers of pension funds under pressure, put out a press release reminding investors that “we are not a trading counterparty to these risk-mitigation strategies.”


For years, we got used to the concept of moral hazard in banking – the lack of incentive for banks to guard against financial risk given their protection from potential consequences. Post-crisis reform may have tamed that hazard among banks, but it could be spreading elsewhere. A recent regulatory review of the policy response to market turmoil in March 2020 concluded that clients “varied in their level of preparedness for margin calls.”


In the event, even the ill-prepared benefited from central bank actions. If that’s the lesson others take away, it will have the effect of incentivizing risk not just in the UK, but everywhere.

Analysis | UK Pension Funds Shouldn’t Be This Exciting

Pension funds are supposed to be among the least exciting financial institutions. Their job is to make long-term investments to meet the predictable needs of future retirees. They should be immune to short-term shocks. Yet last week in the UK, they were the center of an incipient financial crisis.


What led to this was a novel variation on a well-known theme: Leverage meets unforeseen events. The danger when these two collide isn’t confined to any one country or market, so regulators everywhere ought to take note. Banks are somewhat safer than they were before the crash of 2008, but risks that start outside the traditional financial system still require greater attention.


The UK pension funds’ embarrassment shows how subtle those risks can be. The funds used derivatives, so they believed, to hedge their positions — that is, to make their portfolios safer. Using a popular technique called “liability driven investment,” they guarded against the risk that lower interest rates would increase their liabilities (the present value of future pension payments) more than it boosted their assets (government bonds, stocks and other investments). They did this, in effect, by borrowing to increase their exposure to government bonds.


Unfortunately, reducing the risk from lower interest rates failed to take account of the possibility that rates might abruptly and dramatically rise — which is what happened after the UK government announced a reckless new fiscal policy on Sept. 23. Higher rates (lower bond prices) reduced the pension funds’ long-term liabilities — but also caused the funds’ derivative counterparties to demand more collateral up front. That meant selling bonds, driving their prices still lower, which called for more collateral, and so on — a vicious cycle that, for many, evoked the Lehman Brothers moment of 2008.


The Bank of England interrupted this downward spiral by promising to buy bonds at “whatever scale is necessary” to restore orderly markets. It’s too soon to say how the story ends. The debacle has made investors everywhere more anxious, and the central bank’s intervention, to put it mildly, complicates its efforts to tighten monetary policy and curb inflation.

For regulators, the lesson is this: The details of last week’s breakdown are new, but the central dynamic isn’t. Just about every case of financial contagion and crisis, from the 2008 mortgage meltdown to last year’s implosion of Archegos Capital Management, shares the same basic features.


The more leverage held by non-banks such as pension funds, hedge funds and insurers, the greater the chance that dislocations will proliferate and threaten the broader system. Regulators limit bank leverage by imposing capital requirements. In the world of so-called shadow banking, this is largely up to the counterparties. In good times, they often set collateral requirements too low, leading to huge calls for additional collateral in bad times, when markets are most stressed and least able to deliver it.


Back in 2018, the Bank of England was aware that pension funds would be hit with margin calls when interest rates went up — yet concluded all was well. Its worst-case scenario envisaged interest rates rising by 100 basis points. At the time, that seemed a lot. Already moving up, they spiked by more than that in the space of a few days — and would have gone up much more if the bank hadn’t stepped in.


Regulators need to remember that low-probability events aren’t zero-probability events: Eventually they happen, and when they do, the damage can be huge. Looking beyond banks across the ever-widening landscape of non-bank finance, they need to examine leverage in all its forms more closely — and set margin requirements and other rules that reflect how much markets can move when things go wrong.


One day, if regulators do their job, pension funds will be boring again.


More From Bloomberg Opinion:

• UK Pensions Got Margin Calls: Matt Levine

• Problems Facing the Gilt Market Aren’t Unique to the UK: Richard Cookson

• Corporate Bond Doomsayers Are a Little Premature: Jonathan Levin

The Editors are members of the Bloomberg Opinion editorial board.

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com/opinion


UK
Pension fund problems are the canary in the coal mine of lost economic credibility

Commentary

Posted on: 5th October 2022
Jeegar Kakkad
Head of Productivity and Innovation


The mini-budget on 23rd September was an earthquake for the UK economy, leaving financial markets questioning the new government’s economic credibility and its ability to deliver growth in the long run.

It wasn’t just the package of £45bn in unfunded tax cuts, expected to deliver little economic growth while raising debt interest costs significantly, that spooked markets. The charge sheet also included sacking HM Treasury’s Permanent Secretary, the Chancellor’s promise of further tax cuts, the failure to allow the OBR to produce an independent assessment, and questions raised by Liz Truss about the Bank of England’s mandate.

On the morning of 26th September, market doubts turned into a record low for the pound and into rapidly rising interest rates (yields) on UK government bonds (gilts). UK pension funds and mortgage markets were left struggling to adjust to the rapid rise in interest rates and market volatility.

The most acute pressure was felt in pension funds, leading the Financial Policy Committee (FPC) of the Bank of England (BoE) to commit up to £65bn over 13 days to stabilise the gilt market and prevent wider financial instability.

Why were pension funds the source of potentially systemic problems?

As interest rates fell over the past two decades, defined benefit schemes in the UK found that the accounting value of their liabilities (the amount pensions owe people both now and in the future) started to rise: when interest rates on government bonds fall, funds’ future obligations are discounted at a lower rate, thus raising the present value of those longer-term obligations. The Pensions Regulator estimates that every 0.1 percentage point fall in interest rates on government bonds increases the obligations of UK pensions funds by at least £23bn.

While rising interest should have made pension funds’ long-term obligations more affordable, they also had a side effect that not only limited this upside but also created significant cash flow problems for pension funds.

This liquidity problem stems from the investment strategies – called liability-driven investments (LDI) – that pension funds adopted to protect themselves from falling interest rates. LDI seeks to ensure that a fund’s assets match its long-term funding obligations by allocating part of the portfolio to high-growth investments and part of the portfolio to government and corporate bonds. These bonds are then leveraged via interest rate swaps to protect the pension fund valuations from swings in interest rates.

It’s these latter hedging strategies that have created trouble for pension funds: pension funds used interest rate swaps to buy access to a stream of fixed-rate interest payments that were tailored to match their obligations, and in return agreed to provide a stream of variable interest payments to the other party. Not only do pensions’ bonds act as collateral for these leveraged investments, funds are also required to set aside additional collateral if variable interest rates rise too high.

As interest rates on UK government bonds rose sharply at the beginning of last week, pension funds were increasingly being asked to post additional collateral for the interest rate (and inflation) swaps that formed part of their LDI strategies. Pension funds were not insolvent, they were just illiquid: they didn’t have enough assets or cash to meet the collateral demands. To raise funds for the additional collateral, pension funds then sold assets, primarily government bonds, pushing down gilt prices and pushing up their interest rates. But the cycle of higher interest rates and falling gilt prices led to more demands for collateral, creating what markets call a self-reinforcing ‘doom loop’.

This growing financial instability came to a head on 28th September when the FPC decided it needed to step in. This intervention has proved effective at shoring up gilts without the BoE having to make the maximum intervention: long-dated gilt yields have fallen even though, as of 3rd October, the BoE had bought only £3.7bn in long-term gilts.

Mortgage markets, on the other hand, are still reeling from rises to the short-term gilt rates used to price mortgages. As rates rose sharply on 28th September, mortgage providers found that newly agreed deals were rapidly becoming unprofitable, especially for smaller banks operating on fine margins. Providers began withdrawing mortgages, leaving would-be home buyers in the lurch, and raising the prospect of a collapse in house prices.

As of 3rd October, almost 1,700 or 42% of mortgage products had been withdrawn from the UK market as mortgage provider struggled to price products in the wake of market volatility. Interest rates on two-year fixed mortgages are up a full percentage point compared with a fortnight ago, and with 1.8mn households due to come off fixed-term mortgages next year, the full economic pain of the shift in the mortgage market is yet to be felt.

Markets have stabilised as the government’s u-turn on the unfunded 45p rate cut and its decision to bring forward the OBR assessment have signalled a helpful shift away from its cavalier approach to economic policy making. This means that, barring any further surprises from the government, the BoE should be able to withdraw its temporary support for long-dated government bonds on 14th October as planned without seeing a return to instability.

Beyond these immediate aftershocks of the mini-budget, the longer-running challenges of economic credibility and competitiveness remain. The unfunded tax cuts have proved to be all pain with little economic gain. In addition, the government no longer has the political capital to deliver either its proposed supply side reforms or the deep, painful spending cuts needed to fund their tax cuts if the OBR does not accept that a change in growth rates is now in prospect.

The pressure on pensions has only abated, not disappeared, and the mortgage pain is only beginning. Markets abhor a vacuum, and in the absence of a clear and credible path forward from the government on growth and the public finances, the UK is likely to continue to suffer from the fallout of the disastrous mini-budget.

Authors
Jeegar Kakkad
Head of Productivity and Innovation
“Canary in a Coal Mine”: FedEx Signals Recession Ahead

October 5, 2022

The Bridge of Sighs (picture below) is an enclosed bridge located in Venice, Italy, which was built in 1603. It connected the city’s courthouse to the city jail. Legend has it that following their conviction, prisoners were escorted through the bridge to the jail. The view from the bridge was their last view of the beauty of Venice, prompting “sighs” from the convicted.




It seems to me that many are becoming resigned to the outlook that yes, the economy is probably heading into recession. I sigh and admit that I now count myself in that group. I crossed the “bridge” recently when the announcement from Federal Express’s CEO that he believes the world is coming into a recession. Federal Express is one of the companies that can be viewed as a “canary in a coal mine.”

FedEx’s reach is global, and their business trends tend to precede other trends. On top of all the other indicators that are suggesting the U.S. economy is coming into recession (if it isn’t already there), the FedEx announcement acted as the last straw. FedEx’s announcement suggests the reach of economic weakness has become global.
 
Recession Now Top Economic Probability


I have written and publicly suggested my view of a 50% probability of an upcoming recession. I now believe the probability of an upcoming recession is greater than 50%. Recession is now my “main” economic outlook, with the alternative a “soft landing” view in which economic growth remains slow but positive. In the soft landing scenario, the Federal Reserve succeeds in its attempt to bring inflation down without initiating a growth recession. At this time, I find that outcome possible but doubtful.



Why do I think we will probably see an economic recession occur over the next 12 months? Two of our three main recession timing indicators are now solidly suggesting a recession is on the horizon. The other (PMI Index) is trending in the wrong direction but has yet to call an outright contraction. Indeed, one of our indicators—shape of yield curve, which went negative six months ago—is widening and broadening. The chart shows the percentage of the U.S. Treasury yield curve that is now inverted. This chart shows that the U.S. economy has, over the last seven business cycles, always fallen into recession when 55% or more of the yield curve inverts. Currently, 62.2% of the curve is inverted, indicating financial stresses are building.

The other factor that has turned negative is the six-month rate of change in the index of leading economic indicators (LEI). This chart clearly shows that the LEI is now lower than it was six months ago. The chart shows periods of previous recessions given the deterioration in the rate of change.

Along with the shape of the yield curve and the data from the LEI, we are seeing a broadening in the weakness of a number of indicators. A weakening in the trend of industrial production output, durable goods orders, “real” retail sales growth and a strong contraction in money supply growth rates suggests growth in the economy is starting to fail.



Source: The Conference Board

GDP growth has officially been weak most of this year. According to the Bureau of Economic Analysis, “real” U.S. GDP growth turned negative in the first quarter of this year by -1.6%. It has also reported that real second quarter GDP growth was -0.6%. Some have been suggesting that the U.S. has been in recession all year, citing the thought that recessions occur when we see two back-to-back negative quarterly GDP growth rates.

I have commented on this in detail in prior writings, but according to the National Bureau of Economic Research, which makes “official” recession calls, a recession doesn’t occur because we have seen two negative-growth quarters. By its definition, we see a recession when a contraction occurs in the economy that is deep, broad and long. In its official view, two quarters of negative GDP growth doesn’t enter its definition of recession.

The weakness we saw during the first quarter of this year was driven by weakness in exports and inventory adjustments, both volatile and non-demand-driven factors. Final demand remained positive during the quarter, suggesting the weakness we saw during the first quarter wasn’t broad in scope.

But the trends I am now seeing suggest a weakening in factors that affect growth in final demand. Consider:

Year ChangeQuarterly/Monthly ChangeRetail Sales +9.1% +3.6% Annualized/Quarter

Industrial Production +3.6% -2.4% Annualized/Monthly

Durable Goods Orders +8.8% -2.4% Annualized/Monthly

“Real” Disposable Personal Income Housing Starts -3.7% -6.0% (3-month rate of change)

Source: Ned Davis Research

Some are saying that while real disposable personal income growth isn’t keeping up with inflation, retail sales, which are reported prior to inflation impact, have risen by 9.1% over the last 12 months. How can we fall into recession when retail sales have risen by this amount? That’s a fair question.

But if we consider inflation over that period, real retail sales declined by 0.7% over the last year. If you layer a weak growth rate on top of that, real disposable personal income declined by 3.7% over the last year.1 If real retail sales declined by 0.7% while disposable personal income fell by 3.7%, how did consumers come up with the money to spend?The personal savings rate has fallen by 5.5% year over year. Some consumers have been spending their savings to drive their consumption patterns, which isn’t sustainable.2
Over the last year, credit card debt has risen by 13%. Again, probably not sustainable over the long-term.2

Aside from our main recession-monitoring tools, the evidence of an economic slowdown is upon us, and I would argue the evidence is broadening not narrowing.

With all that being said, what is my forecast for GDP growth and inflation as we prepare to enter 2023?

Long-Term Average2022 Forecast2023 ForecastU.S. “Real” GDP Growth +3.1% +1.0% -1.0%

Consumer Prices +3.7% +6.5% +3.5%


“Nominal” GDP Growth +6.8% +7.5% +2.5%

Unemployment Rate 5.7% 4.0% (year-end) 5% (year-end)

Source: stlouisfed.org. Long-term average based on data from 1948 – 2021.

The holdout in this poor economic tale is the jobs market, which still shows strength (now at 3.7%;3 a very low number given the long-term average noted above). Something we need to consider: Jobs are the last thing businesses tend to cut when entering a weak period and the last thing added when things are good. Job data tends to be a lagging indicator.

That being said, if my concerns are justified, and we do enter a recession, I believe there is ample evidence that suggests the recession will be mild and rather short. The employment data supports this view, as I believe the jobs market, while weakening, probably won’t see the downturn with large layoffs as we saw during the deep, hard recession of 2008-2009 when the unemployment rate exceeded 10%.4

I expect to see a trough unemployment level of less than 6% next year.

Fed Policy Becoming Restrictive

Before we wrap up the recession issue, I need to comment on Fed policy. The Fed will continue to raise rates until they reach their federal funds “terminal” rate (now at 4.5%, per Fed data). I suggest the Fed will reach its terminal fed funds rate following its December meeting later this year.

Does the risk of recession go away at that time? No. Remember, it takes six to 12 months for Fed policy changes to be felt by the “Main Street” economy. We in the financial market business experience this impact almost immediately but the economy doesn’t. I suspect much of the Fed’s policy decisions won’t be fully felt by the economy until the first half of next year. It has now been six months since the first Fed rate increase, which occurred in March of this year. Main Street is just now facing the impact of those rate increases, as the impact will probably be felt until at least the second quarter of next year.

As the Fed continues down the path of raising interest rates (I am suggesting the fed funds rate will eclipse 4% by the end of this year, up from the current 3.12%), money supply growth will move into contraction and liquidity will be withdrawn from the financial system.

This withdrawal is already happening. The latest data from the St. Louis Federal Reserve shows that M2 “real” supply has declined by 5.1% over the last quarter on an annualized basis. Historically, the long-term average real growth rate of money supply has been +3.2%. As supply of money declines, prices (interest rates) rise, which slows the growth in demand for capital and economic activity contracts.

The Fed has made it clear it is willing to risk a short-term economic downturn to win the inflation battle. This is the Fed’s plan, and it is unfolding before our eyes.
Balancing the Imbalance

As I have often said in the past, recessions are part of the business cycle and occur for a reason—something in the economy is out of balance and needs to be corrected. We have too much or too little of something. This time around, we have too much inflation and that needs to be purged from the system. I see inflation as the culprit, the imbalance, if you will, as the driver of the probable upcoming contraction.

The silver lining to the Fed’s tightening monetary policy is yes, inflation rates should decline. It is the cure for the imbalance. As we see improvement in the inflation data, the Fed will change gears. I suspect the Fed will keep interest rates higher longer than some are currently expecting, as it is centered on not making the same mistake the Fed made in the 1970s by becoming prematurely loose with policy.

I continue to believe the upcoming recession (if indeed we see one) will be of the “income statement” variety. As noted, recessions occur for reasons, and the reason this time around is centered on inflation, an economic income statement issue. Historically, income statement recessions (1973, 1982, 1990) tend to be more shallow and quicker than “balance sheet”-oriented recessions (2008, as an example).

If my timing is reasonable, I expect to see the U.S. economy out of recession by the middle-to-end of 2023, and inflation back down in the 3%+ range.

l sigh and wait for better days.

Sources:

1St. Louis Federal Reserve

2Ned Davis Research

3U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Sept. 2, 2022 press release

4St. Louis Federal Reserve

BOILER PLATE

This commentary is limited to the dissemination of general information pertaining to Mariner Wealth Advisors’ investment advisory services and general economic market conditions. The views expressed are for commentary purposes only and do not take into account any individual personal, financial, or tax considerations. As such, the information contained herein is not intended to be personal legal, investment or tax advice or a solicitation to buy or sell any security or engage in a particular investment strategy. Nothing herein should be relied upon as such, and there is no guarantee that any claims made will come to pass. Any opinions and forecasts contained herein are based on information and sources of information deemed to be reliable, but Mariner Wealth Advisors does not warrant the accuracy of the information that this opinion and forecast is based upon. You should note that the materials are provided “as is” without any express or implied warranties. Opinions expressed are subject to change without notice and are not intended as investment advice or to predict future performance. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Consult your financial professional before making any investment decision.

Mariner Wealth Advisors (“MWA”), is an SEC registered investment adviser with its principal place of business in the State of Kansas. Registration of an investment adviser does not imply a certain level of skill or training.MWA is in compliance with the current notice filing requirements imposed upon registered investment advisers by those states in which MWA maintains clients. MWA may only transact business in those states in which it is notice filed or qualifies for an exemption or exclusion from notice filing requirements. Any subsequent, direct communication by MWA with a prospective client shall be conducted by a representative that is either registered or qualifies for an exemption or exclusion from registration in the state where the prospective client resides. For additional information about MWA, including fees and services, please contact MWA or refer to the Investment Adviser Public Disclosure website. Please read the disclosure statement carefully before you invest or send money.
Why Russians are not protesting against the war

Since the Ukraine war began, the West has asked why Russians aren’t marching on the streets. The answer is simple

Sergey Smirnov
5 October 2022

Russian law enforcement has targeted the very initiatives
 that call for protests, leaving few routes for mobilisation |
(c) Nikolay Vinokurov / Alamy Stock Photo. All rights reserved

The Kremlin’s war on Ukraine, and especially the mobilisation announced in September, are a real shock for Russian society.

Even if you factor in pro-government opinion surveys, there are millions of people in Russia who are dissatisfied with what is happening. And the people who most disagree with the Russian government are young people. According to the most conservative estimates, the number of under-25s against the war is equivalent to the number of people of all ages who support it.

But why aren’t these people out on the streets of Russian cities?

This is one of the West’s most asked questions since the invasion of Ukraine in February. The simplest answer is this: because Russians support the war and Russian president Vladimir Putin

It’s an argument used frequently by Western politicians, and one that is used to justify closing international borders to Russian citizens. ‘Fight inside your own country’ is a familiar slogan. Eastern European politicians and citizens make this point particularly often. Which is understandable: they feel the pain of Ukraine more closely, remember life under Soviet occupation and fear a Russian invasion themselves.

In fact, to understand the absence of active protests in Russia, an analogy may help.
Soviet-style repression and rigged elections

In terms of ideology and repression, the Putin regime is similar to the Soviet regime and even tries to use elements of the Stalinist Soviet Union. Since the war began, laws have been adopted in Russia that can result in up to ten years in prison for soldiers surrendering to Ukraine’s armed forces.

If you spread ‘fake news’ – that is, any information about the war that contradicts the official line – you face up to 15 years in prison. In Russia, for even using the word ‘war’ (rather than the officially sanctioned ‘special operation’) you can face punishment.

Mass political protests were never a regular feature in the Soviet Union. While they certainly took place, the Soviet authorities severely suppressed them.


The debate over whether Vladimir Putin is or isn't a dictator misses the point |
Gavriil Grigorov/Kremlin Pool/Alamy Live News

During the 20 years of his rule, Putin has built a repressive apparatus that is almost as effective as that of the Soviet Union. (The media outlet where I'm chief editor, Mediazona, covers it in detail.) Indeed, it was in the late 1970s that Putin began to work for Soviet state security, and this time period of the Soviet enterprise – from the mid-1960s to the mid-1980s – and the regime in East Germany, is probably a role model for the current Russian president.

But as well as the wholesale suppression of dissent, the blocking of independent media and the persecution of journalists, there is another detail that makes Russian society similar to the Soviet one. The Russian state has completely removed citizens from political life, swapping this absence of involvement for stability and a gradual increase in living standards, at least in large cities.

Also, it’s important to realise that, in Russia, there have been no elections in the Western sense of the word for a long time. When you see an election result for Putin and United Russia, Russia’s ruling party, remember the rigged results of the recent fake referendums in southern and eastern Ukraine, where allegedly more than 90% of citizens voted to join the Russian Federation.

(By the way, this is surprisingly similar to the voting results in the Baltic states after the Soviet occupation of 1940. That year, allegedly more than 90% of the inhabitants of Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia voted to join the USSR.)


In short, it makes no sense to talk about popular support for the Putin regime on the basis of election results.

It’s true, Russians are afraid to protest after 20 years of repression. Indeed, they prefer to avoid any contact with the Russian state altogether

Opinion polling data – although not always reliable – is another source of information about what Russian society thinks. Yet independent sociologists speak of a growing number of people who refuse to answer pollsters’ questions. Following the invasion of Ukraine, Russian sociologists have even suggested that the percentage of people contacted who agree to answer questions is as low as 5%.

It gets more complicated if you agree to answer the pollsters’ questions. For example, if you do not support the Russian invasion, how do you answer the question of whether you support Russia’s military actions in Ukraine – when there’s a chance you may face a punishment for speaking out, from a fine to a prison sentence.

So, it’s true, Russians are afraid to protest after 20 years of repression. Indeed, they prefer to avoid any contact with the Russian state altogether. At the same time, despite the huge salaries on offer (up to 4,000 euros per month), the Russian army has failed to find a sufficient number of volunteers for the war in Ukraine. And this is after the Russian state and propaganda have called for volunteers.

The Russian authorities have long taught their citizens that street protests don’t work – and could make things worse.

2020: protests in support of Khabarovsk governor Sergey Furgal captured public attention in Russia |

(c) ITAR-TASS News Agency / Alamy Stock Photo. All rights reserved


In 2020, tens of thousands of residents of Khabarovsk, in Russia’s far east, took to the streets to protest against the arrest – which was largely seen as politically motivated – of the regional governor, Sergei Furgal. Two years earlier, 70% of the region’s inhabitants had voted for him in the gubernatorial elections – despite the authorities and Furgal himself asking them to vote for his opponent.

But the Russian authorities defiantly ignored the public, and the thousand-strong marches simply faded away. The authorities did not make any concessions, they sent another governor to the region, and he won the next election with the help of massive voting fraud.

In today’s Russia, with its million law enforcement officers, protesting is just as scary as it was in the Soviet Union. So people choose other forms of protest, including emigration.

Those who left Russia after mobilisation was announced were frightened of either dying in the army or ending up in prison if they refused to fight. For many of these people, protesting on the street was not an alternative – it was safer to flee. Especially since those who did go out to openly protest in large cities were handed summons for mobilisation. Modern Russia, just like the Soviet Union, considers military service as a form of punishment.

Everyone who criticises Russians for their cowardice, unwillingness to fight for their rights should remember: Russia looks increasingly like the Soviet Union. That’s why people aren’t protesting.
China’s Marginalized Millions

How Beijing’s Failure to Invest in Rural Workers Hurts Economic Growth


By Scott Rozelle and Matthew Boswell
October 5, 2022

A child lying amid condemned migrant dwellings on the outskirts of Beijing, August 2017 
 Thomas Peter / Reuters

One often hears the Chinese Communist Party lauded for “lifting hundreds of millions out of poverty,” as the expression usually goes. And there is no denying that the CCP deserves credit for that historic achievement. Less remarked on, however, is the plight of the hundreds of millions of Chinese people living on low incomes in the country’s rural areas, facing few prospects for advancement. China’s rural inhabitants are not living in poverty, but the CCP provides them with almost no means for social mobility—or any mobility at all, owing to the restrictive hukou residential permitting system.

This substantial subset of the population poses a major long-term obstacle to China’s continued economic growth, just as consequential as more familiar factors, such as the country’s “zero COVID” policy, regulatory crackdowns, and ballooning debt. Low-skilled workers once powered the manufacturing and construction booms that led to China’s phenomenal rise. But decades of discriminatory policies have trapped hundreds of millions of people in rural areas, cut off from educational and employment opportunities.

This presents a policy conundrum for the CCP. Even if rural, low-skilled workers could more easily relocate to large cities, they would struggle to compete in the labor markets there, owing to deficits in their education. And it would take a long time to build a reliable pool of skilled workers in rural areas by spending more on education, especially since doing so would require forms of economic redistribution that might be risky for the CCP. There are no easy answers to China’s rural human capital problem, which is likely to affect the country’s growth prospects for decades to come.

Enforcing a policy that is almost unheard of among the world’s countries, China divides its people from birth into two categories: urban and rural. This classification, codified in a residence permit, or hukou, typically stays with individuals for life and determines what type of education, health care, and other social services they can access. As early as the twenty-first century BC, ancient Chinese leaders used household registration systems to aid taxation and conscription. But the system in its contemporary form came into being in 1958, after a decade in which industrialization had led to such rapid urbanization that the CCP had grown concerned about the stability of the country’s food supply. Although the new system was designed to prevent the diversion of labor and other resources from China’s agricultural sector, the government soon restricted access to certain types of education and state welfare services to people with urban hukou status, and inequality between urbanites and rural residents deepened. Today, approximately 800 million people in China hold a rural residence permit.

In the 1980s, when China’s economy first began to take off, the country’s bottomless supply of low-skilled, rural workers represented a comparative advantage. Chinese leaders’ efforts to turn their vast, impoverished country into a middle-income state required a labor force that was numerate, literate, and disciplined. And massive expansions of primary and lower secondary schools in the 1980s ensured that most of the young people entering China’s workforce possessed basic arithmetic and reading skills and were accustomed to strict discipline. This education, rudimentary though it was, enabled hundreds of millions of workers to secure low-wage, low-skilled jobs in the burgeoning manufacturing and construction sectors during that era, turning China into “the factory of the world.”

In the early years of this century, the supply of cheap labor from the countryside began to dwindle, and wages began to rise steadily. Manufacturers responded by transferring the lowest-skilled jobs overseas and by investing in automation. Meanwhile, by the early 2010s, China had built most of the highways, railways, ports, and other major infrastructure projects it needed. Since 2013, Chinese government data show that manufacturing and construction employment has flatlined.

Where are low-skilled Chinese workers going? Official statistics indicate that the fastest-growing sector of China’s economy over the past decade has been the informal service sector. Today, nearly 60 percent of China’s nonagricultural workforce can be found in the informal sector, up from only 40 percent in 2005. These are the delivery people, nannies, street hawkers, food-stall workers, and bicycle repair mechanics that Chinese Premier Li Keqiang was referring to in a 2020 speech when he bluntly asserted that some 600 million people in China earn less than 1,000 yuan per month (about $5 per day), placing them below the World Bank’s poverty line for upper-middle-income countries such as China. Even before the COVID-19 pandemic decimated the informal service sector, official statistics showed that wage growth for these informal workers had slowed to a crawl. During the pandemic, real wages for these workers have fallen in absolute terms.

In seeking to sustain growth over the long term, China’s leaders rightly emphasize the need to shift toward consumption growth to substitute for declining investment-led growth. But having a large informal workforce with stagnating wages is incompatible with this vision. The reason for this is twofold. First, and most obviously, slow wage growth leaves people with limited disposable income. Without the benefits and social protections associated with formal, salaried work, informal workers must save their money to offset the risk of income shocks due to job losses or health emergencies. Second, China’s savings rate was already high by international standards due to the country’s weak social safety net. With as much as half of China’s labor force in precarious informal employment, the government’s options for spurring demand are limited.


When China’s economy first began to take off, the country’s supply of low-skilled, rural workers was a comparative advantage.

If China’s low-skilled workers could find higher-skilled work, this would help the country progress toward its economic development goals. Unfortunately, decades of underinvestment in rural human capital have left many of China’s rural laborers without the skills they need to compete in a modern labor market. Average educational attainment in China is low by international standards, almost exclusively due to the lagging performance of rural cohorts. A sizable majority of rural workers—89 percent, according to a large 2014 study—lack a high school degree.

Although the government has expanded access to secondary education in rural areas in recent years, spending on a per-student basis still lags far behind that of urban schools, with implications for the quality of education that rural students receive. For example, in 2015, the Progress in International Reading Literacy Study, which administers a reading comprehension exam to students in dozens of countries, found that rural students in China had the lowest average scores worldwide.

Rural education matters because, due to decades of declining fertility rates in Chinese cities, over 70 percent of China’s children today live in rural areas. Many of their parents have relocated to cities to work, but without formal employment, they are unlikely to acquire the urban hukou they need to enroll their children in high-quality, urban schools. The increase in informal employment in China has implications not just for the informal workers themselves, who have little access to state welfare services, but also for the children they were forced to leave behind, enrolled in rural schools where it will be difficult to gain the academic skills required to succeed in high-skilled jobs.


Perhaps even more concerning, rural schoolchildren are far more likely than their urban counterparts to experience developmental delays and other health conditions, including anemia, vision problems, and intestinal worms, which, left untreated, can affect their learning ability. And recent data on the economic outlook of China’s rural areas suggest that families living there may face increasing economic challenges due to COVID-19.

Just as striking is a comparison with the economies of other countries that reached similar levels of economic development in the past. Research on Ireland, Israel, South Korea, and Taiwan from the 1970s to the 1990s shows that their high school attainment rates were already relatively high when they became middle-income countries. High school and college education are typically critical for the highly skilled technical and office jobs that form the foundation of a high-income economy. Although China’s average educational attainment is increasing, it is still lower than other countries at comparable per capita income levels. If Chinese workers continue to find it challenging to transition from low-skilled to high-skilled jobs, it will potentially undermine China’s transition to a high-income, high-skilled economy.
RESKILLING RURAL CHINA

The CCP’s current policies to eradicate poverty and revitalize rural areas do not really address these challenges. A national antipoverty campaign that concluded in 2020 amounted to the state providing large payments to impoverished citizens through subsidies, tax waivers, resettlement, and cash transfers. But most of the hundreds of millions of rural Chinese people who are increasingly shut out of China’s formal economy are not, in fact, living in poverty—and such measures will do little to help them become more competitive in an increasingly modern economy.

There are signs that China’s leadership is shifting gears to address the problems of this much larger low-income population. Beginning in 2014, for example, the state relaxed hukou restrictions so that more people from rural areas could legally settle in cities. The problem is that rural people are still barred from large, prosperous cities such as Beijing, Shanghai, and Shenzhen, where jobs pay more, there is more economic dynamism and opportunity, social services such as education and health care are of higher quality, and the future is generally brighter. And if millions of low-skilled workers congregate in smaller, less well-off cities where there are fewer jobs and poorer schools and health services, their presence might slow development in these communities even further.

The CCP could decide to expand social security for low-income people, encouraging them to save less and spend more. But genuinely addressing the inequalities between rural and urban communities would require significant spending on low-income populations, possibly accompanied by cuts to the benefits currently enjoyed by those in urban areas. Expanding entitlements on this scale will be highly challenging in an era of slow growth and high debt loads. And like many redistributive policies, curbing the preferential treatment of the urban middle and upper classes could be politically unpalatable. In the final analysis, the urban population is the main constituent of the CCP. While the CCP was willing to impose intense COVID lockdowns on large cities, these were widely understood to be short-term measures undertaken at a time of crisis. Implementing redistributive policies that would shift urban entitlements to rural residents would be a political impossibility for the Chinese government.
NO SIMPLE SOLUTIONS

There are no easy answers to the problem of China’s increasingly underemployed rural workers. One in every nine people on the earth lives in rural China. Education, health, productivity, and employment outcomes for this group are lower than many people realize, and measures to address the problem are complex and expensive and, even if successfully implemented tomorrow, would not pay off for many years. In the meantime, no analysis of China’s growth prospects is complete without considering the scope of this rural human capital problem and assessing China’s efforts to mitigate it.

If we assume the CCP cannot make much progress solving the problem, there will continue to be two Chinas: a relatively vibrant one composed of the large cities in a handful of coastal provinces and a backward one in the vast rural interior that is heavily dependent on proceeds from the central government to guarantee livelihoods. The only difference is that moving forward, the economic pie will not be growing at the same pace as before. The days of fast growth are likely over. Expectations of real gains in livelihoods among China’s large, increasingly shiftless rural population will be much harder to fulfill in an era of slower growth. Managing these rural dwellers will involve a patchwork of central government transfers, inefficient investments to keep workers busy, and a costly expansion of the state’s coercive power to keep everyone in line.

This unwelcome burden arrives just as Chinese President Xi Jinping has embarked on an ambitious bid to outcompete the United States in the next generation of leading technologies and to increase the world’s reliance on China’s manufacturing and technological prowess while reducing China’s reliance on the rest of the world. That is a tall order in the best of times. To achieve this vision in an era of slow growth, China’s leaders will need to marshal all the country’s resources as efficiently as possible. The presence of several hundred million underemployed people over the next 20 to 30 years dims the likelihood of success, because paying off and controlling this segment of society will divert increasingly scarce resources from the dynamic sectors that Xi depends on in order to bring about his ambitious agenda. In this way, the same rural millions who once propelled China’s emergence as a great economic power may delay, perhaps indefinitely, the realization of Xi’s vision.
POPULAR SELF EXPROPRIATION
Outraged depositors, some armed, storm four Lebanese banks over withdrawal limits


People gather outside a Byblos Bank branch where an armed depositor took hostages according to the Depositors’ Association, in Tyre, Lebanon, on October 4, 2022. (Reuters)
Lebanon crisis
Reuters, Beirut
Published: 04 October ,2022: 01:59 PM GSTUpdated: 04 October ,2022: 03:22 PM GST

Outraged depositors, at least two of them armed, stormed four commercial banks across Lebanon on Tuesday over withdrawal limits imposed on most clients throughout the country’s financial meltdown.

Cases of bank hold-ups have been snowballing across Lebanon as the population grows exasperated over informal capital controls that banks have imposed since an economic downturn began in 2019.

On Tuesday morning, a Lebanese man armed with a pistol and a grenade entered the Chtaura branch of BLC Bank, demanding access to his $24,000 in savings, according to Depositors’ Outcry, a group campaigning for angry depositors.

For the latest headlines, follow our Google News channel online or via the app.

The group told Reuters in a statement that the man, identified as Ali al-Saheli, was himself in deep debt and also needed to wire money to his son, who was studying in Ukraine.

“He had been trying to sell his kidney,” the statement said.

Security forces later entered the bank and arrested al-Saheli before he could access any money, the group said.

BLC had no immediate comment for Reuters.

Also on Tuesday, a group of people employed at a state power station in Lebanon’s north stormed the First National Bank Branch in the port city of Tripoli, according to witnesses.

They were angry over delays in withdrawing their salaries and fees they were being charged for the process, said their union representative Talal Hajer from outside the bank.

In a third incident, an armed depositor took hostages at Byblos Bank in the southern city of Tyre, according to the Depositors’ Association, another advocacy group.

It said he was carrying a pistol and demanding access to his savings amounting to $44,000.

After negotiations with the bank, he agreed to take 350 million Lebanese pounds in cash - worth nearly $9,000 at Tuesday’s market rate - which he handed to a relative before being taken into custody, the Depositors’ Association said.

There was no immediate comment from Byblos Bank.

A fourth depositor staged a sit-in at IBL Bank in the Beirut suburb of Hazmieh, saying he would not leave until he was granted unfettered access to his account, Depositors’ Outcry said. It was not immediately clear if he was armed.

Last month, a spree of seven hold-ups in a single week saw the banking association announce a closure for about a week.

Five incidents have already rocked banks this week. On Monday, Lebanese depositor Zaher Khawaja and some associates managed to withdraw $11,750 from an account with more than $700,000 at the Haret Hreik branch of BLOM Bank.

BLOM said he was not armed and that it would investigate the incident.