Toggle high contrast

Mark Carney (Question and Answer Session) - Tuesday 9 September, AM

Issue date

Mark Carney question and answer session with delegates at TUC Congress 2014
 

Question from Asha Wolfe-Robinson (UNISON)
A report to UNISON by Landman Economics found the cost to the Government of increasing public sector pay is significantly less than might be expected. This is partly due to the extra demand generated as pay increases.  Every 1% increase in public sector injects between £470 million and £880 million pounds of extra value into the economy.  Given the Governor’s previous concerns about the need to see wages improving before interest rates are raised, would he, therefore, agree that much more needs to be done to increase the take-home pay of public sector workers? 

Question from Steve Herring (Society of Radiographers)
Mr Carney, our members in the NHS are facing yet another pay freeze, the fourth in five years, while average earnings growth across the economy continues to lag behind price increases.  What are the consequences for long-term economic stability if working people are denied the benefits of an improving economy? 

ANSWER FROM MARK CARNEY
Those are very important questions.  Let me say, at the outset, that I absolutely recognise that I quoted a figure, which is an aggregate economy-wide figure – everyone is aware of this – of a 10% fall in real incomes since the crisis, but across the economy the hit in the public sector has been larger and we are well aware of that.  That creates real difficulties.  It is one of the reasons why we are very conscious about the timing, pace and degree of potential interest-rate increases.  We need to see the prospects of real wage growth coming in across the economy, including through the public sector. 

Let me just stress two other points. The first is that, ultimately, wage growth in the public sector and wage growth across the economy is going to be determined by productivity.  So what we are doing is trying to put in place the conditions to maximise that and ensure that it flows through.  I will emphasise that from a financial stability perspective, because you raised a second question on financial stability.  This is something that we are taking very seriously. It is one of the reasons why we acted on housing earlier this year because we had concern that in an environment of low pay growth, amongst other factors, that the debt burden that could be built up through the housing market would weigh on this economy not just next year and the year after that but much further out, and very materially reduce incomes and livelihoods, not just for public sector workers but workers across the UK. 


Question from Dawn McAllister (Unite)
I am a Unite Scottish Executive member.  Millions of people are over-indebted and my union, Unite, has highlighted how many people have to borrow from pay-day lenders to get through the month because of low wages and cuts in real wages.  An interest rate rise is likely to have a wide social and economic fallout as people can no longer make ends meet.  Many will face the prospect of losing their homes.  How much is the Bank of England going to consider this and whether wages have increased when looking at whether to raise interest rates? 

Question from Cath Speight (GMB Scotland)
You said that when the unemployment rate fell below 7% interest rates would rise as part of an economic strategy on inflation. You did not follow that through. Is this because of the impact that a rise in interest rates would have on millions of working people, or is it something to do with the pressures politically not to support interest rates this side of an election?

Question from Lynda Rook (Equity)
Is there a place for regulation to ensure economic stimulus is delivered to the wider UK economy as opposed to only the financial sector, for example, to the powerhouse that is the creative industries which delivered 15.6% of GDA in 2012?

ANSWER FROM MARK CARNEY
 If I tried to group them, there are three aspects here.   I welcome the focus on indebtedness of British households to the sensitivity of interest rates because it is absolutely essential, and what that means, ultimately, for growth, the pressures on inflation and for monetary policy.  We are very sensitive to this.  We conduct extensive analysis of not just economy-wide indebtedness but cohorts or groups of people within the economy and how indebted they are.  We see through surveys and other analysis that 40% of British households feel acutely the weight of their indebtedness. We look at how they would adjust to potential rate increases.  It is one of the factors that influences, without question, the path of the monetary policy in the durability of expansion.  What is important is that there is a real prospect of wage increases and that wage increases are coming through because that helps to reduce the burden of that indebtedness.  What I was concentrating on in the speech is the dynamic as this extra workforce finds employment, in economists’ speak, as the slack is used up – I appreciate that that is a terrible way to talk about it – in the labour market and then we start to see those prospects.  We are very alert to this issue and it influences all of our policies.  That is the first point.

Reference was made to pay-day lenders but then there was the reference to bank lending and, particularly, I think, to the creative industries, which is an important point.  There is that a radical restructuring going on, which is not finished but it is in train, of the banking sector in this country.  We have, fundamentally, changed the cost of banking to the banks of various activities.  It is much, much more expensive for banks to engage in trading in the City, investing in financial markets, as opposed to lending to the real economy.   These are big and somewhat lumbering institutions and it takes them a while to adjust, but they need to be successful and to build the skills to lend to businesses. As you know, much of the future of this country is in the creative industries and in industries where the basic assets are human capital, ideas and imagination, so those banks need to be able to make the credit decisions around lending into those industries.  It will take them a while but the incentives are there and they are much more resilient in order to be able to do that. 

Viz-a-viz pay-day lenders and others, what is important is that there are new banks that can come in and compete against these very high rates of interest and very ineffective rates of interest for households, so we have streamlined the ability of new banks to come in and we have had a fourfold increase in the amount of applications and the number of new challenger banks that are coming through again. We have to do more but that is the focus part. 

Just on interest rates and politics, which is the way I would term it, the first thing to say is that we are absolutely indifferent to the political cycle, to who is in government,     

who might be in government and who was in government. We are given a specific mandate. It is, basically, unchanged since 1997 to achieve that 2% inflation target, and we manage monetary policy in order to achieve that.  If we need to raise interests rates before, or lower them for that matter, a vote, an election or referendum, we will do what is necessary in order to achieve that target.  We are technocrats and we do what is necessary. 

If you don’t mind, I just want to clarify one thing.  I think most people are clear on this, but our commitment was not to raise interest rates at least until unemployment got to 7%, because we wanted to secure that recovery.  What we said that once the unemployment rate got to 7% we would then look around, take stock and decide where monetary policy needed to go.  When we looked around and took stock, we saw a lot more people who wanted to work than had jobs, we saw a lot of people working part-time who wanted to work full-time, we saw a lot of people who were working as self-employed who wanted to be in regular employment and we saw a lot of people on zero-hours contracts.  We saw a lot of flexibility and additional capacity in the labour market.  It did not make sense to raise interest rates was our judgment then, and it has been absolutely vindicated by the performance of the economy since. 


Question from a delegate (no name given) (Public and Commercial Services Union)
Mr Carney, PCS represents more than 50,000 workers in Revenue & Customs.  Our estimate is that more than £120 billion tax is evaded and not collected.  We hope you are making the case to the Government that in this situation HMRC should employ more staff rather than cut jobs in order to enable this tax to be collected. 

Our question to you, as the Governor of the Bank of England, is this.  The richest 10% pay a lower share of their income in tax than the poorest 10%.  Do you believe that there is a case for making the tax system more redistributive? 

Question from Patricia Schooling (The Society of Chiropodists and Podiatrists)
Ordinary people are struggling to buy their own homes as a result of the so-called “housing bubble”.  This is a huge problem for young workers while low paid and often paying off university debts.  Is the Bank of England planning to take any steps to take the heat out of the housing market, and would a rise in interest rates make the situation better or worse?  

ANSWER FROM MARK CARNEY
I will start with the housing point and then I will go to inequality.  In relation to housing, we have a range of tools at the Bank of England. The Bank of England has changed in recent years.  It used to be that we, basically, could just vary interest rates, and one of the challenges was that there might be a temptation to use interest rates against an issue of unsustainable growth in house prices, such as you are describing in the housing market.  We now have another range of tools that we can use, so we can preserve interest rates and monetary policy for achieving inflation targets in a way that supports jobs and growth, and that is what we are doing.

What are we doing on housing and how do we view that situation?   What we did on housing in June was that we took a series of steps that, in effect, took out insurance against developments in the housing market that wouldn’t be consistent with the long-term growth of this economy.  We restricted the ability of banks to make risky loans, risky mortgages, by capping the amount of those mortgages that they could grant.  Working with other agencies, we are making sure that banks do proper credit checks and credit analyses, so they are concentrating their resources on people who deserve those mortgages, and we are making sure that those mortgages are being shot^^^ to higher interest rates so when people get a new mortgage they know they can pay that mortgage if interest rates adjust.  As to the consequence of all those measures, the intent was not to target house prices per se.  It was not to stop the housing market in its tracks.  As a number of you here will know that housing markets in your region are just beginning to recover, but it was to make sure that certain housing markets, and certainly the housing market across this country, does not move unsustainably, supported by unsustainable debts.  That is what we can do in the housing market.  We can take other steps. 

Let me also acknowledge our limitations.  We can’t build houses.  The fundamental problem in this housing market is a lack of supply, and that is going to take efforts from many others for many, many years in order to address the lack of supply. 

With respect to inequality, I am afraid that on fiscal policy and tax policy it is not our responsibility. We have many responsibilities – I have just talked about housing – but inequality is not one of our responsibilities, so I am not going to drift into dictating tax policy.  But these issues have real consequences for our policies.  The shift in more rapid wage growth at the upper end and tepid or negative wage growth at the lower end affects inflation.  We need to understand that. That affects our monetary policy. It is one of the reasons why one would expect this more gradual path, even though the economy is growing.  I am going to repeat myself by saying that, again, it goes back to who has the debts in this economy, what’s their ability to service those debts, what does that mean if there is too rapid an increase in interest rates and what does that mean for the sustainability of the economy?  We are trying to do everything we can to put in place the conditions so that there is that growth that is going to bring into place sustainable wage increases for all.


Question from Louise Regan (National Union of Teachers)
International studies show that the greater the inequality in a country, the worse its educational outcomes.  In your interview with William Keegan printed in our Conference Guide you talked about your worries about a “waste of human capital” in the UK.  Do you accept that greater state intervention to strengthen the economy and reduce inequality will improve our children’s education and life chances?  (Applause)

Question from Mahmona Shah (University and College Union)
The recent ONS Upwards revision of the numbers on zero-hours contracts and the growth in low-paid self-employment revealed that the labour market picture is not as rosy as previously thought.  How will the Bank reflect this reality of low pay and a disappearing middle in the quality of labour market data and plan for a fair and sustainable economy?

ANSWER FROM MARK CARNEY
In the near term, which is what you are raising, of zero-hours contracts, self employment and part-time worker figures, we are taking all of those very much into account, because if one just looked at the movement in the unemployment rate and the speed of the movement in the unemployment rate,  one could draw a conclusion of a labour market with very tight dynamics.   But by looking behind, by looking at the number of people who want to work full-time but can still only can find part-time work, as well as people moving into self-employment, the increase in their participation in the labour market, with more people coming in looking for work, and the prospect of more of those coming, taking all those factors and others into account, is why we do still see slack in this labour market, this 1% number that I quoted.  There is a lot of uncertainty around that.  We are learning with every day about exactly what it is, but that is why we see that and that is why the collective judgment of the MPC, which is the committee of the Bank that makes these decisions, has been to keep interest rates where they are.  What I am saying today is consistent with what we have said recently, that you can expect interest rates to start to go up at some point but it is within the context of how that slack is used up and what the prospects are not just for wage increases but labour costs. 

Let me turn to the absolutely crucial question around education.  I can’t stress enough, and you know this from your work and colleagues, that there is nothing worse than wasting human capital. I sound like an economist in saying it that way, of wasting a life, wasting skills and people losing out. 

There were two challenges after this recession, the first being to keep people in work as much as possible because people lose their skills if they are out of work.  It is just an unfortunate reality.  We, in the UK, have done better than others, versus anyone else, in keeping people in work, but that’s not enough.  The whole point is around lifelong learning, building on the base that the teachers give employees.  It is from early childhood education, through formal education, but it is very much a skills agenda that evolves through a lifetime and it is not just for those in work.  It is for those out of work and it has to be available for all, which is why I wanted to stress that at the end.

I will just hammer the point, if I may, which is that our contribution to the pay rise for which you are looking is to ensure that you get that which the economy today can sustain, but it is not clear that you should be satisfied with that.  That’s the extent of what the Bank of England can do.  The question is how do you raise the level of pay that the economy can sustain?  Part of the way you do it is through a very equal and broad-based investment in skills throughout an individual’s lifetime.


Question from Jeff Broome (Union of Shop, Distributive and Allied Workers)
With less than two weeks until the people of Scotland vote in the independence referendum, would an independent Scotland be able to remain in the currency union with the rest of the UK, and, if not, what might be the consequences to the Scottish economy? 

ANSWER FROM MARK CARNEY
I went to Edinburgh in January and I gave a speech on this subject, on the economics of currency unions.  Basically, in that speech I said that there are three components of a successful currency union.  First, you have to have free movement of capital, labour in goods and services – trade – across the various parts of the currency union.  Secondly, you need something called a banking union.  In other words, you need the same regulation, the same supervision and the same standards in the banking sector, and very importantly you need the institutions that stand behind those banks; the lender of last resort, which is the central bank, the Deposit Guarantee Scheme, which are credible.  You need all of those institutions to be common.   Thirdly, you need some form of fiscal arrangement, so you need tax revenues and spending flowing across those borders to help equalise, to some extent, the inevitable fluctuations and differences in the various economies.  I think we only have to look across the Channel to see what happens if you don’t have all of those components in place.  So that’s just the economics of it.  That outlines the economics of it. 

I have said before that we take note of all the positions of all the major Westminster parties to rule out a currency union between an independent Scotland and the rest of the UK.   So it is in that context, if you put it together, that a currency union is incompatible with sovereignty. 


Question from Lorna Daniel (Prospect)
Mr Carney, last July when you announced that Jane Austin would be featuring on the £10 bank note you also made a welcome commitment that future bank notes should celebrate the full diversity of Great British historical figures and their contributions in a wide range of fields. Do you think that this commitment to greater diversity should include the composition of the Monetary Policy Committee?  

ANSWER FROM MARK CARNEY
I do, actually.  I think I have said that.  It was striking when I first came to the Bank that the gender balance in the senior ranks of the institution was not what I would have expected, nor does the staff at the Bank yet fully reflect the broader diversity of the United Kingdom.  So what have we done?  I should note that decisions of who is on the Monetary Policy Committee or any of our other committees are not for the senior management of the Bank but for the Chancellor.  In the last year, I am very pleased to say that Christian Forbes and Minusha Peake (?) have both joined and they are both excellent colleagues.  What we can influence, though, at the Bank and what we have been influencing is the composition of our workforce, and this is what we have done.  It is 15 months, but this is what we have done.

The year before, in our graduate intake, about a quarter of new hires were female.  In the most recent graduate intake, which came in in August, just under half were female.  In our senior management ranks, of the top 50 senior managers, one-fifth were female, now it is about a third.  We have set up a specific taskforce and targets.  We are actively recruiting to get a balance.  We have, as you would expect, a strategic plan. One of the fundamental objectives of our strategic plan is that our workforce at the Bank of England fully reflects the diversity of the United Kingdom, not because it is not just the right thing to do but it will make us much, much more effective.  It is going to take years to do it, we have made a good start, but I am glad to end with that question because it is fundamental to what we need to do. 

Enable Two-Factor Authentication

To access the admin area, you will need to setup two-factor authentication (TFA).

Setup now