One of the best Leaders that Labour never had, Bryan Gould, writes:
The imminent crisis in what is still laughably called the
British steel industry is being greeted just as other similar developments have
been for decades – with consternation and anger, with concern for the
implications for social cohesion in general and for workers’ families in
particular, but with no recognition that this is just the latest episode in
what is now a depressingly familiar saga.
As one British industry after
another has either passed into foreign ownership or closed down, or – as in the
case of the steel industry – both, very few recognise that this is not just a
one-off, but part of the long and not so slow deindustrialisation of Britain.
As we emerged from the end of the
second world war, the UK’s share of world trade in 1950 was a respectable
10.7%. It is now just over 2%.
Our share of trade in manufactures has fallen by
a similar proportion. Manufacturing accounted for 32% of national output in
1972, but that proportion is now about 10% and still falling. In Germany, the
figure is 21%.
No other major developed country attempts to maintain its
developed status with such a low contribution from manufacturing industry.
Not surprisingly, we run a huge
deficit in our trade in manufactured goods.
Much of that deficit arises in our
trade with the other developed economies of the European Union – the countries
that, we are told, will stop trading with us if we leave the EU.
The consequence of the decline of manufacturing is that
we have run a perennial trade deficit in every year since 1982. We have, in
other words, traded at a loss and failed to pay our way in every one of the
past 34 years.
That deficit –
the country’s and not the government’s – is of course the one that really
matters; yet it is now so much part of the familiar economic landscape that it
scarcely warrants a raised eyebrow.
How do we get away with pathetic
rates of investment (a net rate of nil) and productivity growth (almost zero),
and with running at a loss year after year?
We don’t. We have to borrow from
overseas and sell off our assets to foreigners to close the gap. We have sold
more than £600bn of assets over recent years.
This is a rake’s progress that
cannot be sustained for much longer. On the few occasions that the
matter is raised, we are given reassuring answers.
We can’t compete in
manufacturing against low-cost, low-wage competitors, we are told – so how come the Germans can, and that some of
those “low-cost” economies now enjoy higher living standards than our own?
Then we are told that it makes sense to concentrate on
high-value activities such as financial services rather than on dirty, smelly
manufacturing.
But doesn’t that leave the economy too narrowly based, and isn’t
it special pleading on behalf of the City of London, which in any case hogs all
the benefits and leaves the rest of the country, in both social and
geographical terms, scrabbling for a crust?
If we were for once to take these
matters seriously, what is to be done? The first essential is to understand why
deindustrialisation continues to gather pace.
The stark truth is that we can’t
pay our way because we can’t persuade enough customers, either at home or
abroad, to buy British-made products at the prices we ask for them.
And that,
in turn, is because it costs more to make goods in Britain than it does
elsewhere. And why is that? Because we say that it should.
About 70% of the costs in
manufacturing are domestic costs, such as the costs of labour and so on.
Those
domestic costs are translated into international prices by the exchange rate –
and, in the end, we set the rate.
If the rate for sterling was higher, our
goods would be even less competitive, so that our market share in international
markets would fall further, as would profit margins on international sales.
In
the long run, if the rate is kept at too high a level, it will inevitably fall,
but not necessarily to the point where we could start again with a level
playing field.
If the sterling rate was lower,
sales and profit margins would pick up – a lesson learned by many other
countries which have grown at our expense.
So why don’t we learn from them, and
manage our exchange rate so that it doesn’t prejudice our economic health?
The answer is that we set a high exchange rate because it
seems to suit our interests – or at least the interests of some of us.
It suits
those who hold assets, but it means that wage earners are made to bear the
whole burden of trying to improve competitiveness by accepting lower wages – a
major factor underpinning widening inequality.
But if that were true, how
is it that other countries have engineered lower exchange rates without
difficulty and do so regularly?
Just ask the Chinese, or prime minister Abe of
Japan, who has brought about a depreciation in the yen’s value of more than
30%.
There will, of course, be much wringing of hands and
crocodile tears over the steel industry – but there will be more of the same,
continuing seven decades of decline, unless we face some hard facts and take
the required action.
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