Jupiter Merlin Weekly: Inflation data – pick your poison
This Jupiter Merlin Weekly highlights the disparity between different ways of measuring inflation, while asking what happens to offshore wind when the wind doesn’t blow?
However, what is seldom talked about is the Retail Price Index (RPI) which includes housing costs. No longer the official inflation measure, nevertheless in a hangover from the days a decade ago when it was, it is still used extensively in government and regulated business. Among others: index linked gilts; National Savings Certificates; a host of excise duties including transport, gaming and alcohol taxes; interest payment calculations on student loans; regulated prices including season rail tickets. Down from 11.3% in May, RPI in June was still in double digits at 10.7%. While the prices of commodities etc are cyclical and volatile, many of the items above have their ‘prices’ set and locked for the following year based on RPI at a particular date. Take for example season tickets: the annual fare increase for the whole of 2024 will be set using the published RPI figure for July 2023; even if underlying inflation is falling for other reasons towards the end of the current year, the cost of season tickets will be baked in for all of next year at today’s relatively high rate (clearly, the system works to consumers’ benefit at the other end of the cycle: when inflation has troughed and is beginning to accelerate the price pain is delayed).
Most of these RPI-related items are generating income for the government. However, the indexation of 25% of government debt is a direct cost when inflation rates are high. For example in April, the government’s total interest bill was £9.8bn; £6.2bn (63%) of that was directly attributable to the index-linked proportion: crudely, a quarter of the debt in issue being directly linked to inflation and RPI in particular, which is almost invariably higher than CPI, accounted for two thirds of the cost of servicing the government’s total borrowings.
In the UK we have already seen the well-publicised travails of Thames Water, struggling under the weight of a significantly over-borrowed balance sheet and having to work hard to convince investors of the merits of refinancing its bonds to prevent it becoming insolvent.
In France, the major food retail chain Casino is in financial difficulty and needing robust remedial reorganisation measures after warning of an impending default on its bonds.
Again, in the UK (and linking directly with last week’s Merlin column discussing the financial viability of UK offshore wind economics without a new round of government subsidies), citing inflated construction costs and specifically the increased cost of capital, this week the Swedish energy company Vattenfall has shelved its proposed development of one of the world’s biggest offshore wind projects (referred to by one commentator as a ‘turbine forest’) off the north Norfolk coast. We are regularly told by the green energy industry and its lobbies that wind is the cheapest form of energy. So cheap it is apparently unaffordable! What does not help in these discussions about the financial viability of such projects is the harsh but obvious truth of producing renewable electricity from unreliable and unpredictable sources: on the same day as the Vattenfall announcement, SSE, the Scottish power generator, has blamed the weather for a 29% drop in output from its renewables division in the second quarter, largely because of prolonged periods of high pressure which sat over the UK. No wind equals no electricity equals no revenue, but the meter is still ticking on the fixed costs and cash outflows of operating, maintaining and financing those industrial turbine installations while their blades are immobile.
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