How to
smooth over the energy price shock
Prime
Minister Boris Johnson is under pressure to act on soaring energy prices and
household costs as a jump in capped bills looms in April.
The
government has a trilemma over energy prices: how to solve the cost-of-living
crisis, while being focused on net-zero, and unwilling to increase taxation or
borrowing.
There may be
no ideal solution, but a number of questions need clarification.
Who should
be shielded from a 50% rise in energy prices and for how long?
Who should
bear the burden - bill payers or taxpayers? Are we willing to take a hit on
government debt?
And do we
want to smooth this over 25 years or two or three years?
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Johnson promises action over rising energy bills
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Imminent
rises
The energy price rises that are coming
in April and again in the autumn will reach well beyond the "hard-up"
or "fuel poor", possibly sending inflation towards an incredible 7%.
This is something not seen in three decades,
since well before the independence of the Bank of England.
Such is the scale of the increases in
the pipeline - with typical bills heading to £165 a month - which the pressure
will affect millions of lower-middle-income households as well as poorer ones.
Average households, which currently
spend 4% of their disposable income on energy, will see that almost double many
business listing.
A recent poll suggested that half of
Britons would not be able to afford a rise in their monthly bills of £50 a
month. That's the increase which is coming in a few weeks' time.
All of this means there are some
fundamental flaws with the three main solutions currently being floated.
Discount expansion
An expansion of the £140 Warm Home
Discount scheme is the current most-talked-about plan.
The current budget of this scheme is
less than £500m a year.
It is not really designed for a
situation where several million people might need support to fund a £20bn
energy price shock.
The "core" element of the
scheme distributes payments automatically to low-income elderly using pension
credit data.
But there are now more people in the
broader part of the scheme for working-age recipients of the discount.
This part of the scheme is run on a
first-come-first-served basis, where recipients have to apply for the discount
from a fixed pot of funds at each energy company and hope that the fund isn't
exhausted.
There are some different criteria
applicable at each energy company so claimants may not be eligible if they have
switched.
The most significant factor, though,
is that no funds come from the taxpayer.
It is all funded by the energy
companies, or rather, funded from energy bills.
Redistributing half a billion for the
fuel poor on to wealthier people's bills is one thing.
Adding several times that, on top of
the record increases, starts to assume the character of a new tax.
Cuts to VAT and green levies
A cut in VAT saves 5% or £95 off a
£1900 predicted bill. This might prove a helpful addition, but will not
fundamentally alter the picture.
It also gives more cashback to those
with the biggest bills, or the largest, least well-insulated mansions. And it
also loses revenue to the Exchequer.
And then there is getting rid of the
"green levies". These are a range of policies that add about £170 to
bills business listings.
They reflect the funding for
historical investments in green energy and a range of social obligations.
They would be required instead to be
funded by the taxpayer.
A version of this idea was floated
four years ago in Professor Dieter Helm's "Cost of energy" report to
the government. He said that report had been "shelved".
Putting off costs
There is another solution that the
government is looking at: what is being termed a "cost deferral
mechanism".
Essentially some big banks, possibly
backed by a Treasury guarantee, lend billions to energy companies, who then
spread a £600 immediate hike, into, say an additional £120 premium every year
for five years, or less over a decade.
It is possible to do this without
Treasury backing, but some sort of adaptation of rules governing existing
deferral arrangements such as the last resort supplier schemes would be needed.
Another version of this scheme being
pushed in Whitehall could utilize the pandemic rescue architecture at the Bank
of England by providing up-front funding.
This could prove rather controversial,
but some argue that the scheme could help prevent inflation from getting to 7%.
Some version of the scheme, or
"smoothing mechanism", has been gaining traction in the energy
sector, in some government departments, and among MPs keen for a plan.
But it doesn't have universal backing
in the energy industry.
In an interview with the BBC, earlier
this week Centrica chief executive Chris O 'Sheaf referred to it as a
"bailout" for energy companies.
That in turn has led to some
skepticism at the Treasury about how it can work.
But I understand that plans along
these lines are being worked up, with some observers seeing this scheme as the
cornerstone of a Prime Ministerial relaunch in the coming weeks.
Short or long-term hike?
The judgment on whether this is a
one-off shock, or whether, as Mr O'Shea suggested, it will last two years or
more, is critical here.
There are reasons to believe it is the
consequence of an exceptional set of circumstances.
Firstly, the post-pandemic bounce-back
led to unprecedented demand, including for gas.
Secondly, the fact that due to a late,
cold, and long winter last year, crucial stores of gas in Europe never got full
in the first place going into this winter.
And lastly, there is the Nordstrom 2
pipeline from Russia which is finished, but has not been certified by Germany free business listings.
The prediction that wholesale gas
prices stay high for a year or two is a reflection of what futures markets are
saying.
All of that could change rather
rapidly with a speech from Russian President Vladimir Putin, or when the global
economy normalizes.
But we cannot be certain either way.
If a smoothing mechanism is put into
operation, and wholesale prices remain high, then households might get
prolonged chronic pain and a never-ending scheme.
Does the political cycle lend itself to
such a spread of the burden with a general election expected in 2024?
All of this points to the traditional
moment where Number 10's First Lord of the Treasury - one of the Prime
Minister's official titles - overrules a fiscally cautious Chancellor.
But the political backdrop of
"party gate" adds some uncertainty to what actually happens here.
The fundamentals are this though: Is
this a one-off price shock? And for how long does the government want to spread
the energy price pain?
For ordinary households, there
couldn't be a more important consequence to the nation's currently delicate
political balance.
Boris
Johnson says he is talking to Chancellor Rishi Sunak over how the government
could help people with soaring energy prices.
The prime
minister is under pressure to act on rising household costs, ahead of further
increases to capped bills due in April.
Some Tory
MPs want cuts to green levies and VAT to help bring bills down.
Labour,
which also wants VAT suspended, is also demanding higher taxes on oil and gas
producers.
The party
said it would use money from the hike to pay for more generous government
payments to help poorer households with costs.
On Monday,
Mr Johnson said ministers understood the difficulties people were facing, and
"we're certainly looking at what we can do".
· Labour
demands energy firm tax hike to cut bills
· How
can the government solve the energy crisis?
· How
much would a VAT cut on my energy bill save?
Trade body
Energy UK predicts bills will surge by up to 50% in April, when the change
to the price cap, due to be determined in February, kicks in.
There have
been warnings that average households could pay about £700 more per year, amid
surging prices for wholesale gas worldwide.
Speaking to
reporters during a visit to a vaccination center, Mr Johnson said rises were
driven by "general inflationary pressure" caused by the world economy
"coming back from Covid".
But he
added: "We've got to help people, particularly people in low incomes,
we've got to help people with the cost of their fuel - and that's what we're
going to do."
Asked if he
would meet Mr Sunak this week, he replied: "I've been meeting the
chancellor constantly. I met the chancellor last night to talk about it."
Mr Johnson
is expected to hold his first formal discussions with Mr Sunak on Monday,
although a decision on what to do is not expected imminently.
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