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The Risk of Rising Inflation.
By Peter Morgan. Published at Morganist Economics.
14:08 21/09/2021.
Copyright © 2021 Peter James Rhys Morgan.
Originally published at the link below.
https://morganisteconomics.blogspot.com/2021/09/the-risk-of-rising-inflation.html
Extremely high government debt creates an additional dimension to economic risk, due to the exposure the public sector debt interest payments have to an increase in inflation or the base rate of interest. Index Linked Gilt return payments move in line with inflation making public sector debt interest payments rise if aggregate prices appreciate. Currently about twenty five percent of the total government debt is Index Linked. This makes government debt incredibly sensitive to a increase in inflation and could cause the debt to spiral massively out of control.
Economic techniques can be used to control inflation to prevent this from happening. Usually the base rate of interest rises to decrease aggregate prices, but interest rate increases can be harmful to the economy too. When the base rate of interest is raised the cost of paying debt interest payments increases, which can damage businesses and cause house repossessions. It can also cause the government debt interest payments to rise when new debt is issued, due to the need to compete with the base rate of interest to create demand for treasury debt products.
Treasury bills and other short term treasury products are particularly connected to the base rate of interest. According to the UK Debt Management Office (DMO) 'Fiscal Risks Report - July 2021' (pages 172 - 175), government treasury products are extremely closely linked to the base rate of interest. This requires the base rate of interest to remain low to prevent public sector debt return payments from rocketing. Government debt of around one hundred percent of GDP necessitates inflation and the base rate of interest to remain low to avert catastrophe.
Elevated levels of inflation and high base rates of interest have been avoided over the past ten to fifteen years, through the utilisation of pension economic control. Instead of the base rate of interest rising to reduce inflation pension saving has been increased to keep inflation low, which has prevented the cost of government debt return payments from soaring. Although the increase in pension saving carries the cost of pension tax relief it is less expensive than higher inflation or base rates of interest, due to the greater public debt return payments they produce.
Pension economic control has proven effective at sustaining low levels of inflation without the need to increase the interest rate over the past decade. The cost efficiencies of pension economic control from sustaining low levels of inflation and base rates of interest have been gargantuan. Currently the taxation exempt annual pension saving allowance or the lifetime pension saving allowance are altered to control inflation and attain other economic targets, which only enables pension economic control on an annual basis rather than a monthly basis.
Advancements in macroeconomic tools could allow pension economic control on a monthly basis improving the effectiveness of the management of inflation and the base rate of interest. Superior macroeconomic control can prevent government debt return payments from growing in addition to optimising the pension saving process. The development of a completely new pension economic control model and pension economic control organisation the 'Pensionium', could reduce the risk of high inflation and an interest rate rise in addition to optimising costs.
By Peter Morgan. Published at Morganist Economics.
14:08 21/09/2021.
Copyright © 2021 Peter James Rhys Morgan.
Originally published at the link below.
https://morganisteconomics.blogspot.com/2021/09/the-risk-of-rising-inflation.html
Extremely high government debt creates an additional dimension to economic risk, due to the exposure the public sector debt interest payments have to an increase in inflation or the base rate of interest. Index Linked Gilt return payments move in line with inflation making public sector debt interest payments rise if aggregate prices appreciate. Currently about twenty five percent of the total government debt is Index Linked. This makes government debt incredibly sensitive to a increase in inflation and could cause the debt to spiral massively out of control.
Economic techniques can be used to control inflation to prevent this from happening. Usually the base rate of interest rises to decrease aggregate prices, but interest rate increases can be harmful to the economy too. When the base rate of interest is raised the cost of paying debt interest payments increases, which can damage businesses and cause house repossessions. It can also cause the government debt interest payments to rise when new debt is issued, due to the need to compete with the base rate of interest to create demand for treasury debt products.
Treasury bills and other short term treasury products are particularly connected to the base rate of interest. According to the UK Debt Management Office (DMO) 'Fiscal Risks Report - July 2021' (pages 172 - 175), government treasury products are extremely closely linked to the base rate of interest. This requires the base rate of interest to remain low to prevent public sector debt return payments from rocketing. Government debt of around one hundred percent of GDP necessitates inflation and the base rate of interest to remain low to avert catastrophe.
Elevated levels of inflation and high base rates of interest have been avoided over the past ten to fifteen years, through the utilisation of pension economic control. Instead of the base rate of interest rising to reduce inflation pension saving has been increased to keep inflation low, which has prevented the cost of government debt return payments from soaring. Although the increase in pension saving carries the cost of pension tax relief it is less expensive than higher inflation or base rates of interest, due to the greater public debt return payments they produce.
Pension economic control has proven effective at sustaining low levels of inflation without the need to increase the interest rate over the past decade. The cost efficiencies of pension economic control from sustaining low levels of inflation and base rates of interest have been gargantuan. Currently the taxation exempt annual pension saving allowance or the lifetime pension saving allowance are altered to control inflation and attain other economic targets, which only enables pension economic control on an annual basis rather than a monthly basis.
Advancements in macroeconomic tools could allow pension economic control on a monthly basis improving the effectiveness of the management of inflation and the base rate of interest. Superior macroeconomic control can prevent government debt return payments from growing in addition to optimising the pension saving process. The development of a completely new pension economic control model and pension economic control organisation the 'Pensionium', could reduce the risk of high inflation and an interest rate rise in addition to optimising costs.