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Financing Investment Reforming finance markets for the long-term
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1. The profitability of the UK’s finance sector rests in part on a failure to pass
on the benefits of its rising productivity to the rest of the domestic economy.
Despite huge advances in information technologies and analytical capacity,
the unit cost of intermediation to the non-financial economy is higher now
than it was in the 1950s
2. Raising SME investment requires shifting the focus of bank lending to small,
high-growth firms, and the development of new specialist banks. UK banks are
overly focused on real estate, leaving a gap in the supply of finance needed to
improve productivity and growth in the economy
3. Promoting longer-term corporate investment requires a stronger alignment
of the incentives of companies with the savers who ultimately own their
shares. By reforming executive pay, extending fiduciary duty to intermediary
institutions such as fund managers and brokers, and ending exemptions for
Stamp Duty Reserve Tax, the incentives for excessive short-termism in equity
markets can be reduced.
The evidence and arguments for these propositions are gathered together in the
following chapters. In each case we set out the direction we believe that policy
should take to address the problems we have identified. We welcome responses.
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Financing Investment Reforming finance markets for the long-term
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1.
The profitability of the UK’s finance sector
rests in part on a failure to pass on the
benefits of its rising productivity to the
rest of the domestic economy
DOES THE UK HAVE AN INVESTMENT PROBLEM?
Economic output is dependent upon investment, yet the UK has significantly
lower investment relative to comparable advanced nations. Business spending on
replacing or expanding capital in the UK is worth around 17 per cent of gross value
added (GVA), compared with around 20 per cent in Germany and 22 per cent on
average across the Eurozone (World Bank 2016). Over time this has left the stock of
capital in the UK economy far lower – both when measured as a ratio to GDP or per
worker – than the most successful advanced economies (see figures 1 and 2).
FIGURE 1
Over time the stock of capital in the UK relative to GDP has fallen well behind that of
comparable advanced economies
Ratio of total economy capital stock at replacement prices over GDP, 1950 to 2014
Germany
United
Kingdom
United
States
France
Japan
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
3.0
3.5
4.0
4.5
5.0
1990
20
10
20
15
2005
2000
1995
1960
1980
1985
19
75
19
70
1965
1950
1955
Source: Adapted from Bank of England 2016
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FIGURE 2
Over time the stock of capital in the UK relative to the workforce has fallen well behind
that of comparable advanced economies
Ratio of total economy capital stock at replacement prices over workforce, 1950 to 2014
Germany
United
Kingdom
United
States
France
Japan
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
1990
20
10
20
15
2005
2000
1995
1960
1980
1985
19
75
19
70
1965
1950
1955
Source: Adapted from Bank of England 2016
There are two possible explanations for low investment in the UK: either demand
for investment is low; or the supply of credit for investment is sub-optimal. Both
could be true.
The UK non-financial economy is certainly structurally different from many of its
competitors in a way that affects demand for finance and investment. Since the 1970s
the UK has moved away from more capital-intensive, higher paid industries towards
more labour-intensive, lower paid services. While some movement of this kind
has occurred in all advanced economies, the shift has been much more stark and
dramatic in the UK than in many other countries (Jacobs et al 2016). Manufacturing
in the UK now makes up just 10 per cent of the economy’s total GVA, compared with
23 per cent in Germany and 12 per cent in the US (OECD 2016). Recent GDP growth and
record levels of employment in the UK have coincided with a stalling of productivity
growth since the financial crisis that is almost without precedent, both in terms of UK
history and by international comparison. This has in turn contributed to the slowest
recovery in real wages of almost any country in the OECD since 2007 (IPPR analysis
of OECD 2017). This would suggest that the UK economy is in some form of ‘low-wage
equilibrium’ (Hyun Soo 2014). In aggregate, companies are maintaining high growth
and output, not by adding to their stock of capital (whether tangible or intangible),
but by adding to their workforce with cheap labour.
The recent rise in self-employment in the UK – from around 12 per cent in
2001 to just under 15 per cent in 2016 – is symptomatic of this trend. Many of
the self-employed might be described as the ‘disguised unemployed’ – the
phenomena of people working in activities where their productivity is lower
than it might otherwise be were effective demand to be higher (Eatwell 1997).
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The fact that the UK has a relatively low rate of investment because it has a
relatively labour-intensive low-wage economy, however, is not a good argument in
favour of maintaining this. It is now widely recognised that the stagnation of wages
in the UK requires a determined effort to raise aggregate productivity, and that this
requires greater capital investment (Haldane 2017, LSE Growth Commission 2017). So
even if the UK’s financial sector were delivering an optimal supply of finance for the
present low-investment economy, the question would remain: is the finance sector
fit for purpose to support an increase in investment to drive the UK towards a new
model of higher productivity and increased wages and living standards?
1
A key issue is whether UK finance is contributing to sufficient long-term investment.
There is no single measure of long-term investment, but a useful proxy is expenditure
on research and development (R&D). Among the most advanced nations in the OECD,
the UK has one of the lowest rates of R&D spending, even after accounting for the
dominance of service sectors in the UK economy. After adjusting for the composition
of industry across countries, the UK spends around 2 per cent of GVA on R&D. This
compares with 3 per cent in France and the US, and closer to 4 per cent in Japan and
Finland (see figure 3). Business spending on R&D is also likely to be understated in
countries such the US and Germany, where the private sector benefits significantly
from integrated state spending on similar activities (Mazzucato 2016).
Low R&D spending is unlikely to be primarily driven by a shortage in the
supply of finance, since much of R&D is internally financed. There are then two
possible demand side explanations: either there are not enough opportunities
for long-term investment, or else the time horizons over which businesses
require a return on their investment are too short. Given that R&D spending
is lower in the UK even after accounting for the structure of the economy, it is
difficult to explain low R&D spending solely on account of reduced commercial
opportunity. This would suggest that at least some of the problem lies in the
interaction of UK corporate governance with UK finance markets (Lazonick 2014,
Lawrence 2017).
1
We do not suppose that this question need only be asked of finance. The structure of finance markets
can only be one part of the problem to low investment. The Commission is also exploring the equally
important, if not more important, issues on the demand side to investment as part of our work on
corporate governance, industrial strategy and macroeconomic policy.
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FIGURE 3
UK spending on R&D is well below many comparable economies
Business spending on R&D as a percentage of GVA, adjusted and unadjusted for sector
composition (selected countries, 2011 and 2012)
Unadjusted
business R&D
intensity
Adjusted business
R&D intensity
0.00%
1.25%
2.50%
3.75%
5.00%
FIN
JPN
DNK
AUT
SWE
FRA
USA
BEL
CAN
NLD
KOR
DEU
GBR
NOR
IRL
ITA
ESP
NB: Figures are based on estimates of business R&D by fourth digit industrial sectors. Data
refers to 2011 for Austria, Belgium, Canada, Greece, Ireland, Mexico and Portugal. Data refers
to 2012 for Denmark, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, the UK and the US.
Source: OECD 2013
ARE FINANCE MARKETS SERVING THE REST OF THE ECONOMY?
In many ways, the UK finance sector is world beating. In terms of size, exports,
employment and profits, our financial system is among the most successful in the
world. The unconsolidated assets owned by UK-based financial firms are worth 12
times more than annual GDP (Burrows and Low 2015). The sector accounts for 7.2 per
cent of all UK economic output (ONS 2017a) and employs (on well-above-average
earnings) more than 1.2 million people, or around 3.8 per cent of all employees (ONS
2017b). Financial services are also responsible for a trade surplus worth 2 per cent
of GDP – more than all other sectors with a net surplus combined (The City UK 2016).
There are certainly questions over the continued price of this success in terms of
global and domestic systemic risk. But though not yet fully tested, progress has been
made in macro prudential regulation since the financial crisis, with the new Basel
III Accords – which aim to improve bank safety through improved capital buffers –
set to be fully implemented by 2018. There remain outstanding concerns that UK
banks are not as well capitalised as US banks, but in general it appears that the first
purpose of finance as set out in the previous chapter – to provide jobs, profits and
exports to the UK economy –is being well served.
But at least part of the second purpose – to provide finance for investment
and to intermediate ownership for the UK economy – would appear to be more
problematic. One of the most striking findings of recent research into the
financial sector is that the ‘unit cost of intermediation’
2
– the cost the sector
2
Defined as the ratio between the value of loans to the non-financial economy as a proportion of GDP
and the GVA of the finance sector as a proportion of GDP see Philippon (2014) and Bazot (2014) for
more information, and explanation of adjustments and modelling.
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effectively charges the rest of the economy for its services – has remained more
or less constant over the last 60 years. This is despite almost immeasurable
advances in information technologies and analytical capacity over this period,
including computer chips, the internet, mobile telephony, broadband and data
analytics (Philippon 2014). A truly competitive market would have ensured that
the institutions involved in financial intermediation passed on some proportion
of the productivity gain from these technological advances through lower costs
to savers and companies. But what we actually see is that the cost of financial
intermediation in 2007 was a third higher than it was in 1950 – in other words, in
aggregate the market has failed to pass on these productivity gains to anyone
outside of the sector itself. This is true both for the US (Ibid) and for the UK,
Germany and France (Bazot 2014).
New IPPR analysis has sought to provide an update to these findings for a
broader panel of developed countries. Our analysis shows that in aggregate,
UK finance is behaving particularly strangely. Borrowing from the novel
metric pioneered by Philippon (2014), we estimate the unit cost of financial
intermediation by calculating the ratio between the value of loans to the non-
financial economy as a proportion of GDP, and the gross value added of finance
and insurance as a proportion of all gross value added in the economy. Figure 4
plots this ratio as a three-year rolling average. Outside the UK, the OECD average
has seen a persistent decline in the unit cost of financial intermediation. Between
2000 and 2014 the cost of intermediating finance across the OECD fell by a third.
The fall in cost was on a similar scale in Germany and France, and a little larger
in the US.
3
Yet in the UK, average costs in 2014 were almost identical to those in
2000. Furthermore, in the UK the costs rose uniquely during the run-up to the
financial crisis. This suggests that UK finance firms were especially unusual in not
passing on any of the benefits of their large profits to the rest of the economy in
the form of improved efficiency over this period.
3
These results are not directly comparable to those of Philippon (2014) and Bazot (2014) since the
latter two adjust their unit costs to take account of changes in the composition of firms across time.
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FIGURE 4
The unit cost of financial intermediation in the UK has barely fallen compared with 2000
Ratio between the value of loans to the non-financial economy as a proportion of GDP,
and the GVA of finance and insurance as a proportion of all GVA, selected countries,
2000-2014
US
Non-UK OECD average
UK
Germany
France
0.00
1.25
2.50
3.75
5.00
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
NB: OECD average includes selected advanced OECD countries
4
Source: IPPR analysis of data from the Bank of International Settlement (2017) and OECD (2017)
Although a persistently high unit cost of financial intermediation over time does
not on its own prove a lack of financial efficiency, it should surely provoke concern.
While the analysis above does not account for structural economic differences
across countries and across time, the detailed modelling by Philippon and Bazot
has shown that the cost of financial intermediation has remained high, even after
controlling for the types of economy to which they are lending. This included
controlling for variations in the nature and composition of firms and industries
across time and, therefore, the differing levels of financial risk as the structure
of the economy has changed through the decades. Unlike other global industries
that remained commercially viable over the same period, the finance sector has
not improved the value for money of the services it provides to the non-financial
economy (Philippon 2014).
One possible explanation for consistently high unit costs might relate to the
(lack of) competitiveness of finance markets. But as Bazot has shown, in the
UK, unit costs rose in both the 1980s and 2000s at a time of deregulation
and financial innovation when greater competition should have led costs to
fall (Bazot 2014). Commenting on a similar phenomenon in the US, Philippon
shows that lack of competition is not the likely cause of persistently high unit
cost: periods which saw a rise in price coincided more closely with periods
characterised by fewer barriers to entry, rather than more (Philippon 2014).
Another possible explanation is that the quality of finance is improving
across time in a way that is not reflected in the structure of the economy or
4
This includes Austria, Australia, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France Germany, Greece, Hungary,
Ireland, Italy, Japan, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Russia, Spain, Sweden and the US.
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the size of assets. A candidate for such a phenomenon could be improved
information harvesting and dissemination, improving the quality, if not the
size, of intermediated assets over time (all else being equal) and therefore
contributing to a persistently high unit cost. For example, the rise in unit
cost during the first half of the 2000s coincided with innovations in ‘originate
to distribute’ finance and the reestablishment of UK finance as a major
international service (Bazot 2014). But since these practices were heavily
implicated in the spread of contagion during the 2007 crisis, the extent to
which the rest of the economy was benefiting for an improved service was, in
this case, highly questionable at best.
At the very least, persistently high unit costs – which are common across a
number of countries but have shown a particularly unusual profile in the UK
over recent years – warrants a closer examination of the role of the finance
sector in supporting investment. This would be true even if policy makers
wanted to maintain the efficiency of the UK economic model in terms of its
present low-wage configuration. However, it becomes an imperative if future
governments want to move the UK to a higher productivity, higher wage
economy in the future.
There are two possible mechanisms through which business finance markets may
be part of UK’s investment problem, affecting both the supply and demand for
investment and long-term value creation:
1. business finance markets may be systematically failing to provide the
necessary capital for firms that would otherwise be able to make commercially
viable investments
2. business finance markets are affecting the demand for investment by
instilling the wrong priorities on corporate decision-making through their
intermediation of company ownership.
Our review of the existing evidence, along with new IPPR analysis, suggests that
both of these mechanisms are present. Our arguments and evidence are set out in
the following two chapters.
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2.
Boosting SME investment further requires
shifting the focus of bank lending to small,
high-growth firms, and the development of
new specialist banks
Following the crisis, external financing for businesses fell significantly, with
net lending turning negative for six consecutive years (BBAa 2017). The depth
and extent of the deleveraging in the wake of the crisis reflected not just the
contraction of economic output, but a severe supply side credit crunch, with
lenders unwilling to fund all but the safest investments. Bank balance sheets
were rapidly cut back and the market in securitised business loans was largely
wound down (Wehinger 2012).
Although lending throughout the economy contracted during the post-crash
period, small and medium firms were disproportionately affected. Larger firms
(defined as those having more than 250 employees) typically have access to a
broader range of funding sources, such as the syndicated loan market and public
bond markets or public equity markets, as well as their own retained earnings.
By early 2013, credit conditions for these large firms had improved substantially
(Deloitte 2014). But a significant finance gap (the difference between funding
required and the finance offered) – of between £10 and £11 billion in 2013 –
remained for small and medium sized enterprises or SMEs (NAO 2013).
In response to this supply side gap, the Bank of England’s Funding for
Lending Scheme narrowed its focus exclusively to SMEs in 2014. Similarly,
the Enterprise Finance Guarantee scheme was introduced to give banks a
government guarantee on their loans to SMEs. At the same time, the Coalition
Government launched the British Business Bank (BBB) to increase the supply
of finance to smaller firms less able to get credit. The BBB has tried to reduce
the risk of investing in SMEs, by providing loss guarantees or matching funding
for both loan providers and private equity investors. The BBB is particularly
focused on expanding the array of financing options available to SMEs, as
part of a wider government effort to increase access to alternative forms of
finance beyond traditional bank loans. For example, the Enterprise Investment
Scheme and the Seed Enterprise Investment Scheme provide equity investors
with tax reliefs on their investments (Hatfield 2017).
Since these interventions, there are some signs that the finance gap for SMEs
as a whole has closed. Recent survey evidence suggests credit conditions have
improved, driven both by general economic recovery as well as government
intervention (Saleheen and Levina 2017). Net lending to SMEs stopped falling in
2014, and has grown in every quarter since, totalling £1.5 billion in 2016 (BBAa
2017). Furthermore, alternative sources of financing, including private equity,
asset finance and peer-to-peer lending have also been on a steady upward trend
in the last few years (BBB 2017).
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