Richard Murphy on UK capital flight

4 Mar
Keir Starmer’s belief that the private sector will be the salvation of UK investing is wholly misplaced. Large UK companies are the worst at investing. They look to financialisation for their profits, with innovation very much off their agendas. To pretend that partnership with the private sector is the way forward for the UK is wrong. The private sector has no interest in the future. Its purpose is to turn debt into dividends.

There’s good reason I follow the daily blog of Richard Murphy; tax specialist, modern monetary theorist, bird watcher, Quaker and no doubt much besides. He may be sorely misguided as to the nature and reformability of Western ‘democracy’. He is assuredly as wrong as wrong can be on the nature and purpose of the Ukraine War.

Even on his home turf of accountancy and economic analysis the professor is constrained by a variant of Gell-Mann Amnesia, and more broadly by his lack of class analysis and consequent failure to know imperialism when it stares him in the face. But within those limits Richard does – ahem – sterling work and his post yesterday is a case in point. He may eschew the i-word – a word far closer to financialisation than he seems capable of acknowledging 1 – but his forensic accounts of imperialism in action are so often on the nail.

Mainstream economists have been known to sneer, usually in tandem with a wider trashing of modern monetary theory, at Professor Murphy’s lack of formal economics qualifications. To my mind they might as well be deriding his lack of grounding in basic Voodoo. More specifically, Richard’s background in accountancy frequently throws light on places unaccustomed to the stuff. As it does here, in a short post aimed at Keir Starmer’s addiction to economic savagery but, whether its author knows it or not, going way beyond that.

Starmer’s ideas about the private sector are wholly misplaced

As the FT notes this morning:

More UK companies are drawing up plans to shift their stock market listings to the US, bankers say, in a growing exodus that threatens to undermine London’s effort to reinvent itself as a vibrant hub for global equities.

It’s an interesting suggestion, so why is this happening?

The FT suggests there are a number of reasons, of which “the prospect of a government willing to spend hundreds of billions of dollars on infrastructure” is one that apparently appeals to investment bankers. How very odd you might say that they so like public money, except for the fact that the opinion is wholly logical: the foundation of market success is always the quality and quantity of government spending in modern economies.

There are, however, other good reasons for this move. In particular, UK pension funds have almost given up investing in the shares of UK companies now. In a little more than two decades such shares have fallen from half of portfolios to just 4% whilst holdings of bonds by such funds now exceeds 70% of their value. UK investors are just no longer interested in what UK companies, and companies more generally, do.

Although, if I am candid, I think it more than that. They are no longer interested in equities because unlike the more ideologically driven US markets they have seen through what the modern company does.

As research I did with others at Sheffield and Queen Mary, London showed, the modern corporation often pays out more by way of dividends than it earns by way of profits. It succeeds in doing so by ever-increasing its borrowing and by undertaking arbitrage [defined here, and a term also much used in critical analyses of imperialism] between various financial reporting standards. In particular, they are prone to abusing the differing rules of UK generally accepted accounting principles and International Financial Reporting Standards in group accounts – meaning they recognise much more profit in the group parent accounts than they do as a result of actual trading by the group as a whole and it is this parent company pot that they use to pay dividends.

Astute investors have, I think, rumbled this game-play much beloved of all companies but readily apparent in those in the UK because we require that group parent companies publish a separate balance sheet which means that in this country this abuse is apparent in group accounts. As a result, they take the risk warning those accounts provide and avoid investing in such entities. UK pensioners are better off as a result. 2

There is, however, a bigger message in here as well. That is that Keir Starmer’s belief that the private sector will provide the salvation for UK investing is wholly misplaced. Large UK companies are the worst at investing in proportion to size and number of employees. They just don’t do that any more. They look to financialisation for their profits, and not actually making money, whilst innovation is very much off most of their agendas. To pretend that a partnership with the private sector is the way forward for the UK is, then, wrong. The UK private sector has no interest in the future. Their purpose is to turn debt into dividends. That is it. Starmer might want to stop that. Unless he does his ideas about the private sector are wholly misplaced.

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  1. For more on the link between imperialism – north to south export of monopoly capital, south to north repatriation of profits – and hyperfinancialised Western economies, see Economics of imperialism and Why read Michael Hudson?
  2. “UK pensioners are better off …” may seem an extraordinary statement given that the UK state pension is the lowest of any OECD country. I imagine Richard Murphy is speaking here of company schemes. As luck would have it, a piece just today on This is Money sets out the UK situation on both.

2 Replies to “Richard Murphy on UK capital flight

  1. The BTL comments in this piece provide this quote from a recent naked capitalism piece:

    From October 2001 through October 2022, Cisco spent $152.3 billion—95 percent of its net income over the period—on stock buybacks for the purpose of propping up its stock price. These funds wasted in pursuit of “maximizing shareholder value” were on top of the $55.5 billion that Cisco paid out to shareholders in dividends, representing an additional 35 percent of net income. Besides absorbing all its profits over the 21 years, Cisco took on debt and dipped into the corporate treasury to fund these two types of distributions to shareholders.

    Which provides further substantiating evidence for Murphy’s observation that the private sector don’t do investment any more.

    Except, of course, investing in gullible politicians across what passes for a political spectrum in Westminster (and any local authority of your choice) so that they will keep signing off the continuing printing of fiat money to shovel to the already wealthy to keep this parasitic rentier Ponzi scheme going whilst feeding the public with TINA rhetoric.

    • Thanks Dave. Along with a stack of other non-productive (non-value creating) activity in the FIRE dominated West – anglo-saxon West especially – share buyouts boost GDP, making it a wildly misleading measure of economic wellbeing. No wonder the economic resilience of Russia, with a GDP the size of California’s, was so badly underestimated by European leaders.

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