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Helm Talks is full of short, 'pull no punches' insights into:
Energy & Climate;
Regulation, Utilities & Infrastructure;
Natural Capital & the Environment.

Professor Dieter Helm is Professor of Economic Policy at the University of Oxford.

Helm Talks - energy climate infrastructure & more Helm Talks - energy climate infrastructure & more

    • Zaken en persoonlijke financiën

Helm Talks is full of short, 'pull no punches' insights into:
Energy & Climate;
Regulation, Utilities & Infrastructure;
Natural Capital & the Environment.

Professor Dieter Helm is Professor of Economic Policy at the University of Oxford.

    The free-lunch election

    The free-lunch election

    The uninspiring ideas and promises from both main parties since the election was announced make for a depressing read. In trying to get our votes – promising not to put up taxes and to look after pensioners – they are seeking to deliver the cakeism we, the consumers and voters, want: more and better services, without paying for them. It is our votes they are bidding for, and the election campaigns reflect what they think we will vote for.

    In the face of the massive capital maintenance and investment needs across many sectors (infrastructure, the NHS, education, water, energy), someone has to pay. Not only do we not want to pay higher bills, we want to borrow to finance the investment, rather than saving to pay for it. Net of capital depreciation, saving in the UK is negative.

    It would take a brave political leader to spell out what would really be needed to re-industralise the UK (to manufacture all the wind turbines, nuclear reactors and solar panels), to transform our health and education services, to provide a proper defence system, and to restore our natural environment.

    All of this costs, but we don’t want to pay. We want a free lunch. This is not sustainable for our citizens, societies and businesses. The opinion polls suggest that people don’t buy this empty promise, yet they seem set to vote for it. Because it is not sustainable, it will not be sustained. All the promises we like hearing will turn out to be empty – we will have to pay for our lunch.

    • 11 min.
    Privatisation casualties piling up

    Privatisation casualties piling up

    The privatisation casualties are starting to stack up – earlier failures included Railtrack, and more recently there is Thames Water. Royal Mail is struggling to deliver the post; Bulb and over half the energy supply companies failed; and BT is struggling to find a way forward. Is there a trend behind this, and what does it mean for the UK’s core infrastructures?



    As real interest rates rise, the financial engineering that regulators allowed to happen has started to unravel. Thames Water geared up to 80%, Heathrow even higher, and most of the energy distribution companies are carrying a lot of debt. Their priorities risk becoming the servicing of their debt over and above their capital maintenance and the performance.

    Some think that it’s simply a question of reversing the privatisation, but it’s hard to see how nationalisation will resolve the issues. Abolishing dividends does not abolish the cost of capital. Finding the money for investment just gets a whole lot harder. The Treasury has other competing priorities in a highly constrained public finance context.



    Proper regulation is what is needed now to deal with the casualties and to prevent a trickle becoming a flood. Failing companies need to be taken into special administration and restructured, with a proper balance sheet and with new owners brought in to run the company. This needs to happen to Thames Water – if it doesn’t, a terrible precedent will be set. Clear performance and environmental requirements need to be reimposed. A line needs to be drawn, with companies regulated to operate in the interests of their customers; nationalisation simply kicks the can down the road.

    • 15 min.
    Fudging the fiscal rules

    Fudging the fiscal rules

    The Labour Party, like the Conservatives, has committed to borrow only to invest, to fund current spending only from current income, and to get debt as a percentage of GDP down. As ever when it comes to fiscal rules, the devil is in the detail, and these rules are less than they seem. Labour acknowledges that this may take some time, but its promise is that it will meet its fiscal rules by achieving the highest growth rate in the G7.

    As with the Conservatives, Labour knows that these fiscal rules leave plenty of wriggle room. The deadline on current spending bites only gradually and that for the debt to be coming down is by the end of its first Parliament. More importantly, current spending on desperately needed capital maintenance could be renamed as “investment” expenditure (as Gordon Brown did with education and health spending), leaving the next generation to pick up the tab for what should come out of current income. For both parties, “growth” is assumed to help fix the problems, with Labour targeting the highest growth rate amongst the G7 by the end of the Parliament. Neither party has any plans to tackle the lack of domestic savings, and hence the almost complete reliance on foreigners to lend them the money.

    The fiscal rules allow large scope for fudge. If either party really meant to be fiscally credible, it would need to be willing to entertain either serious tax rises or serious reductions in spending (or both). Fiscal rectitude is easier to announce than it is to deliver.

    • 15 min.
    Failing utilities – is special administration the solution?

    Failing utilities – is special administration the solution?

    What is to be done about the UK’s failing utilities? The current back-stop is special administration, opening up the possibility of wider restructuring. In all cases it is the structure that needs to change if there is to be a stable investment framework for the next couple of decades.

    In the case of Thames Water, if the special administer is called in, the assets could be taken over in the short term and passed on to other owners. The trouble is that the current owners are mostly foreign, and the UK is very dependent on foreign investors as it is a net dis-saver. Such dependence creates a big problem: we are beholden to the kindness of strangers to invest in all our utilities, but these investors have many alternative options to place their money.



    Special administration would nevertheless provide a great opportunity to break Thames up, both geographically and by service. It need not lead to any increase in government spending other than very short-term guarantees on the debt. There could be a London Water and a Greater Thames Water, divided between sewerage and water supplies, all listed. Separating out sewerage could help to deal with the large CAPEX required through a ring-fenced ten-year improvement programme, with bespoke regulation and longer-term funding and finance arrangements.



    A structural approach might also work for Network Rail, with greater integration, bringing the train operators and rolling stock companies back into the frame. For Royal Mail, there is a fundamental structural issue relating to service provision – put letters back into the Post Office as a public service, separated from the parcels delivery service.



    Introducing stability and a longer-term approach could at least create a more solid and investable infrastructure, which may then address the challenge of how to make these utilities more attractive to outside investment. Fudging Thames, Network Rail and Royal Mail now will give us another decade of failures and crises, which in turn will turn out worse for foreign investors.

    • 14 min.
    Fiddling the figures – iron fiscal rules are not what they seem

    Fiddling the figures – iron fiscal rules are not what they seem

    Iron fiscal rules that allow borrowing only for investment might seem like a sensible strategy, but the figures have repeatedly been fiddled to make the UK appear fiscally responsible. Both main political parties have been playing this game for forty years. From Thatcher onwards, Conservatives used privatisation and PFIs (private finance initiatives) to move debt off the public books to the private sector. Gordon Brown opted for the PPP (public–private partnership) model for the London Underground, and perfected the art by re-categorising some public spending (e.g. on health and education) as “investment” in order to meet the requirement to borrow only to invest.



    The current approach, however, is much more serious. Governments are now borrowing to maintain our assets, calling this “investment”, as are the utilities. Fixing the school roofs and the hospital buildings, and, for the utilities, the sewers, the potholes, the sad state of the railway infrastructures, patching up the electricity networks, and maintaining the natural environment, should be current expenditure, not treated as new investments. We are borrowing from the next generation to pay for the current maintenance. Capital maintenance should be a current expenditure not a capital one.



    Sustainable public finance would (with a few exceptions) require debt to only ever be for investment that genuinely enhances assets and creates new ones, such that the next generation receives better assets. When it comes to the environment, we need to pass it on in a good state, not to simply say we will continue to borrow and live beyond our means. Government needs to explain honestly and openly how it will balance the books. Pretending that our fiscal rules are held with an iron fist whilst actually including the capital maintenance is bad accounting. The numbers are huge. The next debt crisis will follow as the unsustainable is not sustained.

    • 13 min.
    Three energy policies

    Three energy policies

    When it comes to addressing the trilemma of energy policy in the UK (net zero, energy security and customer affordability), there are three overall policy approaches. “Policy option 1” is about setting targets: pick a year by when net zero is to be achieved, and then do whatever is necessary to get there. “Policy option 2” is the other way around, looking at what can be afforded and then at what can be achieved with the available pot of money.

    There is a third set of more extreme options of stopping oil and gas now, or just assuming that science and technology will eventually solve the problem. Both are dangerous.

    What is now needed is a rational debate and honesty. Politicians need to engage in an open conversation with citizens and to work out how to maximise the benefits from what can be afforded, by making hard choices between the options.

    • 15 min.

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