Governments can rewrite Budgets and replace Prime Ministers. They cannot negotiate with the bond market.
David Cameron walked away after losing the Brexit referendum. Theresa May became trapped by negotiations she could never fully control. Boris Johnson won one of the largest parliamentary majorities in modern history before political capital evaporated. Liz Truss discovered, in just forty-nine days, that bond investors could dismantle an economic programme faster than Parliament. Rishi Sunak inherited the clean-up. Keir Starmer has now joined the growing list of former Prime Ministers, leaving another government to confront the same fiscal constraints.
Seven Prime Ministers have occupied Number Ten since the Brexit vote.
That level of political turnover is usually associated with countries facing economic upheaval rather than one of the world’s largest financial centres.
Each government arrived promising a fresh start. Each eventually encountered the same obstacle. Britain has grown accustomed to spending beyond what its economy comfortably supports while investors have become steadily less willing to finance that ambition at yesterday’s interest rates.
Political commentary naturally focuses on personalities. Was one leader stronger than another? Were mistakes made? Could different decisions have changed the outcome?
Those questions matter, but they struggle to explain why governments with entirely different ideologies continue arriving at remarkably similar conclusions.
The answer lies a few hundred yards from Westminster in a market most voters never think about.
Government bonds rarely dominate newspaper headlines, yet they have become one of the most powerful political forces in Britain. Every Chancellor eventually discovers the same reality.
Winning an election is one thing.
Persuading investors to finance the promises made during it is something altogether different.
The Market’s Veto
September 2022 lasted barely six weeks.
Long enough to destroy a Prime Minister.
Long enough to force the Bank of England into emergency purchases of government debt.
Long enough to remind governments across the developed world that investors still possess a veto.
The Truss episode has already become shorthand for political failure, but it was never simply a story about one Budget or one Chancellor. Markets were responding to something larger. They were questioning whether Britain’s public finances still deserved the confidence they had enjoyed for decades.
Confidence is an unusual asset.
It takes years to accumulate and can disappear in an afternoon.
Bond investors are often portrayed as ruthless speculators waiting to punish governments. The reality is rather less dramatic. They simply lend money with the expectation that inflation will remain under control and today’s borrowing will not quietly be repaid with tomorrow’s devalued currency.
Once those assumptions begin to weaken, everything changes.
Rising are not just another market statistic scrolling across a Bloomberg terminal. They become a higher mortgage rate six months later. They become more expensive business loans, fewer investment projects and larger interest payments for the Treasury.
Politics talks about spending.
The bond market talks about who pays for it.
Britain has reached the point where those conversations increasingly determine one another.
Source: Oliver Market Intelligence
The Bill Comes Due
For almost fifteen years Britain operated inside a financial environment that now feels strangely abnormal.
Money was cheap.
Interest rates hovered close to zero, central banks absorbed enormous quantities of government debt and refinancing became almost routine. Successive governments borrowed in conditions that encouraged the comforting illusion that low financing costs were permanent rather than exceptional.
They were neither.
As older debt matures, it must be refinanced at today’s interest rates rather than yesterday’s. That adjustment is happening quietly, almost invisibly, inside the Treasury’s accounts. Every refinancing cycle leaves a larger interest bill. Every rise in gilt yields diverts more tax revenue towards servicing existing debt instead of funding public services.
This is where Britain’s fiscal debate has fundamentally changed.
Healthcare demands more money. Defence budgets are climbing. Infrastructure requires investment after years of neglect. An ageing population steadily pushes pension and social care costs higher. Every department has a persuasive case for additional funding.
The Treasury has only one balance sheet.
Growth remains the obvious escape route. A stronger economy makes today’s debt easier to carry tomorrow. Every Chancellor speaks confidently about productivity, investment and innovation because no politician wants to tell voters that the country’s ambitions have become larger than its finances.
Markets are under no such obligation.
Investors do not price aspiration. They price repayment.
That leaves every incoming government confronting the same uncomfortable arithmetic. The slogans change. Cabinet ministers come and go. Election victories briefly create the impression of a fresh start.
The debt auction calendar remains exactly where the previous administration left it.
Increasingly, that calendar exerts more influence over Britain’s political choices than anything debated inside the House of Commons.
For households, those decisions rarely appear as abstract discussions about debt sustainability.
They arrive in much more familiar ways.
Source: Reuters
The View From the High Street
Most people will never watch a gilt auction.
They will, however, remember the day their mortgage came up for renewal.
The first signs rarely arrive as a financial crisis. They appear in quieter ways. A couple postpones moving house because borrowing has become too expensive. A manufacturer delays buying new machinery. A small business decides not to hire another employee because financing no longer makes sense.
Bond markets have an unusual way of finding their way into ordinary life.
Every increase in government borrowing costs filters through the wider economy. Banks become more cautious. Credit becomes more expensive. Investment slows. Confidence follows.
None of those changes make dramatic headlines on their own.
Together, they become slower growth.
Governments usually respond with promises of support. Tax relief, subsidies, infrastructure spending or targeted assistance all sound politically sensible. The problem is that each announcement has to be financed. Borrowing to offset the consequences of higher borrowing costs quickly becomes a circular exercise.
That is the trap Britain now finds itself trying to escape.
The Debt Problem Goes Global
Britain is hardly alone.
Japan has spent decades demonstrating how far governments can stretch public finances when domestic investors remain willing buyers of government debt. Even there, however, the ground is beginning to shift. have started moving higher after years of extraordinary monetary support. For global markets, that matters. Japanese institutions remain among the largest investors in overseas government bonds.
Across the Atlantic, America faces a different version of the same dilemma. Deficits continue expanding despite an economy operating close to full employment. Interest payments on federal debt have become one of Washington’s fastest-growing expenses, forcing uncomfortable questions about how long the current trajectory can continue.
Europe offers little comfort. Growth has weakened, demographics have deteriorated and governments are being asked to spend more on defence, energy security and industrial policy just as borrowing has become materially more expensive.
Different economies.
Remarkably similar arithmetic.
Capital has become increasingly selective. Investors who once accepted almost any developed-market sovereign bond as a safe asset are beginning to differentiate between governments with credible fiscal paths and those relying on increasingly optimistic assumptions.
That shift has consequences far beyond individual countries.
Confidence rarely disappears in isolation.
The Quiet Tax
History is surprisingly consistent on one point.
Heavily indebted governments seldom reduce their liabilities through sustained budget surpluses alone.
There are only so many options available. Taxes can rise. Spending can be cut. Economies can grow quickly enough to outpace the debt.
Or inflation quietly does some of the work.
The last option is rarely presented as policy. It simply emerges from the incentives facing governments carrying ever larger debt burdens.
Inflation allows yesterday’s liabilities to be repaid with tomorrow’s less valuable money.
For the state, that can ease the pressure.
For savers, it quietly erodes purchasing power.
Cash loses value without leaving the bank account. Fixed-income investments struggle to keep pace. Wealth is transferred gradually rather than dramatically, which is precisely why the process often attracts less attention than explicit tax rises.
Confidence does not collapse overnight.
It fades.
By the time investors begin questioning the purchasing power of a currency, the conditions that created those doubts have usually been building for years.
The Return of Real Money
has survived every monetary experiment because it asks almost nothing of the people who own it.
It does not rely on a central bank maintaining credibility. It does not depend on a government balancing its books. It carries no promise that another institution must keep.
That is why its role changes as confidence weakens.
For much of the past three decades, bonds occupied the position gold once held. They offered liquidity, safety and, in many cases, positive real returns. Investors could rely on sovereign debt to preserve capital while generating income.
That assumption is beginning to look less certain.
Central banks appear to have recognised the shift before most private investors. Over recent years they have accumulated physical gold at the fastest pace in decades, quietly reducing their dependence on an international monetary system built upon ever-expanding sovereign debt.
The move is revealing.
Institutions responsible for managing national reserves are diversifying away from promises and towards assets that exist outside them.
Private investors are beginning to ask the same questions.
The debate is no longer simply about generating returns. It is increasingly about preserving purchasing power in a world where governments, regardless of political colour, face remarkably similar fiscal constraints.
That brings us back to Westminster.
Over the past decade Britain has replaced Prime Ministers with remarkable frequency, yet every incoming government has inherited essentially the same problem. Different slogans. Different Cabinets. Different economic priorities.
The debt remains.
So does the bond market.
Governments can change policy. They can reshuffle ministers, rewrite Budgets and promise a new direction.
They cannot negotiate with arithmetic.
Until Britain convinces investors that its public finances are moving onto a more sustainable path, the political cycle is likely to remain trapped in the same pattern. Leaders will come and go. Markets will keep asking the same question.
Can the numbers still be trusted?
Increasingly, that question matters more than whoever happens to be standing outside Number Ten.