Essayer OR - Gratuit
The moron premium
The Observer
|June 01, 2025
Fantasy economics has become the populists' calling card. The consequences are anything but imaginary
-
The markets have a knack of speaking truth to power.
When politicians make promises they'll struggle to keep, bond traders make them pay the price. When investors see spending rising faster than revenues, they judge that governments are living beyond their means and will have to raise taxes, increase debt or both. Government debt looks riskier, the cost of borrowing goes up. In the charming parlance of the trading floor, this is known as the “moron premium”.
Britain paid the moron premium when Liz Truss briefly ran the country. The combination of £45bn in unfunded tax cuts and unproven plans for growth drew a swift response from the bond markets: the UK’s long-term borrowing costs jumped to a level not seen in nearly 30 years, higher than the cost of borrowing in Italy. For the government, the Truss mini-budget added £10bn in additional debt service costs, according to the Resolution Foundation; for millions of homeowners, it led to higher costs of every sort of borrowing, including mortgages and credit cards.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition June 01, 2025 de The Observer.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE The Observer
The Observer
For all humanity
The new moonshot isn't really new at all, but it is an uplifting moment in these fractious times
3 mins
April 05, 2026
The Observer
Abandoned children raise fundamental questions about what a mother owes her child; questions impossible to answer without barrelling into ideas of women as self-sacrificing caregivers...
But Jess's mother sits at the extreme - a woman who abandoned two children and has refused to say why.
5 mins
April 05, 2026
The Observer
'Forty-eight hours before all hell will rain down': Trump warns Iran over Hormuz
As the US president ups the ante, allies discuss using minesweepers to clear the strait and Tehran imposes new transit fees on shipping
3 mins
April 05, 2026
The Observer
Day-one rights have bosses worried, but they pave the way to a healthier economy
This week the next phase of the government's flagship Pay and Employment Rights Act will be rolled out, including “day-one” sick pay and paternity leave.
2 mins
April 05, 2026
The Observer
Raise a toast! British marmalade survives a storm in a jam jar
Ours is a world in flux - rising sea levels, the price of oil - so it’s good to know there are things that can still be relied upon.
1 min
April 05, 2026
The Observer
Litigation funder set for £100m payout if estate agents beat Rightmove
A subsidiary of the hedge fund Elliott Management is expected to win at least £100m if a lawsuit accusing Rightmove of charging excessive fees to estate agents is successful in claiming £1.5bn in damages.
1 mins
April 05, 2026
The Observer
We'll see them on the other side of the moon
It will be the third act in the drama of Artemis II.
2 mins
April 05, 2026
The Observer
Kanye West
The controversial star’s ‘freak show’ is heading to London. But is it time to stop giving him chances, asks Barbara Ellen
4 mins
April 05, 2026
The Observer
Let's raise a Golden Ballroom to those who are making us all great again
It's a balmy Tuesday evening in DC; we're perched in the rooftop bar of the Hotel Washington, which directly overlooks the White House.
2 mins
April 05, 2026
The Observer
US dollar replaces gold as the safe haven in a crisis
Periods of great uncertainty are when gold supposedly comes into its own as a hedge - a safe haven for investors when all else fails.
1 mins
April 05, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
