Labour ministers sent out in recent days to respond to the looming energy crisis sparked by the Iran war have essentially stuck to that reassuring wartime slogan: keep calm and carry on.
“I think people should go about their lives as normal, knowing that the government is taking action to bring energy bills down,” James Murray, the chief secretary to the Treasury, told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme on Tuesday.
But as the oil price surges once more, there are growing fears the government’s “don’t panic” messaging may be underplaying the scale of the challenges ahead and crowding out sensible advice on cutting consumption.
“It’s the wrong message,” says Andrew Sissons, the director of the climate programme at research foundation Nesta, referring to the government’s communications so far on the war’s impact. “The reality is that the global supply of oil and gas is going to be down by maybe 20%. It’s a supply crisis, which means everybody needs to consume less.”
Part of Labour’s challenge is that it dearly wants to claim credit for the £117-a-year cut to household utility bills that was a central theme in the chancellor Rachel Reeves’s autumn budget.
That reduction, paid for by shifting the cost of green schemes on to general taxation and scrapping a flawed energy efficiency scheme, comes into effect in April.
Yet it is already clear that the cost of household energy will rise again in the summer, when the next quarterly price cap is set. The latest forecast from consultancy Cornwall Insight estimates the cost of a dual-fuel bill will rise by 17.6% from July – swamping the 7% cut in April.
Meanwhile, oil and petrol prices have leapt since the start of Donald Trump’s bombing campaign and Iran’s retaliatory strikes. Over time, these higher costs are expected to feed through to prices across a wide range of products.
So having put tackling the cost of living at the heart of their pitch to the public, ministers now face having to explain why energy inflation is expected to increase once again.
No government wants to sow panic – less still panic buying – so the “keep calm” message is understandable. Talking down the economy, by denting fragile consumer confidence, is also the last thing they want to do.
And the government is also trying to face down a vociferous campaign from opposition parties about Reeves’s plans to reverse the Tories’ 5p cut to fuel duty, in three steps from September to next March.
While income from VAT on fuel will rise as a result of higher prices, wider tax revenues will be hit by the increasingly expected economic slowdown – and the government’s cost of borrowing has risen too since the crisis began, jeopardising Reeves’s fiscal targets.
It is these fears over tax and spend that have prompted the chancellor to insist that any help with utility bills must be “targeted” – a view widely shared by thinktanks, including the Institute for Fiscal Studies and the Resolution Foundation.
But the government has found itself unwilling or unable to make the other part of this argument – that many people will have to brace themselves for higher bills, and it would be a good thing if, as a society, we could crimp our energy use.
Sissons argues: “The message from the government should be: number one, be more efficient wherever you can – where you can save energy without going cold or stopping travelling, then do; and number two, this is a great time to be switching away from oil and gas on to clean electricity, on to heat pumps and electric vehicles, which is exactly what the government wants us to be doing anyway.”
Jill Rutter, of the Institute for Government thinktank, once a senior civil servant in the Treasury, says she would prefer a message that was more like “keep calm, but you can probably find some quite useful savings,” adding: “There are things you can do to manage down your consumption.”
Labour is understandably keen to avoid anything that might smack of the “nanny state”, let alone the dread word “rationing”. But the risk is that, as the conflict continues, “keep calm and carry on” sounds increasingly adrift from reality.
