Spending cuts: I hope Cameron and Osborne know what they are doing

The government’s proposed cure for the ailing British economy could be a bit like applying leeches to 18th century patients: worse than the disease

Like all sensible people, I hope that David Cameron and George Osborne know what they are doing when they set out to chill our collective spine as they do in all the newspapers this morning about the scale of the coming cuts to public expenditure.

It was a warm-up for the PM’s big “everyone’s life is going to change” speech today.

But like many sensible people I have my doubts about the wisdom of this carefully choreographed exercise ahead of the chancellor’s 22 June budget. If they do what they say – I am still hoping that they don’t meant it – the cure could be a bit like applying leeches to 18th century patients: worse than the disease.

It was wholly predictable that when they came to power they would open the Treasury books and declare it all to be much worse than they feared. All new governments say that. So it doubtless is in some respects.

But in those respects that matter most it’s not, it’s better, not least when compared by some airheads with the plight of Greece. Even that £156bn deficit they keep talking about is £20bn less than it was predicted to be not so long ago. That is not an insignificant sum.

The urgent case for cuts is that a combination of Gordon Brown’s structural budget deficit – 4%? 6%? – and the cost of rescuing the banking system is unsustainable and must be rectified as soon as possible.

The fear is that without a clear plan for deficit reduction the belatedly panicky credit rating agencies – the people who failed to spot the emerging banking crisis – will mark down Britain’s triple-A credit rating, as they recently did Greece and Spain: the sovereign debt crisis that has engulfed the eurozone.

If that happens lenders will require higher interest payments in return for funding our debts and more cuts will be required to keep up the payments: the kind of downward spiral that so hurt public spending in the Thatcher-Major years.

All true enough, but the key word is “plan”. We need ministers to sound as if they mean it, as Alistair Darling was starting to do with his deficit reduction plan after facing down Brother Brown.

The papers today are full of talk of the Lib-Con coalition’s “Geddes Axe” in the 1920s and – more recently the federal Canadian government’s 20% cuts in the 1990s, as here in the Daily Telegraph. When I wrote about it last year – it was promoted by the new Institute for Government – I made a serious error. I forgot that the Canadian provinces do most of the spending, so the parallel is inappropriate.

But that’s a detail. The real threat lies in all states that have overdone it – the US is the prime example – dashing to rebalance their economy, public and private sectors, as advised by the hairshirted states – Germany is the prime example.

The result: hopes of renewed growth collapse and the world falls back into beggar-my-neighbour recession. It’s growth that will float the debt away most effectively. Remember, Margaret Thatcher’s savage cuts in the early 80s worked in market terms but did unnecessary damage to UK industry in the process.

In the IMF crisis of the 70s Denis Healey – a man of great self-confidence – had to fight gloomy Treasury predictions that with hindsight turned out to be excessive. The Treasury will be keen to take advantage of the new team’s youth and inexperience to reverse both Labour mistakes and Labour’s values. None of them resigned in protest, I note in passing.

Bear in mind the following facts as you soak up the masochism. The UK economy is currently operating at 10% below its pre-crisis trend. The British government can borrow at real interest rates below 1%. The ratio of debt to GDP was 68% by the end of 2009-10 against 73% in Germany, 77% in France and an average of 87% over the last century or so.

Cheer up. British debt, mostly funded by British lenders who are saving madly – as in so much, unlike Greece – also has a much longer maturity, 13 years on average: no panic. British savers can finance British borrowing, and until the private sector recovers the state sector had better keep on spending if we are to avoid renewed recession.

If the new government raises taxes, cuts spending and – just for luck – tightens monetary policy too via higher interest rates and does so too quickly, we are all going to feel the pain all right. And soothing words from Nick Clegg in yesterday’s Observer – soft cop to Dave’s tough cop – will not save us.

Michael White Guardian

A new politics? Not until we blow away the rhetorical smokescreens

After so much political disenchantment, now, when we have this new beast in office, a peacetime coalition, is it time not to be cynical, but instead to take pause and allow our new political élite to prove itself? Should all us naysayers and members of the professional sarcastocracy shut up?

Not likely.

Over the past 15 years or so, the electorate has become increasingly disaffected by and disengaged from the political process, at the same time as the political classes have claimed to be acting more and more in response to our opinions. In the “information age”, politicians hide their behind-closed-doors approach to politics beneath a veneer of public accessibility and accountability. They go on YouTube, but their decisions are made where you can’t see them.

In particular, the language in which public debate is still conducted – the mentioning of you, I, and we – is a rhetorical smokescreen to allow undiscussed, undisclosed policies to be enacted under the guise of apparent transparency. It bends sense, maths, logic and English to breaking point.

The most blatant instance of such disintegration remains, for me, the moment in February 2003 when one and a half million people marched in vain against the invasion of Iraq. When it was put to a government spokes-man that it would be very hard to ignore such a great number demonstrating on the streets of London, his reply was devastating in its logic. “A million-and-a-half may have marched,” he said, “but there are 60 million people in Britain, which means there are 58-and-a-half million who didn’t march.” By the same logic, when the Queen Mother died, 100,000 queued to walk past her coffin, which indicates that, given over 59 million of us chose not to, she must have been one of the most reviled and hated figures in British history. Giving democratic victory to those who choose not to do something makes The X Factor one of the most despised TV shows in recent times, the Daily Mail an unpopular paper for minority interests, and David Copperfield a ridiculous flop of a book with no lasting impact.

Changing this abuse of logic – and it may take a generation – will define whether or not we really have a “new politics”.

Here’s Nick Clegg, three weeks before the election, outlining why, despite all the constitutional niceties built up over centuries of parliamentary democracy, no Prime Minister, especially one called Gordon Brown, should be allowed to stay in Downing Street the day after an election, even if a coalition government hasn’t yet been formed: “Well, I think it’s complete nonsense. I mean, how on earth? You can’t have Gordon Brown squatting in No 10.” (The implication being that this is how we think so we can’t really argue with what he says.) He added: “Whatever happens after the election has got to be guided by the stated preferences of voters, not some dusty constitutional document which states that convention dictates even losers can stay in No 10.”

Said the man who came third and now has an office in Number 10.

David Cameron performed a similar constitutional volte-face. Fourteen days before the election, he proposed that anyone who became Prime Minister without winning an election first would be obliged to call one within six months of taking office. Two weeks later, when he proposed the coalition, he announced it would secure itself in government for five years by raising the majority threshold for a dissolution of Parliament to 55 per cent of MPs. Cameron had gone from arguing passionately for more elections to arguing passionately for fewer. He gave as his reason: “It is a big change. It is a good change. It is a change that will result in strong and stable government, as I believe we are demonstrating already.”

That’s it. No commission, no panel of constitutional experts, no private consultation with senior civil servants.

It is a quick fix to a problem, rammed through as an extension of the Blair mantra, “I did it because I thought it was the right thing to do”, but sugar-coated in the reformist language of change. Ideas uttered in that context are, today, simply unassailable, and anyone in the media or the commentariat or the Opposition who questions them is dismissed as being out-of-touch and churlish.

Blair once infamously said: “Do I know I’m right? Judgements aren’t the same as facts. Instinct is not science. I’m like any other human being, as fallible and as capable of being wrong. I only know what I believe.”

That passage only makes sense if the final line is reversed. Normally, we seek evidence, and form conclusions on the basis of what we find. We believe what we know. Blair’s logic overturns about two-and-a-half-thousand years of rational inquiry.

“I only know what I believe” typifies the thinking of the modern politician, who speaks in an “aw-shucks” conversational tone to make himself seem and sound a regular kind of guy, but who will use whatever props are at his disposal to enact his predetermined decisions without deviation.

Our political masters try to look and sound like normal people, while being more exclusively political than any previous generation. All the main candidates for the Labour leadership are forty-something career politicians who studied politics at university before going into political research, think tanks, and Parliament. Cameron and Clegg are two young like-minded individuals running the country who have known very little else outside the world of politics. Politicians only know what they believe because they’ve had nothing else to know.

It’s no coincidence, I think, that the number of people voting for the main parties in general elections has fallen dramatically in the past decade and a half, just as this new hermetically-sealed language of political self-belief has flourished, and just as the media commentariat has grown in number. That’s because the language and tone the media adopt seem no different from the politicians they’re meant to be critiquing. Politicians and broadcasters are gravitating towards each other, in much the same way we’re told that similar masses will coalesce at the end of the universe. They have been increasingly finishing each other’s sentences, inhabiting each other’s mindsets, and the result has been a homogenous body of material light years away from the electorate.

So how Britain governs itself, and how its political élite behaves and thinks, cannot be overturned by one quirky election result. The mindset has to change as well, and it requires a mighty effort of engagement by us.

The public used its own initiative to engage with this election. There were record voter registrations, especially among the 18 to 25s, and the electorate was broadly interested and energised by the television debates. Moreover, the traditional weapons of party propaganda were neutralised by faster-moving online communities, who came up with collective responses to any claims that seemed unreasonable. Wild allegations about Nick Clegg in the Tory press saw a tsunami of sarcasm engulf the elderly media barons – and Nick Clegg’s press improved. And after the online spoofs of Cameron’s airbrushed posters were followed by Cameron’s own spoofing of Labour’s Ashes to Ashes parody, posters were spoofed beyond relevance and never heard of again. There is now a media- and politically-savvy population with the means to engage creatively in politics.

I believe it is precisely at this point in our politics, just as we might be persuaded we should sit quietly and give all the new chaps in the Government a chance, that we should actually be at our most alert. For this moment of “change” to have any meaning, people in government must have their words, their behaviour, policies and arguments, dissected and held up to scrutiny. That is not negative. It is not destructive to be forensic. It is possible to have a positive belief in the power of politics to change lives for the better, and to wish those in office well, while urging more diligence than ever before.

Looking for the pitfalls, pointing out the contradictions and alerting people to the flaws contributes to a larger movement of inspection and debate and questioning that we must all participate in if we are ever to get the politics we truly deserve.

Armando Iannucci Saturday, 5 June 2010


Spot the Difference Mr Laws

Norfolk mother jailed for benefit fraud

CHRISTINE CUNNINGHAM

Last updated: 27/05/2010 06:30:00
A Norfolk mother who falsely claimed more than £76,000 in benefits after failing to declare she was living with a partner, was last night starting a 20-week jail sentence.

Sarah Riley, 34, falsely claimed the benefits over a six year period from 2001 to 2007. Norwich Crown Court heard that she obtained a total of £64,433 in income support and £10,225 in housing benefit as well as £1,583 in council tax benefit.

Matthew Edwards prosecuting said that Riley’s claim had not been fraudulent from the outset but she had failed to notify the Department of Work and Pensions when she had started living with her new partner in 2001.

The court heard that Riley had now split up from her partner and was making efforts to repay some of the money and had paid back more than a £1,000.

Riley of Cremer Street, Sheringham, admitted 10 counts of benefit fraud.

Jailing her for 20 weeks, judge Alasdair Darroch, told her he accepted that prison would be devastating for her but said: ?This is a very large sum of public money and there was dishonesty going on for a long period of years.?

It is disheartening and short-sighted to abandon this incentive to save

I came full circle about the child trust fund, swinging behind it as I realised its sheer impact, never mind elegance, a fortnight before they canned it. The CTF cost far less than tax breaks on pensions and Isas, and yet its takeup was far higher (40% of people have a pension scheme; 29% have an Isa; 75% of children have a CTF, half of those have people regularly topping it up).

The number of people saving monthly, long-term, for their children, went up threefold, and the amount they were saving went up by 60% since the trust fund’s introduction. It was, said David White, the CEO of the Children’s Mutual, “the most successful savings initiative there has ever been”.

On the level of social justice, its scrappage is dispiriting. Intuitively, I imagined that the people saving into the funds were in the higher income brackets, and the people failing to take up the accounts were poorer. In fact research by the Children’s Mutual shows this not to be the case (40% of those who don’t take up the fund are in affluent categories).

In low-income households there’s been a sea change – one-third of children whose parents have a combined income of £19,000 (this is substantially below the median) are having £19 put away for their futures each month. Children in that band would have no prospect of a lump sum at 18 without this fund. That would probably count them out of university, certainly if fees go up, as they are bound to.

For those who don’t go to university, and 57% of people don’t, a lump sum as modest as two grand could mean driving lessons, and a skill that catapults them into employability.

For middle-income families meanwhile, a well-managed fund, topped up to its limits, could yield £35,000. This is easily the difference between taking a degree and being discouraged by the size of a student loan.

The Child Poverty Action Group (CPAG), along with other similar organisations, wrote to the three main parties before the election, asking if they were prepared to sign up to a fairness impact study. This was to be a rigorously devised document against which new policies could be tested for their impact on inequality – of income, assets or access to services. Clegg said yes, Cameron and Brown gave positive but non-committal responses.

When the coalition was finalised, this request was made again: and while the CPAG waited for the response, this announcement came yesterday. What a disheartening statement of intent. In terms of changing behaviour – encouraging people to engage with financial products, to see themselves as savers, the success of the CTF was peerless.

So much of the conversation since the financial crash has been about the demise of personal saving, the ready acceptance of personal debt, and how important it is for the financial health of the nation that this is redressed. Now the one initiative that made a demonstrable, relatively inexpensive nudge in the right direction is to be axed. It is putatively in the name of responsible stewardship of the national debt. It is so incredibly short-sighted.

Social democracy or Thatcherism: which is better for the public finances?

Posted at 12:12 pm on 24 May 10 by Adam Lent

Lovely presentations of data on the UK public finances since the war by The Guardian here.  Scroll down to the table near the bottom and you notice something interesting: the period between 1946 and 1979, when the post-war social democratic consensus reined, saw only five years when the public finances were in deficit.  However, since 1979  there have only been seven years when the public finances weren’t in deficit.

Unlike orthodox neo-classical economists, I prefer empirical evidence and history to theoretical models and I think that counts as a pretty strong data set. It suggests two things:

  • firstly, the Thatcherite consensus has been far worse than the social democratic consensus at generating a sound fiscal position (pretty poor show given this was the Iron Lady’s big schtick in 1979);
  • secondly, that the current European and UK obsession with New Right style austerity cuts will not deliver the long term fiscal stability the politicians claim.

The reason for both is the same – fiscal health is delivered by economic health not vice versa.  The period after the war was characterised by economic stability and growth with only one minor recession. Since Mrs. Thatcher reshaped the UK economy we have suffered three recessions and a series of collapses in the financial sector. There is little chance of sound public finances when they are repeatedly buffeted by the volatility of a free market.  But humanity’s (and economists’) capacity to ignore history is sadly infinite.