It’s both ironic and
appropriate that George Osborne’s budget should be presented on the UN’s
International Day of Happiness. Ironic, because,
though disguised by slick and astonishingly confident presentation, for Osborne the budget is loaded with “news of
fresh disasters,”(well, not exactly fresh, we knew already: growth forecast
down, borrowing forecast up, AAA rating lost – though he didn’t mention that last
one.) Appropriate because, as every
year, the budget produces an unedifying orgy of navel gazing as to who will gain
(beer drinkers with a penny off the pint, ) and who will lose (public servants, with a wages held below inflation
for a further period) the odd pound or
two, which the British public are misguidedly convinced will make them happier
or do irreparable damage to their lifestyle.
The importance of the budget has long been overblown, but,
for what it’s worth, it should be judged on the following criteria:
Is its over-all
effect appropriate to current conditions?
In other words will it stimulate the economy in a recession or dampen it
down during overheating?
No. Osborne is
relying on an “active” monetary policy, which has been the policy since he took office, and
the money, rather than being active, has remained inert in the banks, shoring
up their balances. There are signs of
some Vince Cable influence, such as £1bn
for infrastructure improvements, and £3.5bn for “shared equity homes,” but
these, though better than nothing, are modest compared with what is needed. The tax cuts for high earners, and the Liberal
Democrat policy of raising the income tax threshold to £10 000, may provide
some stimulus, but are probably not as immediately effective as a cut in VAT.
Osborne admits that the budget is fiscally neutral, so there is no effective
fiscal policy to create a Keynesian multiplier to stimulate demand, growth and
employment.
Does it made our
society more equitable?
The cuts in welfare benefits for the most needy remain, and
the freeze on public service pay will put increased pressure on the many who
are at the bottom of the pile. The tax
cuts for the highest earners, from 50% to 45% remain, but the £1.200 help
towards child care apparently does not apply to those receiving tax credits,
though it does apparently apply to households where two adults are not earning
more than £1 500 a year, (and that’s each! ) Profits tax is to be reduced by a
further !%. So regression rather than advance
on fairness.
Does it nudge
consumption away from “bads” and towards “goods”?
The penny off beer might help slow down the closure of pubs,
which I suspect the majority, though not all, would regard as a “good.” Other alcohol duties are to continue to
increase, which I, as a red wine drinker, can cope with. However, the planned
increase in fuel duty is scrapped, which will be popular, but is wrong. We really must grasp the nettle and become
less dependent on oil: it is cowardice for neo-cons, who believe in the price
mechanism, to run away from using it in this vital area.
Housing being a “good,” the stimulus to the housing market
is to be welcomed. However, much was
made of helping young people onto the “housing ladder,” financed by mortgage
guarantees for those unable to afford a deposit. This is surely going to promote more of the
unsustainable private debt that got us into the economic mess in the first
place. Permission for local authorities
to borrow to build affordable homes would have been better. We need to move away from seeing houses as “cash
cows” to “homes as places to live.”
Does it nudge
production away from what the markets used to demand to what they are likely to
demand in the future?
The implementation of most of Lord Heseltine’s
recommendations for regional development, and the cut in the liability of small
firms to pay NICs (a tax on jobs) could well stimulate investment and
innovation. This is probably the most
positive and far-reaching part of the budget.
Will it lead to a
long-term balancing of the public finances?
No, by Osborne’s own admission the National Debt will rise, over a “rolling cycle of five
years “, from 75.9% of GDP to 88.9% and then settle at 84% by 2017/18
Conclusion.
The budget has some good features, but they nibble at the
edges. The one completely praiseworthy
feature is the retention of the 0.7% target for aid to the poorest countries
(though any kudos in actually keeping this promise, first signed up to over 40
years ago, was spoiled by a caveat that we must be careful, as GDP stagnates,
not to exceed 0.7%). Whilst I suspect there is now a recognition that it is
growth rather than cuts which will reduce the government’s current deficit, the
reliance continues to be on a loose monetary policy, in spite of its failure,
rather than bold fiscal stimulus. The
message of planned consolidation and more equitable sharing of what we already
have, prosperity without growth, isn’t even on the agenda.
In short a pretty pathetic effort by Osborne.
ReplyDeleteDoes he really think that e penny off a pint will rescue pubs?
Yet another example of tinkering: good for economists and journos but largely irrelevant to most.