- investing in green and hi-tech manufacturing
- solving the housing crisis
- discounting bus-fares for 16 to 21s by 30%
- retaining our "triple lock" on pensions (hurray!)
- cutting greenhouse gas emissions.
- “Balancing the cyclically-adjusted current budget by 2017/18, on time and fairly, protecting the economic recovery and bringing down Britain’s debt as a share of national income."
The "official" policy is that 60% of this balancing
should be achieved by further cuts in expenditure and 40% by tax
increases. The Social Liberal Forum, the allegedly "left wing" in proposing and amendment
that the ratio of cuts to tax increases should be 50/50.
Ouch!
No Liberal, least of all SLF members, should be
supporting this at all, even if the 50/50 amendment is accepted. To compare it to rearranging the deckchairs
on the Titanic is too weak an analogy:
arguing about the rules for marbles as the ship sinks would be closer.
The deficit is not an immediate problem. Accepting
that it is is cravenly swallowing, alas along with Labour and most of the media,
the very successful Tory PR spin.
Frankly, it never was our most urgent problem, even in 2010. The comparison with Greece is and was
ludicrous: their debt was mostly short-term and held abroad - ours is mostly long
term and mostly held within our own economy, and our DEBT/GDP ratio was and is relatively
modest. The deficit is certainly not our
most urgent problem now.
It is increasingly recognised that the Tories used and
are still using the deficit as an excuse for their real aim of rolling back the
state. As William Keegan write in the Observer (22/02 15) :
The truth is that the only long-term plan they have
had is to seize the excuse of the putative need for “austerity” to shrink the
state, in the process imparting serious social damage to the poor.
SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon also recognises in her
splendid address on the economy to UCL that the obsession with the deficit could be nothing to do with reducing
it, but "an ideological war to shrink the state." With the exception
of her advocacy of complete independence rather than home rule (and, in my view,
her misguided enthusiasm of HS2) she is saying exactly what I believe Liberal
Democrats should be saying. Liberal
Democrats who have not heard the speech will recognise that a genuinely Liberal
Democrat economic policy is feasible if they listen to her on
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sirf1TTMqd4
I heartily wish every Liberal Democrat conference attendee would give this a hearing..
I heartily wish every Liberal Democrat conference attendee would give this a hearing..
Not only should Liberal Democrats
move on from deficit obsession, we should also stop trying to claim credit for
alleged economic “success” of which the Tories boast. On their own terms (retaining the AAA rating,
eliminating the deficit in one parliament) their policy has failed, and such “green
shoots” as can be discerned do not bear serious scrutiny (increasing employment
largely dependent of low skilled work and zero-hour contracts; still unbalanced
growth fuelled by consumer debt encouraged by yet another housing boom .)
“When you’re in a hole, stop digging” is a
useful maxim at this stage.
As Liberal Democrats, heirs to the party of Keynes
and Beveridge, we should recognise that Britain’s urgent and present problems
are unemployment, in particular youth unemployment, under-employment,
zero-hours contracts, low paid casual and part-time work when full time work at
decent salaries and conditions are what is needed, plus an end to the cruel removal
of social security payments which causes unnecessary misery and makes food
banks a common feature of our wealthy society.
Unfortunately we cannot deny our complicity on the
economic policies the coalition has pursued.
We could however make it clear that the so-called Plan A was effectively
abandoned, and the recovery, actually in
process when the George Osborne took office, resumed only after two years of
“flat lining” through modest Keynesian expansion introduced,
possibly largely at the instigation of Vince Cable, in 20012/13.
To be true to our principles the “Balancing the
Budget” clause should not be subjected to minor tinkering but replaced by one
which promises no further cuts, calls for modest Keynesian expansion (easily
affordable whilst interest rates are at rock bottom: indeed we are culpable if
we miss the opportunity), and relies on the consequent increases in government revenue
and fall in social security payments to balance the budget in the long run. As Keynes argued, “look
after the unemployment,
and the budget will
look after itself.” There is no need for a date.
This approach may be embarrassing for some of our
leaders, who have appeared at times almost to welcome the misguided Tory
policies rather than argue that they have over 300 MPs and we have only 57, and
that were the figures reversed we should be doing things differently.
But better embarrassment and some tricky explanations
to interviewers hoodwinked into believing that austerity is the only answer
than continued dishonesty.
We have plenty achievements of which we can be
proud in our period of coalition: the fixed term parliament (we should shout
much more loudly about this), shared parental leave, the pupil premium, the
green investment bank, etc (I have a list of 23). We should be campaigning on these rather than
trying to defend, let alone continue, an economic policy which betrays our
heritage and principles.
Nick Clegg promised more honest politics: let’s
give it to them, and give the voters in England and Wales a genuine alternative
economic policy, as is offered to the voters in Scotland.
No comments:
Post a Comment