In this article in Sunday's "Observer" (13th August 2023). . .
. . . Will Hutton plays the role of the little boy in the Hans Anderson fairy-tale who points out that the emperor has no clothes.
The facts Hutton enumerates come as no surprise to those of us who follow the course of Britain's economy but they give a concise picture of the UK's current economic situation which is dramatically different for that the Tories, their sycophantic think-tanks and supportive press try to paint.
Here's a summary (with any additional comments of my own in brackets).
Unlike in previous times of economic difficulty:
· we are no longer members of any secure trading relationship such as the Empire or the EU (and the much-vaunted promises of new post-Brexit relationships don't so far amount to much):
· our international assets no longer exceed our liabilities (quite the reverse as a result of "selling of the family silver" to foreign holders):
· much government debt is now short-term and debt servicing is vulnerable to short term interest fluctuations:
· the current account deficit is enormous (about 6% of GDP I seem to remember having read somewhere):
· we are no longer an industrial giant (thanks to Thatcherism from the politicians and short-termism from our "captains of industry"):
· productivity is "wretched" (way behind the US, Germany and France and either the lowest or next to the lowest in the G7)
· if we strip out the contribution of London, our GDP per head falls below that of Mississippi, the poorest state in the US.
The consequences of this economic performance, allied to the growth in inequality, have percolated down to the health and social condition of our society. Hutton records that one in three of our children live in poverty, our five-year-olds are now the shortest in Europe, and two million people report going without food for at least one day in every month.
We are no longer the spanking-rich world leading country we like to pretend.
It is common to date this decline from the public spending “austerity” policies introduced by George Osborne in 2010 but I believe the problem goes back much further, indeed right back to the end of the Second World War.
Jo Grimond, a junior officer in the War and leader of the Liberal Party from 1956 to 1967 puts his finger on it. In his “Memoirs” (published 1979) he writes:
“…we came out of the war being told we had saved the world by a unique act of courage against fearful odds. We naturally became convinced that the world must see that we were natural leaders of the West entitled by our deeds of valour and skill to rest on oars as far as work was concerned and owed a debt, indeed a living, by our neighbours. (page 99)
That delusion still exists. Indeed under Johnson it existed in spades.
The delusion had and still has two serious consequences. We have failed to reform significantly either our methods of running the economy or the government, and we have failed to look to other countries for clues on how to do both better. Why should we: ours are “the best in the world and the envy of the world?”
To strop the rot and achieve, not, for goodness’ sake, world-beating leadership, but just modest competence as an advanced developed nation, we need to ditch these arrogant delusions once and for all and subject our institution to root and branch examination and fundamental reform.
In our system of government we need examine our electoral systems, the powers of our governments, parliament as an effective law-making body and monitor of government performance rather than a forum for political point-scoring, serious devolution of powers - including tax raising - to the nations, regions and local government, balancing the media and the funding of political parties.
In our economy we need to find ways of promoting long-term investment rather than short-term monetary gain from our entrepreneurs and funders, fairer taxation, measures to achieve an equitable distribution of incomes and wealth, protect the vulnerable, change the housing market from the means to acquire a cash-cow to the provision of somewhere to live, and in our education system promote respected and effective method of achieving technical competence.
It is a mammoth task. Such a programme will take at least fifteen years to implement. A continuation of the two-party duopoly will produce the “mixture as before.” A progressive alliance of Labour, Liberal Democrats, Greens and Nationalists might just “break the mould” (remember that one?) and set us on the right track.
Sadly, the Labour Party is full of people who won’t entertain the idea of constitutional reform. They believe in a ‘two party system’, even though the Conservatives win elections at the rate of 2:1. They don’t believe in coalitions
ReplyDeleteAgreed: that is a major hurdle we have to overcome if Britain is to get out of this downward spiral. Without fundamental change such as is outlined above (or similar, as outline by Hutton, or by Ian Dunt in "How Westminster Works") a Labour win at the next election will result it the existing system being run more humanely for one, perhaps two parliaments, and then the Tories will be back to squander any gains that have been made. We need need a good number of seats for the Liberals, Greens and Nationalists at the next election to force the Labour diehards to recognise that they must work with us.
ReplyDeleteDaily Express readers are still - I saw a comment just this week - saying something like, "Have they already forgotten that we freed them from Nazi tyranny?", when referring to France, or some other Eurpean nation. I am now 77, but even I wasn't around in 1945 to remember anything.
ReplyDeleteAgreed. I’m a little bit older, born in 1937. I don’t remember much about the war itself, but its aftermath dominated my late childhood and adolescence. Like most of my (male – can’t speak for the girls) contemporaries I lapped up the war stores in the comics (Wizard and Hotspur), the Biggles novels of W E Johns and the POW escape stories. All emphasised British exceptionalism (though we didn’t call it that). Later American films were viewed with some disdain (Johnny come latelies) and the massive Russian contribution was never mentioned at all (still isn’t) Grimond was right, we were brought up to believe that the world owed us a debt Sadly we haven’t grown out of it.
ReplyDeletethe massive Russian contribution was never mentioned at all (still isn’t)
DeleteSurely you jest. You can't move these days without people saying 'you know who really beat the Nazis? The Russians!'
You know what isn't mentioned? Two things: first, without American and British supplies and materiel taken around the north sea route by the British fleet (at a cost in lives), Russia would have fallen to the Germans; second, Stalin was on Hitler's side and, had Hitler not betrayed him, would have stayed on Hitler's side the whole war and happily divided Easter Europe up between Soviet Russia and Nazi Germany.
A progressive alliance of Labour, Liberal Democrats, Greens and Nationalists might just “break the mould” (remember that one?) and set us on the right track.
ReplyDeleteThe evidence of Scotland would seem to suggest that a 'progressive alliance' of Greens and Nationalists is certainly no guarantee of anything like good governance. Any sign of a ferry yet? A working bottle deposit scheme?
(The UK's dire productivity problem is a real dead weight on our economy and growth; unfortunately Labour, if in power, will make it worse by increasing regulation, increasing the tax burden, and increasing useless and wasteful public spending even further from its already stupidly excessive levels. We know what's needed, it's the same thing that was needed last time we got into this situation: supply-side reforms to boost growth. Exactly the kind of thing this Conservative government talks about but doesn't actually do.)