Faced with rising energy costs, largely as a result
of Trump’s disastrous war in Iran, the former Tory Chancellor, Jeremy Hunt, told
us that: “The markets wouldn't allow the kind of intervention I was able
to do in 2022”, and suggested that any assistance to households would have
to be far more targeted. There are, of course, good arguments both for and
against targeting of assistance, and that’s an argument which will continue for
the foreseeable future, whether in relation to energy costs or any other
policy. Governments will make choices; the question, however, is whether they will make
those choices on the basis of their own judgement as to what is right, or
whether they will follow the neoliberal line that ‘the markets’ have such a
stranglehold on policy that they will make the decision. Sadly, the current
Chancellor seems to be as much in hock to that neoliberal argument as her
predecessor.
Markets, as argued here previously, are an effective
way of matching buyers and sellers, and can perform a highly valuable role in
any economy. But markets which constrain, or even determine, government policy have
ceased to be a tool of society and have set themselves up, instead, as our
masters. ‘Markets’ are not objective arbiters of right and wrong, they don’t
come out of nowhere with rules set entirely by themselves. They are, rather, a
human construct, designed and built by people with the aim of facilitating economic
activity. They are not impersonal forces which react in a considered way to
events in accordance with predictable rules – market movements are the agglomeration
of a large number of individual bets about the probable direction of future
movements or, rather, bets about the way in which other participants will bet
on those future movements. The idea that governments should allow their policies
to be determined by markets which have been captured by gamblers and
speculators is a complete abdication of responsibility, and a capitulation to
vested interests.
Giving credence to the idea that ‘markets’ can and
should control what governments can do comes naturally enough to those who
support neoliberal economics and the obsession with abiding by arbitrary fiscal
rules. The problem that we face is that the government and the official
opposition are united in swallowing the lie – Reeves and Hunt are interchangeable.
Austerity and economic inequality are two sides of the same coin – we’ll only
escape from both when we re-establish the role of markets as servants rather
than masters.
