One of the many areas
of agreement between Labour and the Tories when it comes to economics is their
unshakeable belief in the Great God Growth as the solution to all economic
problems, to say nothing of other problems such as health and education. There
is, it seems, no need to consider further taxing, or redistributing, accumulated wealth or disproportionately high income because the
Great God will magically make the cake bigger, and a bigger cake goes further.
To the extent that there is a difference between the parties, it relates only
to the question of which particular rites and ceremonies need to be performed
by the devotees of the Great God before (s)he performs his or her magic. The
problem with this whole belief system is that it depends on some unstated and very
dubious assumptions.
The first of those
is that the government itself has no direct role in making growth happen.
Government’s job is simply about providing a bit of infrastructure and
slackening a few rules, and suddenly growth will just happen. It’s an approach
which, incidentally, treats government expenditure as though it is a drag on
the economy and therefore to be avoided rather than something which can itself
directly stimulate growth, and undermines its own aims in the process.
The second is that a
bigger cake means that everyone benefits. But without any consideration or control
of the way in which the extra cake is shared out, what stops those who already
have the biggest slices from simply grabbing all the extra cake for themselves?
After all, recent history of growing disparity suggests that that is the most
likely outcome.
And the third is
that, as the cake grows, the government’s tax income grows in proportion. It’s
a belief which rather overlooks the fact that those taking the biggest slices
of the cake are also those who are best at avoiding paying tax, and most likely
to be able to conduct their financial affairs in such a way as to take their
income in the form of (lower-taxed) capital growth rather than taxable income,
and/or shift their wealth and income into off-shore havens.
Perhaps the biggest
assumption of all is that growth is, in and of itself, always a ‘good thing’.
It is at best arguable and at worst a potentially disastrous approach to the
utilisation of the Earth’s resources.
Maybe they believe
that their Great God will add a magic ingredient to the cake mix which ensures
that baking a bigger cake doesn’t need any extra resources; maybe the same
ingredient turns greedy hoarders of wealth into altruists keen to share the
cake more evenly. Maybe the moon really is made of green cheese, and revolves
around a flat disc called Planet Earth. Or maybe, in the real world, we
actually need government to take deliberate action to ensure greater fairness
in the allocation and use of resources. That’s an option which currently looks
unlikely to be on any ballot papers come the election. Seen solely in terms of the
choice of a future UK government the question is very much simpler: which
colour disillusion do we prefer?
1 comment:
Growth ? Pretty much discredited as a measure of anything remotely relevant. A country, like UK, can "enjoy" economic growth while a large slice of the population gets denied access to the fruits of that growth. Some coffers have grown explosively over the last decade or two, but we have seen a re engineering of our society so that the poles are further apart than ever before in my lifetime of 70+ years.
I believe that an improved level of industrial and commercial activity would be a "good thing" but only if it is accompanied by better employment conditions, no zero hours or other mickey mouse contracts, accessible health, social care and education and a harder line on crime, including corporate crime.
Maybe there's a bit of the old Pol Pot flickering away inside me but I would like to thin out the "talking head" professions and return them to do spells among the boys and girls who do the dirty jobs in building, infrastructure, and even the care homes of this country. People need to see the reality especially when they have spent so long waffling around in the lofty illusions so prevalent in Wales and UK today.
Post a Comment