Originally published February 2013.
As predicted in an earlier post (4th Feb - "Cameron's 'hard-won economic credibility' is a sham") the UK has lost its AAA rating with one of the three major credit rating agencies. It is unlikely to be the last. The reasons cited by Moodys are poor economic performance (zero growth) and high and rising debt levels. In a bizarre response by the Chancellor he used the Moodys statement as a justification of the Government's current policies. Despite the fact that he had previously claimed that the loss of AAA status would be 'humiliating' and 'a disaster' for the previous government (which it, by the way, managed to avoid) he appears to believe that this downgrade is confirmation that the economy is 'on the right path'. Apparently loss of confidence by the agencies is only a disaster for Labour administrations. Osborne's response failed to even mention the lack of economic growth as a factor. Instead he again focused on the need to reduce debt. This is complacent and short-sighted in the extreme - without growth there is no chance of reducing the deficit and paying back the debt. Without government spending to stimulate growth the only option in the end will be to implement punitively high levels of taxation on the income and existing assets of the UK's taxpayers, and to reduce welfare to a rump.
No-one should be surprised that Osborne continues to choose his current path rather than that of fiscal stimulus - this is where his political prejudices naturally lead him. Keynesian stimulus is anathema to him. He is quite happy to use this crisis as an excuse to further his political objective of winding down the state. He firmly believes that if he simply 'gets the Government off the backs of the people' the markets will take care of the rest. Hence he is on course to reduce government spending to the lowest percentage of GDP in the G20 by 2017 (around 27% of GDP versus around 50% in 2010 - lower even than the United States, a byword for poor public services). Anyone who still thinks he is really only trying to pay off the debt needs to think again - make no mistake, this is a political mission and he appears not to care who gets hurt. And with reductions on this scale a lot of people will get hurt.
As predicted in an earlier post (4th Feb - "Cameron's 'hard-won economic credibility' is a sham") the UK has lost its AAA rating with one of the three major credit rating agencies. It is unlikely to be the last. The reasons cited by Moodys are poor economic performance (zero growth) and high and rising debt levels. In a bizarre response by the Chancellor he used the Moodys statement as a justification of the Government's current policies. Despite the fact that he had previously claimed that the loss of AAA status would be 'humiliating' and 'a disaster' for the previous government (which it, by the way, managed to avoid) he appears to believe that this downgrade is confirmation that the economy is 'on the right path'. Apparently loss of confidence by the agencies is only a disaster for Labour administrations. Osborne's response failed to even mention the lack of economic growth as a factor. Instead he again focused on the need to reduce debt. This is complacent and short-sighted in the extreme - without growth there is no chance of reducing the deficit and paying back the debt. Without government spending to stimulate growth the only option in the end will be to implement punitively high levels of taxation on the income and existing assets of the UK's taxpayers, and to reduce welfare to a rump.
No-one should be surprised that Osborne continues to choose his current path rather than that of fiscal stimulus - this is where his political prejudices naturally lead him. Keynesian stimulus is anathema to him. He is quite happy to use this crisis as an excuse to further his political objective of winding down the state. He firmly believes that if he simply 'gets the Government off the backs of the people' the markets will take care of the rest. Hence he is on course to reduce government spending to the lowest percentage of GDP in the G20 by 2017 (around 27% of GDP versus around 50% in 2010 - lower even than the United States, a byword for poor public services). Anyone who still thinks he is really only trying to pay off the debt needs to think again - make no mistake, this is a political mission and he appears not to care who gets hurt. And with reductions on this scale a lot of people will get hurt.
If Osborne's priority was really to restore health to the economy he would look at capital measures to stimulate growth, such as a concerted house-building programme, and at measures to mobilise the wealth tied up in property and land. The massive amount of wealth transferred from poor to rich over the last 30 years needs to be redistributed so that it is spent rather than it being idly hoarded, in order to create economic activity. Closing the gap between rich and poor will be healthy for the economy as the poor tend to spend the money. Unfortunately this won't happen - the Government's reduction of the deficit 'by a quarter' is almost entirely down to capital spending cuts so these are unlikely to be reversed (and smoke and mirrors with 4G auctions and QE proceeds - the deficit in current spending has actually come down by only 6% so far; so the real pain is still to come). And Osborne has ruled out any form of land or wealth taxes.
So, as admitted by Clegg, the capital spending cuts were a massive mistake but the Chancellor will continue to plough on with his wrong-headed policies and the public will continue to buy it. But not, I suspect, for all that much longer.