Kwasi Kwarteng
Why the reaction came as it did is not hard to understand: Kwarteng has - on our behalf - put another £45 billion on the national credit card, while abolishing the highest 45p income tax rate and cutting the basic rate of that tax. This will disproportionally benefit the well-off. And it gets worse.
Our new Chancellor has, with a straight face, described his actions as a “Growth Plan”. But with those at the bottom of the pile getting nothing from the budget, it will be interesting to see where the growth will come from, other than by a lot of sparrows sifting through a yet larger pile of horseshit. And then another thought enters: does Kwarteng actually know his economics?
I am not joking here. Let’s take this nice and slowly: what he seems to have missed is a very basic understanding of where growth comes from. This can be put directly: if you want to stimulate and thereby grow the economy, you don’t bung the rich a handout while giving the less well-off nothing.
This comes down to what is known as propensity to save versus propensity to spend: if you give someone at the bottom of the pile more money, they will, with the certainty of night following day, spend it. The least well-off always have more items on which they wish to spend than they have money. So they will spend it: what they spend it on may not be to the liking of the moneyed class, but that is not the point. They will generate economic activity.
However, if that money is given to someone who is already wallowing in cash, their propensity is not to spend, but to save it. They may invest it, but not necessarily in the UK. After all, the Tories have run down the country’s infrastructure for the past twelve and a half years, the labour force is restive after one effective pay cut too many, and mainland Europe looks more stable.
Hence the markets’ lack of confidence in the idea that this really was a “Growth Plan”. Unfunded tax cuts just so the rich could put a little more away in another of those offshore accounts? How economically illiterate is that? Small wonder right-leaning commentators were soon accusing those of insufficient faith in Kwarteng’s actions of “the politics of envy”.
But falling share prices and currency values showed that this, too, was no more than sloganeering in the vain hope that it might hold back reality. Kwarteng, meanwhile, had let slip who was behind the great experiment, as he deemed his measures to be “fair”. Ah, “fairness”: the cover word favoured by the so-called Taxpayers’ Alliance. Whose former head advise Liz Truss.
In recent years, the TPA has majored in falsehood and misinformation, and also, on occasion, in economic illiteracy. It has not been alone: the whole alphabet soup of Astroturf lobby groups, from IEA to CPS to ASI to PX, has been propagandising incessantly on the basis of occasionally highly questionable data. Also, they claimed to understand the markets.
“The Government is going full throttle for an ideological argument about whether growth at all costs matters more than any residual sense of fairness. Quite why a tax cut for people earning more than £150,000 a year is not inflationary but pro-growth, while higher wages for workers doing essential jobs, who are obliged to spend every penny in their local economies, is inflationary and harms growth, will baffle ordinary people marooned with ordinary ideological intelligences”. Ordinary people who will suffer the most.
It has been rather like Brexit all over again: those who led many to believe that they knew better suddenly go from sitting on the sidelines cat-calling to finding themselves holding the levers of power, going on to show in short order that they don’t know how to operate them - partly because much of their case was built on omission, deception, and occasional flat-out lying.
The Astroturf lobby groups may plead economic purity, but those who can’t afford to turn the heating on - right now, before the next cost increase hits - will be forgiven for not giving a rat’s arse about how pure and rigorous the philosophical underpinning of this chaos happens to be.
Kwarteng doesn’t know what he’s doing. Nor do his advisors. That is all.
https://www.patreon.com/Timfenton
Where's the problem?
ReplyDeleteKwarteng is a far right thieving tory like all of them. It's what they do.
And don't kid yourself the Starmer Quisling Gang would be much different.....apart from a few crumbs here and there (Bliar/Brown's "Sure Start" bullshit anyone? Plus the "abolition of boom-bust"?).
They'll get worse too. Parliament is just a cesspit of thieving greed run by far right sociopaths and careerist cowards.
You miss the point, Tim.
ReplyDeleteThis isn't about economic efficiency or fairness. It's about political power wielded through economic monopoly. All to maintain control by a tiny social group. Any "trickle down" is concentrated in people mug enough to fall for the fraud. Just enough to possibly tip the balance in a corrupt electoral system.
But still nothing compared to the desperate lengths that malevolent mindset will go to after its inevitable failure.
You'll see.
ReplyDeleteAh, the narcissism of small differences, Anonymous.
Ask the people who will suffer from Kamikwazi Kwarteng's actions yesterday how 'much different' they would like things to be. You might be surprised to find that their needs don't match the purity of your own sea-green incorruptible requirements and that they'd settle for a reasonably secure financial future, decent public services and a government that they don't feel regards them as the enemy. A 'few crumbs' to you perhaps but quite a lot more than that to the people you seem to think you are arguing for.
In the end a choice has to be made: pick one side or the other; or opt for the ultimate narcissism of daily sitting in front of the mirror playing with your ideological self.
But I think you probably made that choice a long time ago.
15:08.
DeleteGuess what, we could have had all those things:
https://labour.org.uk/manifesto-2019/
Except your kind of happy-clappy Polly Toynbee onanism sabotaged it.
Too much forehead knuckling makes you blind too.
Tsk tsk.
15:08.
DeleteAnd then there's this (again):
https://youtu.be/elp18OvnNV0
On Business Matters on the BBC World Service in the early hours of Friday morning, Prof. Danny Blanchflower, a former member of the Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee summarised Kwarteng's budget in the single word insane.
ReplyDeleteWhen even the Pope thinks “trickle-down” is a load of bollocks* it might be time to reconsider.
ReplyDelete* I'm paraphrasing here. A bit.
There is an even better summary than Galbraith's: "When a rich man spends a penny, it trickles down onto the poor."
ReplyDelete"...understand the markets..."?
ReplyDeleteWhat, like the Ayn Rand crackpot Greenspan at the Federal Reserve and his "irrational exuberance" bullshit during yet another capitalist looting? Or corrupt Eton fruitloop Rees Mogg promoting the pandemic as a profits "opportunity" while tens of thousands were killed by deliberate tory government policies of "take it on the chin"?
"The markets"....Yeah, that's the answer....Except it isn't. It's "the markets" which have reduced London to an international thieves kitchen housed in high rise architectural slums.
Believe Kwarteng's lying thievery - and the Starmer Quisling's when he gets the "opportunity", as he surely will by default - and you'll deserve what's coming to you. Which will be an intensified economic disaster. Yet more poverty, social collapse and political and moral corruption. Eased only by an occasional sticking plaster over a cancer tumour.
All for "irrational exuberance" of "the markets".
As opposed to irrational frothing reiteration of stupid tropes and deluded stab in the back conspiracy theories about a self inflicted electoral disaster.
DeleteThen you make come-backs that you seem to think are brilliant rebuttals/reputations but merely underline your stubborn overestimation of your deluded version of insight. By and large you deface the comments on this excellent blog.
You labour under the impression that no one can surpass your unique judgements on EVERYTHING, and crikey its boringly predictable 99.9% of the time
12:41.
DeleteUnfortunately for your (non)"argument" evidence continues to mount to the contrary: https://youtu.be/5DTMF0MSXng
Which will of course be ignored by corporate media and ranting righties.
Have a nice non-frothy day.
As per usual, ideological ferment and a link to an echo chamber.
DeleteKeep taking the tablets, try changing the record and don't attempt to patronise people who probably care as much as you do.
21:28.
DeleteGosh. More froth. I bet local mutts bark at you day and night.
Have a VERY nice day. But don't wager on sterling.
ReplyDeleteAll true, Anonymous 12.41, especially the way his(her?) juvenile Spartisms trash the overall impression of the blog so carefully and painstakingly constructed by Tim.
What also intrigues me is how he manages always to get pole position on the comments. Does he get up very early every day after a night of sleepless malevolence or does he do whatever the blog comments equivalent is of nipping down to the pool at 7am and leaving his towel on the sunbed?
One thing's for sure though: 'it will only get worse, much worse'.
19:09.
DeleteOo look:
https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/opendemocracyuk/british-politics-is-an-oligarchs-cocktail-party-tory-ministers-are-the-waiters/
That'll have the flag-shaggers and Quislings choking in their mealy mouths.
Evidence is like that.
19:09.
ReplyDeleteOo look. The BBC - THE BBC! - in "ideological ferment":
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-63029909
Have a nice smug cappuccino day.
21:28.
ReplyDeleteOo look. Yet MORE "ideological ferment": https://www.liverpoolecho.co.uk/news/liverpool-news/jeremy-corbyn-joins-dock-workers-25106875
As opposed to ale-house bullshit.
I saw a homeless man in the street, so I did the selfless and compassionate thing.
ReplyDelete|I went to the rich area of town, found the biggest house and pushed £10,00 through the letter box.
@ Unknown, 15.11
ReplyDeleteYes, I saw that comment on Twitter too. I also thought it was quite funny, but didn't feel the need to pass it off as my own.
@ Bertie etc
A few years ago when I lived in Liverpool, every weekday I'd get the bus into work. There was a guy who sat on the back seat engrossed in his phone and muttering to himself and the wider world that the capitalist structure would collapse any day now. That or pass adverse comment on how any young ladies on the bus were dressed. Ironic, given his own hygiene. Whenever That Anonymous posts, I think of that guy.
In a way I admire his persistence. Whether as Anon, or as Alan Clifford, posting variations on the same rant on every story Tim has covered, at least as far back as 2013. Even if he has no opinion on the matter of the story, he has an opinion on what he thinks Tim should have been covering instead.
In another way I feel quite sorry for him. He clearly hasn't much of a life, and his aggression, misogyny, and obsession add up to a red flag of positively 'Stalin's funeral' proportions. This blog is clearly an outlet for him, perhaps one of the few he hasn't been banned from. Having done the Prevent course, I'd say he certainly ticks a lot of boxes that add up to some serious concern.
PS Anon, this is my real name, I'm a 40-something civil servant from the north west. And, as far as I can tell, the only person posting on this blog using my name.
15:41.
ReplyDeleteGosh.
That's so obsessive it amounts to paranoid stalking. While ignoring issues.
U ok hun?
Good to hear from you again, Andy. I'm often struck by (what appears to be be) the silent tolerance of other readers of Zelo St towards Anonymous or Mr Clifford (or is it 'Mr Clifford'?). And by Tim's forbearance for that matter.
ReplyDeleteAnyone reading the regular first comment after happening upon this excellent, informed and serious blog would conclude that they'd stumbled on a niche site catering for retired and embittered tankies obsessed with treachery (past present and future), the hairstyle of the current Labour leader and the burning, scalding, sulphurous pit of corruption that lies within the London Orbital Motorway.
I agree with you on the sympathy bit but the relentlessness of the bile would test the patience and tolerance of a Desmond Tutu. And it's not particularly his views which wear you down but the one-tone, turn-it-up-to-11 spittle-flecked-delivery overkill. Always an object lesson in how to repel your audience(if they can fight the boredom long enough to stay around).
Still, I imagine he's too old to change now and he'll have had a bad day today what with all that positivity on show in Liverpool.
Oo look. More inconvenient truth and EVIDENCE:
ReplyDeletehttps://youtu.be/P-cHBQf5z_M
Those three Al Jazeera exposès will have the Quisling red tory, white flag-waving, Grauniad-reading, propaganda righties choking on their fruit muesli and decaffs. While the Starmer troubadour of surrender tries to weasel out of responsibility for the worst political treachery even by Bliar/Brown "standards".
'Twas ever thus among their cowardly type. As will once again become evident.
WW2 traitor reference?: check
ReplyDeleteStock right-wing Guardian reference?: check
1980s stock Daily Mail 'satirical' muesli reference?: check
weaselling troubadours?: demented, but original at least
hatred of any Labour govt that ever had the cheek to get itself elected?: check
treachery?: check
cowardice?: check (not sure whether I should 'flinch' or 'fear')
Cassandra/Old Moore/Albert Steptoe style prophesying at the end?: check
Vintage Anonymous I'd say! double Stolichnayas all round!
13:55.
DeleteStandard red toryism "analysis". Vintage Bliarist bullshit I'd say.
Treble Siddiquis all round!....If you can find any in the physical and human wreckage he left behind.....