Conservative Policy Causes Britain’s Economy to Officially
Fall Into Recession
The objective, professional world of real economists, unlike those who are dominated by
ideological forces has long recognized that economic policy to contract the
economy would, in all likelihood contract the economy. In Britain the Conservative party took
over in a coalition government and immediately said that their policy goal was
to reduce the deficit, never mind growth and employment.
To meet that goal they embarked upon a policy of
massive government spending cuts, massive layoffs of government employees and a
small tax increase, a tax increase made even smaller by rescinding a tax increase
on very high incomes. They left in place
an increase in the VAT, which acts much like a sales tax in its impact and
effect, particularly on low and middle income groups. The Conservative position was
that this policy would produce a “confidence” boost and that boost would
influence consumers to spend more and business to invest more.
The latest results
published on Britain ’s
economy show
things did not work out as Conservatives felt they would, but they did work
out as economists thought they would.
Britain slipped back
into recession at the start of this year, with economists concluding that even
the most generous interpretation of official data released on Wednesday
suggested the economy had flatlined for over a year.
The Office for
National Statistics said that output for the first three months of the year
contracted by 0.2 per cent, following a 0.3 per cent decline at the end of 2011.
Okay, the negative numbers are small, so maybe it is
fair to say that the economy is just dead in the water instead of sinking to
the bottom. But even with a generous
interpretation there is this.
Michael
Saunders, economist at Citi, said Britain was experiencing “the
deepest recession and weakest recovery for 100 years.”
“It
is now four years since real GDP peaked in the first quarter of 2008,” he said,
noting that the level of GDP at the end of the first quarter of 2012 stood 4.3
per cent below its pre-recession peak.
And yes, some are in denial
While
a spokesman for the British Retail Consortium said the data was an accurate
reflection of what businesses were seeing, the EEF, a group of manufacturers,
disagreed.
“The
anecdotal evidence is much more positive than the numbers today,” an EEF
spokesman said.
But to take that position one has to believe ‘anecdotal
evidence’ rather than hard numbers, which is some ideologues do but professional policy makers and advisers and commentators do not.
Why is this man smiling? Because he has a job as Chancellor of the Exchequer and you don't |
But mostly in denial
was the Conservative government, where
Chancellor George Osborne is in charge of fiscal policy.
George
Osborne said he had no intention of easing the government’s deficit reduction
plan on Wednesday after the economy plunged into a
double-dip recession and the longest downturn for more than a century.
With
economic woes adding to the long list of troubles for the coalition, the
chancellor blamed the
eurozone for Britain’s economic plight, which has left output 4.3 per
cent below the 2008 peak and rejected Labour’s claim that the new recession was
“made in Downing Street”.
“The
one thing that would make the situation even worse would be to abandon our
credible plan and deliberately add more borrowing and even more debt,” Mr
Osborne said.
Yes, everyone would be laughing at this stupidity were the
consequences no so devastating for so many people.
It will be interesting to see how all of this plays
politically in Britain . Major local elections will be held soon, the
grim economic news along with news about how the Conservative government held
secret talks with Rupert Murdoch (controlling owner of Fox News) to facilitate
his takeover of a satellite TV system while denying that such talks ever took
place will test just how much patience the British voting public has with
Conservatives and their policies.
Of course, it would be wrong to mention that much of
Britain’s policies with respect to government spending that have led to the
economic train wreck are also the policies of Mitt Romney and the Republicans,
so we won’t do so.
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