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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsUK Lesson- Austerity leads to more debt
BY JOHN CASSIDY
Yesterday, I argued that U.S. fiscal policy is heading in the wrong direction, toward the economics of austerity. If you want to know where this path can lead, look across the Atlantic to poor old Blighty. For almost three years now, since the election of a Conservative-Liberal coalition, the British government has been slashing government programs and raising taxes, supposedly to reduce a big budget deficit. As Ive written previously, the results have been pretty disastrousboth for ordinary Britons and for the public finances.
Just how disastrous was made clear yesterday by a new report from the Institute of Fiscal Studies, a London-based think tank that is widely regarded as independent and nonpartisan. In the Green Budget, its lengthy and detailed annual review of the U.K.s finances, the I.F.S. pointed out that the budget deficit, far from being eliminated, was still so large that next year the Chancellor, George Osborne, will have to borrow about sixty-five billion pounds more than he had anticipated. (Thats about four per cent of the U.K.s G.D.P.) Indeed, the hole in the public finances is so big, the I.F.S. said, that the government might well be forced to introduce a series of tax hikes following the next general election, which is expected to take place in 2015.
Even some commentators who have supported the austerity program appear dejected. This is a truly desperate state of affairs that demands swift and decisive action, the Daily Telegraphs Jeremy Warner wrote in his column following the release of the report. And he went on: We seem to have the worst of all possible worlds, with nil growth, some very obvious cuts in the quantity and quality of public services, but pretty much zero progress in getting on top of the countrys debts.
Thats a pretty accurate synopsis. When Osborne and his boss, David Cameron, took over in May, 2010, and committed to an unprecedented program of austerity measures, the economy was slowly recovering from the Great Recession. By the final quarter of 2011, it had fallen back into a recession, from which it has yet to emerge. In the third quarter of last year, the London Olympics gave the economy a temporary boost, but in the fourth quarter G.D.P. fell again, at an annualized rate of more than one per cent. Whether this should be categorized as a double dip or a triple dip is a matter for debate, but the fact remains that Osborne promised growth and instead delivered a lengthy slump.
Read more: http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/johncassidy/2013/02/uk-shows-how-austerity-policies-lead-to-more-borrowing-and-debt.html
LeftishBrit
(41,208 posts)Scootaloo
(25,699 posts)Check the pockets of the people who proposed the austerity cuts.
woo me with science
(32,139 posts)the implementers are supposedly there to "represent."