biffvernon wrote:If economic growth is what you want then using the market to employ resources efficiently is the way to go - you employ the cheapest labour. That's just what Ken criticises the last government for doing.
But he's also criticising it for expanding the public sector recklessly with national debt.
At the time, I agreed with Labour's policy of spending on public services. I assumed it was mostly being financed by high tax revenues from the booming economy, rather than by borrowing.
Since I've learned more about economics, and discovered PO, I can see Labour's policy for the irresponsible and dangerous one that it was.
Given the extraordinary times we live in, any responsible government would be looking to bring down the national debt. I don't think the way the Tories are tackling this is very fair, and I think that they'd be cutting spending even if times were good; but I'm not convinced their cuts would be so stringent if Labour hadn't had us living beyond our means for so long - and if PO and the concomitant end of growth didn't mean that servicing the national debt has to be a priority.
Let's face it, the Troy agenda is to shrink the size of government. Same old same old, but this time they are hiding behind the fig-leaf of national debt.
To call our national debt a fig-leaf is rather missing the scale of the problem.
Remember debt = loan. If national debt is high is just reflects the willingness of players to lend to the government.
It's more than that. If we default on our loans, the pound becomes toilet paper and we can't import anything.
This is why I fear there will be a fast crash. All it takes is for the pound to lose most of its value over the period of a few weeks or months, and virtually overnight we find ourselves with no oil and not enough food.
"We're just waiting, looking skyward as the days go down / Someone promised there'd be answers if we stayed around."