As we're learning, it is actually the executive in control of the ship. Not some civil servant in a windowless Whitehall office.Paddington Bear wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 10:05 amA Treasury that was in favour of capital expenditure on infrastructure and energy and understood the value of assets as well as liabilities would have created a very different Britain in 2022 to the one we have._Os_ wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 9:56 amThat Spectator article is trying to use culture wars bullshit (that no normal person cares about) to explain the economy. Which was the point I was making, the stuff one side is pumping out is total madness, whatever reality they're in it's not the same one I'm in.Paddington Bear wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 8:52 am
Treasury Orthodoxy over 30/40 years has seen large swathes of Britain become some of the poorest areas in Western Europe, this did not begin with Brexit and it is not unfair to suggest alternative approaches (the current alternative approach is batshit obviously)
Getting into the actual substance. The immediate point is that "Treasury orthodoxy" looks almost conspiratorial if that's the primary explanation, it's Trump's "deep state" and "drain the swamp". The real explanation is that globalisation and the end of the Cold War unlocked a huge supply of labour, then computer and telecoms technology amplified this. This created a lot of new wealth, including in the UK, the UK hasn't stagnated for 30-40 years. What some advanced economies have failed to do (most evident in English speaking countries it seems) is ensure that new wealth was spread widely, rather than concentrated at the top and in specific geographic locations. Politics is mostly process driven not event driven, the process started with Thatcherism (which still dominates the orthodox position), Blair/New Labour and Cameron changed some parts of this model (and the orthodoxy too) but did not replace it. Then Brexit promised those that had been failed by this process total system change and no immigration, and those that had done well from this process no system change and also no immigration ... and what they got is a deranged version of Thatcherism (and now Reaganism) and even greater immigration.
Tory alternate reality is a responsibility free zone. 2022 UK is more or less a Tory creation. The structural problems aren't the fault of the external enemies the Tories have created (EU, immigrants), nor the internal enemies that have been invented (single mothers, benefits claimants, judges, remainers, the Treasury, and now "the anti growth coalition"). The problems and the lack of solutions are about Tory thought being dominant and any alternative being immediately destroyed as heretical. Which means the problem is with the voters too. New Labour mk2 is a real possibility now (a definite upgrade on what's currently in power), but that doesn't actually fix the problem. An electoral system that forces the creation of two dominant parties and forces a false consensus, is one of the bigger culprits in all this.
If Truss and Kamikwasi continue on their adventure, infrastructure spending will be cut. It will have to happen, because the alternative is more expensive debt. The guy in the windowless Whitehall office sending out anodyne emails pointing out reality, isn't the one that will cut infrastructure spending for tax cuts. It's Truss, Kamikwasi, and the Tory party.
I predicted on this thread a year ago that the BoE would become a battleground, we're now about to see who wins that battle. I've seen a few populist/nationalist shit shows, the civil service always becomes a battleground too and that's when the real damage gets done.