GFTU BGCM 2019 Minutes
seemed to me to be completely unsustainable and I expected there to be a
shift to a new progressive left of centre settlement which would put right many
of those fundamental flaws of the Thatcherite and Reaganite revolution of the
1970s and 80s and it just did not happen. It just did not happen. There was a
shift, but actually the people who filled the vacuum were the right.
There was a brief period where the Labour Government of 2007 to 2010,
Gordon Brown’s Government, moved in a sort of Keynesian direction. There
was some attempt to actually have an industrial policy, to actually shift politics
in a more Keynesian direction, but it did not really take hold and after 2010
there was a fundamental shift towards austerity, towards saying that all the
problems of the economy had been caused by Labour Governments
overspending and that actually was the root cause of the problem. This was, in
my view, a fundamental travesty of what had actually happened, but it became
very quickly embedded in political discourse in 2010. Labour did not mend the
roof while the sun was shining and if consumers were tightening their belts,
which they were back then, then it made sense for the Government to tighten
its belt as well and this was economically completely illiterate, because if the
consumer is tightening its belt, businesses are not investing, then it requires
the Government to act as a spender of last resort to prevent there being an
even deeper contraction. But back in 2010 the myth quickly became
established that all the problems of the economy were caused by
overspending, too much borrowing, too much State and that the answer was to
actually contract public spending, deal with the deficit, raise taxes, cut public
investment and get the public finances back on track within five years. That
was the plan and for one reason or another, which we do not need to go into
now, that became the accepted political wisdom of the time.
The result, as might have been expected, was that the economy grew much
less slowly than expected. Raising taxes, cutting spending slowed down the
rate of growth and it took much, much longer for the public finances to start to
come round. It was supposed to be dealt with in one term and then it became
two Parliamentary terms. Now it is going to be the mid-2020s by the time the
Government hits its targets. So that was the second big anniversary, 2009, the
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