In an earlier post I sketched out what I thought would be the
essential macroeconomic battleground for the forthcoming (2015) general
election.
● The Conservatives would lead on austerity and growth.
In May 2012 I suggested the line: “Austerity laid the foundation for our current growth, so we need to stick with it to ensure growth continues”, and the Chancellor has certainly followed my advice! Having linked
austerity and growth, the Conservatives will go on to claim that only they can
be trusted to deliver more austerity, and therefore continued growth.
● Labour, on the other hand, will lead on how living
standards have stagnated over the last five years, which current growth is unlikely to change before the election. Having offered the
Chancellor some spin in May 2012, in that post I thought it was only fair to offer
something to the opposition, which was this chart.
This is all nonsense of course. Osborne’s claim is Orwellian: austerity was
not necessary for achieving growth, but actually delayed it. In Labour’s case we
have no idea what lies behind the productivity collapse which is the main
factor behind the chart above, so ascribing it all to government policy is a
bit heroic. Having said that, the more the Chancellor tries to claim credit for employment growth, the more
he opens the government up to the idea that they are responsible for the
decline in living standards.
For those who are tired of this focus on traditional
macroeconomics, there may be some better news. One additional element in the
battleground to come might be the issue of inequality, but only if Labour
chooses to fight on this ground. The reason is that the Conservatives have signalled that they will reprise their
ambition to raise the exemption threshold for inheritance tax from £325,000 up to £1m.
President Obama has said that inequality is the “defining
challenge of our time”. Thomas Piketty's “Capital in the
Twenty-first Century” emphasises the importance that concentrated wealth is
likely to play in increasing this inequality if it is allowed to be transmitted
across generations. Inheritance taxes are clearly central to all that. So the
Conservative proposal to raise the inheritance tax threshold is in effect
saying that they do not regard increasing inequality as a problem.
So I read with interest a piece by Ed Balls in the Guardian today. There he majors on the cost of living, but there is just a hint of something more: “the ongoing cost of living crisis is deeper and broader than one or two sets of figures. It's about whether most people on middle and lower incomes see their real earnings grow in line with the growth in the economy.” But inequality is not mentioned once, and fairness is only mentioned in the context of “balancing the books”.
This is hardly raising inequality as a “defining challenge of our time”. Does this reflect a genuine difference between the left on either side of the pond, or simply that Obama is in power and Ed Balls is not? If it is the latter, is Labour right to fear that going strong on inequality would lose them the election? Let me end with some encouragement from an unlikely source. A recent Financial Times leader argued that
“ratcheting up the IHT threshold to £1m cannot be justified at present. Making this promise is good pre-election Conservative politics. Implementing it in these austere times would be socially unjust.”
They make a number of important points. Even if thresholds
remain unchanged, and despite high house prices, the OBR estimate that just 10%
of estates will be liable to pay any tax at all. Implementing the £1 million
threshold would cost the Treasury more than £3bn, which in times of austerity
is money that could be better used elsewhere. And finally they say that redistribution
is vital if inequality is not to be exacerbated. When the FT starts worrying
about inequality, perhaps this is after all a battle that Labour can win.
One would have thought that a major barrier to Labour playing this card was that inequality increased 1997-2007, but has hardly moved at all 2010-2014.
ReplyDeleteThat is not to say that Labour moves on inequality would be unwelcome, but rather that the politics if it are, to say the least, problematic.
Ross McKibbin on the budget in his LRB blog 20 March 2014 has it that "there was one odd provision: that members of the emergency services who lose their lives ‘protecting us’ will no longer pay inheritance tax. It is a nice gesture. But how many members of the emergency services actually pay inheritance tax?"
ReplyDeleteAnd as ever, Stefan Collini's 'Blahspeak' 8 April 2010 at the LRB is pitch-perfect on Milburn (a shorter piece appeared in the Guardian as 'Social mobility: the playing field fallacy' Monday 23 August 2010).
What is with the implied criticism of the FT? Their writers are perhaps the most well-informed in Britain. The chief economics editor (Martin Wolf) is a committed Keynesian for crying out loud. Surely it is the newspaper that is most likely to raise the emerging problem of inequality.
ReplyDeleteI agree about their writers - the Chris Giles report I referenced in my latest post really is excellent, John McDermott is consistently spot on, Martin Wolf is of course amazing etc. But your argument did not hold for UK austerity, as I have complained in the past: most recently 11th April.
DeleteI think your characterisation of the Left's response to the 'Austerity is working' 'twaddle', as pathetic, was stinging but sadly fair comment. This post is another timely 'pull yourself together', slap. I wonder what the Labour Party High Command's strategy is re economic policy. The next election will be decided in a relatively few number of marginal seats in non 'Westminster Village' constituencies. Whether support from big business will prove decisive in these seats I can't judge. However, I suspect the rising inequality narrative would gain greater traction. But you can't expect to get support by simply raising an issue. You need to present policies to address it. Is this the real problem?
ReplyDeleteI would like to see a graph or graphs plotting inequality over the years.
ReplyDeleteI'm extremely concerned that the UK is sliding towards becoming like what the US is now: an oligarchy shrouded in a rhetorical veil of democracy, with extreme inequality, mass poverty and huge economic problems. At the moment that seems to be the UK's trajectory; with increasing inequality, a government which is unambiguously being run for elite interests and with policies which appear to be trying to mimic some of the more egregious aspects of American society (such as the pernicious privatisation of the NHS and increasing University tuition fees).
ReplyDeleteSurely it shouldn't be hard to convince "business" (whatever exactly that term means) that an inheritance tax is no threat and, if the money is spent wisely (or, equally, cuts in spending will be avoided) it is a plus for profits. I think it is a more general aversion by voters to taxation plus the fact (I have seen evidence for this from many countries) that almost every family imagines that it will have to pay inheritance tax, wherreas extremely few actually do. But what is a campaigning political party for if not to put something forward in accordence with its values and then go out and fight for it?
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Hmm, not so sure this post does the cause of macro-economists many favours: step 1, create an arbitrary trend-line of GDP per person from 1964 - 1977 (13 random years, WTF?) and then extend it through periods of significant change, e.g. Maggie's time in office. Step 2, extend it all the way to the present day, some 33 years after the initial sample. Step 3, pose a pseudo-problem about the present day. What about assessing this question across a statistically meaningful span of time, say against GDP per person from 1700 - 1850 and onward to the present? This would cover the effect of the arrival of big changes to productivity, for example the arrival of the so-called "oil era"? Or indeed the invention of the internet, the arrival of the personal computer, the motor car, mechanised printing, shipping containerisation? Surely these had big impacts on human output per person, whereby small numbers of people became more productive at the expense of the many, and by virtue of their magnitude, actually assist in understanding these changes to productivity. The imposition of austerity is a mere road-bump by comparison and alterations to public sector productivity have been impacted far more by external changes e.g. in the case of the NHS, introduction of excel, switching to email etc.
ReplyDeleteGreat post! Been reading a lot about inheritance law. Thanks for the info here!
ReplyDeletegood post some more information here
ReplyDeleteCorporation tax (CT) is due on profits made by a Limited company. Every Limited company based in the UK is liable to it. When you set up a new company, you must tell HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) if it’s liable for Corporation tax. You must pay any Corporation Tax due and file Company Corporation Tax Returns on time.