Those who care to see know the real damage that austerity has had on
people’s lives. From those needing care who now
get so little, to those waiting longer
for hospital treatment, and those whose homes might not have been
flooded without the cuts
from 2011. There is nothing unusual about the UK in this respect:
austerity (cuts in spending that are either mistimed or unnecessary)
causes
harm, wherever it is imposed. But the political cost has also been
huge.
This is true in the Eurozone, but in this post I want to focus on the
UK. The cost on the left could not be greater. Austerity and the
reaction to it were central to Labour losing the election. The
Conservatives managed to pin the blame for Osborne’s austerity on
Labour, and as the recent Beckett report
acknowledges (rather tellingly): “Whether implicitly or explicitly
(opinion and evidence differ somewhat), it was decided not to
concentrate on countering the myth … ” It was also central in
the revolution of the ranks that happened subsequently.
Austerity is a trap for the left as long as they refuse to challenge
it. You cannot say that you will spend more doing worthwhile things,
and when (inevitably) asked how you will pay for it try and change
the subject. Voters may not be experts on economics, but they can
sense weakness and vulnerability. If instead you restrict yourself to
changes at the margin, you appear to be ‘just the same’.
I think many of those on the centre left still do not see this trap.
There are some problems you cannot triangulate around, but have to
tackle head on. Here is a recent example
from Rachel Reeves. Much of what she proposes, when she talks about
securing the necessary investment in flood defences for example,
makes total sense, but it also tends to cost money. Rather than
confront Osborne’s unnecessary cuts, she talks about a failure “to
demonstrate that we understood that dealing with the deficit and
controlling public spending are the precondition of effective
progressive government.”
The urge to move on,
and not talk about the dry subject of the public finances, is quite
understandable and not confined to the parliamentary Labour party.
Here is Mariana Mazzucato giving a brief summary of her excellent innovation agenda for Labour (or indeed any political party that is not hamstrung by a neoliberal romantic view that technical advance is all down to the entrepreneur and the state just gets in the way, a view completely destroyed by her excellent book). I was struck by the juxtaposition of the following two sentences:
“Likewise, it is time to move on from the debate over austerity to a new conversation about how to build smart, mutually beneficial public-private partnerships to fuel decades of growth.
For starters, we must invest in education, human capital, technology, and research.”
“Likewise, it is time to move on from the debate over austerity to a new conversation about how to build smart, mutually beneficial public-private partnerships to fuel decades of growth.
For starters, we must invest in education, human capital, technology, and research.”
But of course it becomes so difficult to achieve that investment when
the dead hand of austerity is demanding cuts from everything it
touches.
That dead hand is not just left handed, but touches the reformist
right just as it does the left. Some regard David Cameron’s
speeches that talk about reducing the causes of poverty and social
deprivation as just window dressing, but I agree with Raphael
Bahr
that these come from a genuine desire on his part to be remembered as
a socially reforming prime minister. Yet as a result of austerity
such speeches seem ridiculous now, and will only be disregarded by
history: meaningless when set aside the reality of the poverty and
harm caused by government actions. Here is a self explanatory chart
from
the IFS.
There were genuine hopes on all sides that Universal Credit (UC)
might achieve the aim of simplifying the benefit system, and thereby
reduce the number who fail to claim benefits they are entitled to and
need. But as a result of austerity, and those cuts to tax credit that
the Chancellor was forced to postpone, UC will now be seen as a way
of cutting benefits and will be either extremely unpopular and/or be
quickly killed. It would be useful to be able to assess what aspects
of the health reform brought in by the coalition worked and which did
not, but I suspect all that will be lost in the chaos caused by
underfunding.
So the dead hand of austerity kills hope of reform from both left and
right. The years of austerity will be seen as wasted years, when no
new progress was achieved and plenty that had been achieved in the
past setback. Recovery from recessions need not be like this, and
indeed has not been like this in the past. They can be a time of
renewal and reform: if not from a credit squeezed private sector then
at least from government. And it could have been like that again,
because there was absolutely no necessity to embark on
austerity in the depth of a recession.
Those on the right may say well at least we are getting a smaller
state. But attempts to force people to in effect spend less on health, education, justice and even a welfare state, are not durable for more
than a decade or two. It will be a hollow victory.
In the US and most
of Europe the obsession with austerity is coming
to an end. It is still killing Greece and holding back Germany, but
elsewhere deficit targets are either being achieved through growth or
quietly ignored. Yet in the UK that dead hand continues, seen or
unseen, to dominate policy and debate. And with its architect set to
become Prince Minister and large parts of the opposition still too
timid to challenge it, it looks like another five wasted years lie
ahead for us.