Daily Mail

Communist pipe dream that’s just economic illiteracy

- by Ruth Sunderland BUSINESS EDITOR by Labour sound attractive. Voters are being tempted with a vision of a workers’ paradise, with four-day weeks for five days’ pay. Plans are afoot to nationalis­e water companies, rail, Royal Mail and National Grid as we

ANYONE who imagines nationalis­ing a chunk of BT will lead to a golden age of telecommun­ications clearly can’t remember the Sixties or Seventies.

When I was a little girl, my grandparen­ts were one of the few households on our street to have a phone. If my mum and dad needed to make a call, they would have to pop over the road.

The phone was clunky with a rotary dial. On the rare occasions it actually rang, I had been trained to answer with: ‘Hello, Middlesbro­ugh 86298!’ It had arrived after a stint on a waiting list – I think Grandad moved up the queue because he had been wounded at Dunkirk.

There was a choice of black or a curdledcre­am colour. Discretion was imperative because it was on a crackly party line, so anything juicy soon spread round the whole town.

The costs were expensive by the standards of the time, and unlike today’s youngsters who are glued to mobile phones, my brother and I were firmly forbidden from ever telephonin­g anyone. If there was a fault, you could wait weeks for it to be fixed.

A brief diversion down memory lane should remind us that, nostalgia aside, nationalis­ed industries were pretty dreadful even decades ago in a much simpler and less technologi­cally advanced economy.

In the infinitely more sophistica­ted world we live in today, Labour’s plans to expropriat­e whole swathes of the stock market would be utterly ruinous.

John McDonnell took to the radio yesterday sounding for all the world like a friendly uncle, telling listeners how he wanted to emulate the state- controlled broadband in Korea. He did mean South Korea and not the communist North, but you could be forgiven for wondering.

His plan to seize a chunk of BT is a window into Labour’s instinctiv­ely Marxist mindset, and his soothing tones belie the fact this would be larceny on an epic scale.

Billions of pounds of assets would be seized by the state from their legitimate owners.

But he and Jeremy Corbyn are economic illiterate­s. This sinister duo pose as friends of the workers and champions of ordinary people but they are trying to bribe the electorate with a string of promises which would be risible if they were not so menacing.

Nationalis­ing part of BT would undermine property rights, which have been sacrosanct in this country for centuries. Robust respect for private property is a major reason foreign investors bring their money here. Aside from that, if thrifty Britons fear their savings and investment­s might be stolen from them at any moment, what incentive do any of us have to save or invest for our future?

On the surface, the ideas proffered

FAR

from ushering in a workers’ utopia, Labour’s revolution­ary programme risks plunging us into economic purgatory. McDonnell and Corbyn are not subtle economic thinkers. They are trying to impose crude socialist dichotomie­s on a complex and advanced modern economy. They seem oblivious that workers and capitalist­s are often one and the same people.

Instead, they paint a picture of a world of evil, moustache-twirling capitalist­s, getting rich off the back of virtuous, down-trodden ordinary folk. But if there ever was such a simplistic division, even in the 19th century when their hero Marx formulated his ideas, there certainly isn’t now.

The BT shareholde­rs who McDonnell wants to rob are not faceless City firms, they are small investors and savers. His plan involves dipping his hand, Faginlike, and picking the pocket of virtually every British adult with a pension plan.

Bosses’ lobby group the CBI reckons the nationalis­ation programme could cost £196billion not counting BT, which could add another £100billion to the bill.

Labour disputes the calculatio­ns, but whatever the precise numbers, the tab will be huge. McDonnell says he will fund this by issuing government bonds or IOUs. These will have to be paid back by taxpayers now and in the future.

Thanks to the Tories putting our finances back into decent shape after the financial crisis, the UK is seen as a good credit risk.

At the moment interest rates are low. But under a socialist regime, Britain’s credit rating would be at risk of a downgrade – it is already on a negative outlook from agency Moody’s – and the costs could rise.

There is another question, though. Certainly, there have been some abuses of capitalism, including excessive pay at the top and tax avoidance.

But does anyone seriously think that a bunch of Labour apparatchi­ks and their party-appointed stooges can run a highly complex business like BT’s broadband arm better than its current managers?

In a worst-case scenario, Labour could create mayhem in the economy with a run on the pound, a steep rise in the costs of government borrowing and capital flight as overseas investors flee. Even in the best case, their nationalis­ation plans would be a monumental waste of time and money.

We are still the fifth most prosperous economy in the world, despite being a relatively small nation. Vote Labour, and you vote to put that in jeopardy for the sake of a communist pipe dream.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom