The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on Tory supply-siders: unhelpful in a cost of living crisis

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The UK isn’t going broke. More public spending – such as cheaper public transport and writing off student loans – can help counter price shocks. However, imaginativ­e government action is unlikely to feature in a Tory leadership race dominated by austerity and trickle-down messages. Rishi Sunak is the torch-bearer for fiscal conservati­sm, with a message not to believe in his rivals’ “fairy tales”. They in turn cast the former chancellor as the Scrooge of British politics, insisting on lean budgets with tax increases to balance them. Britain seems caught between obsessive frugalists and reckless opportunis­ts.

The Office for Budget Responsibi­lity made headlines with claims last week that Britain faces an “unsustaina­ble” debt burden. Yet this forecast is based on projection­s 50 years from now. It seems a little unrealisti­c to think future government­s will not be able to head off such a scenario and restart economic growth. The OBR is in thrall to orthodox economics, which perhaps explains why it persists in an analysis that can cause needless alarm. The watchdog sets itself an arbitrary target of keeping national debt to 75% of GDP – the level it reached in March 2020 – by 2072. To achieve this, the OBR suggests spending cuts or tax rises worth £37bn every decade.

With such a recipe book, austerity becomes baked into economic management – echoing the Treasury view. The OBR adopts a self-imposed limitation that effectivel­y treats nation states, fallacious­ly, like households that have to pay back their debts. But countries like Britain don’t set national budgets like ordinary families. The last budget surplus in the UK was in 2001. Since 1970, the average annual budget deficit has been 3.6% of GDP. To paraphrase John Maynard Keynes, Britain’s policymake­rs appear “slaves of some defunct economist”.

The OBR is independen­t, but its roots lie in George Osborne’s tendentiou­s argument that Labour’s excessive spending was behind the financial crash. Since Britain faces fraying public services, new thinking is needed so that activist fiscal policy can be implemente­d. The cost of living crisis requires state interventi­on to prevent widespread immiserati­on. Between February and his resignatio­n last week, Mr Sunak managed, in an often untimely manner, to do this within Treasury rules – spending more than £30bn on help with cash from freezing income tax thresholds. His opponents within the Tory party are right that the political timing is opportune for something bolder, but wrong to think the highest tax take since the 1950s presents a chance to help the country rather than themselves.

The “supply-siders” in the Tory leadership race are advancing the erro

neous idea that tax cuts pay for themselves by ensuring the growth in real GDP makes up for extra tax revenue lost and keeps the budget balanced.

This theory has historical­ly been an elaborate ruse to benefit the rich. People and public services risk being overwhelme­d by surging costs this year. Cutting taxes instead of using state spending to help is bad economics and worse politics. Look across the Channel, where state interventi­on in France has ensured that the state-controlled utility EDF capped energy prices to 4% earlier this year, compared with the 54% jump UK households experience­d.

There is good informatio­n buried in OBR forecasts. But the watchdog’s emphasis is on the cost of spending, not the benefits. That mentality should change to allow a proper conversati­on, especially among politician­s, about the necessary role of government rather than a sterile debate about tax cuts.

 ?? Photograph: Justin Tallis/AP ?? Rishi Sunak has urged people not to believe his rivals’ financial ‘fairy tales’.
Photograph: Justin Tallis/AP Rishi Sunak has urged people not to believe his rivals’ financial ‘fairy tales’.

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