Khaleej Times

Britain needs a change of guard

- robert sKidelsKY WIDE ANGLE

Enough is enough,” proclaimed British Prime Minister Theresa May after the terrorist attack on London Bridge. Now, it is clear, almost half of those who voted in the United Kingdom’s general election on June 8 have had enough of May, whose Conservati­ve majority was wiped out at the polls, producing a hung parliament (with no majority for any party). Whether it is “enough immigrants” or “enough austerity,” Britain’s voters certainly have had enough of a lot. But the election has left Britain confusingl­y split. Last year’s Brexit referendum on European Union membership suggested a Leave-Remain divide, with the Brexiteers narrowly ahead. This year’s general election superimpos­ed on this a more traditiona­l leftright split, with a resurgent Labour Party capitalisi­ng on voter discontent with Conservati­ve budget cuts.

To see the resulting political terrain, imagine a two-by-two table, with the four quadrants occupied by Remainers and Budget Cutters; Remainers and Economic Expansioni­sts; Brexiteers and Budget Cutters; and Brexiteers and Economic Expansioni­sts. The four quadrants don’t add up to coherent halves, so it’s not possible to make out what voters thought they were voting for.

But it is possible to make out what voters were rejecting. There are two certain casualties. The first is austerity, which even the Conservati­ves have signalled they will abandon. Cutting public spending to balance the budget was based on the wrong theory and has failed in practice. The most telling indicator was the inability of George Osborne, Chancellor of the Exchequer from 2010 to 2016, to achieve any of his budget targets. The deficit was to have vanished by 2015, then by 2017, then by 2020-2021. Now, no government will commit to any date at all.

The targets were based on the idea that a “credible” deficit-reduction programme would create sufficient business confidence to overcome the depressing effects on activity of the cuts themselves. Some say the targets were never credible enough. The truth is that they never could be: the deficit cannot come down unless the economy grows, and budget cuts, real and anticipate­d, hinder growth. The consensus now is that austerity delayed recovery for almost three years, depressing real earnings and leaving key public services like local government, health care, and education palpably damaged.

So expect the ridiculous obsession with balancing the budget to be scrapped. From now on, the deficit will be left to adjust to the state of the economy.

The second casualty is unrestrict­ed immigratio­n from the EU. The Brexiteers’ demand to “control our borders” was directed against the uncontroll­ed influx of economic migrants from Eastern Europe. This demand will have to be met in some way.

Studies by Harvard University’s George J. Borjas and others suggest that net immigratio­n lowers the wages of competing domestic labour. These fears have long underpinne­d sovereign states’ insistence on the right to control immigratio­n. The case for control is strengthen­ed when host countries have a labour surplus, as has been true of much of Western Europe since the crisis of 2008.

The crux of the issue is political legitimacy. Until modern times, markets were largely local, and heavily protected against outsiders, even from neighbouri­ng towns. National markets were achieved only with the advent of modern states. But the completely unrestrict­ed movement of goods, capital, and labour within sovereign states became possible only when two conditions were met: the growth of national identity and the emergence of national authoritie­s able to provide security in the face of adversity.

The EU fulfils neither condition. Its peoples are citizens of their nation-states first. And the contract between citizens and states on which national economies depend cannot be reproduced at the European level, because there is no European state with which to conclude the deal. The EU’s insistence on free movement of labour as a condition of membership of a non-state is premature, at best. It will need to be qualified, not just as part of the UK’s Brexit deal, but for the whole of the EU.

So how will the shambolic results of the British general election play out? The most sensible outcome is currently a political non-starter: a Conservati­ve-Labour coalition government, with (say) Boris Johnson as Prime Minister and Jeremy Corbyn as his deputy. The government would adopt a two-year programme consisting of only two items: the conclusion of a “soft” Brexit deal with the EU and a big public investment programme in housing, infrastruc­ture, and green energy.

The rationale for the investment programme is that a rising tide will lift all boats. And an added benefit of a thriving economy will be lower hostility to immigratio­n, making it easier for Britain to negotiate sensible regulation of migrant flows.

And who knows: if the negotiatio­ns force the EU to re-cast its own commitment to free labour movement, Brexit may turn out to be a matter less of British exit than of an overhaul of the terms of European membership. —Project Syndicate

The most sensible outcome is a political nonstarter: a Conservati­veLabour coalition government, with (say) Boris Johnson as PM, Jeremy Corbyn as his deputy

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