There is a budget coming up. Here is the post from Sunday 20 June 2010 shortly after the General Election when the new Coalition Government embarked on its first. We do not seem to have made much progress, one way or another:
Quote:
One of the
vanities of the human species is that because of the complexity of its brain it
has come to believe that it knows what it is doing and can therefore arrive at
decisions leading to actions that consequently are said to be right.
The course
of human history ought to remind us that this is not something we are very good
at as we have lurched from one disaster to another of our own making.
We then
often rationalise this away by coming up with notions such as creative
destruction or blaming other peoples or other causes. Sometimes the other causes may be correct
such as geophysical events over which we have no control.
Even then
when we insist on building major cities and creating large communities in
volatile earthquake zones or next to volcanoes or at or below sea level, in the
past we have put it down to whatever passing deity happens to be around at the
time.
The present
budgetary crisis in the UK
is one part of a much wider and deeper human crisis. The scale and complications inherent in this
are well beyond the understanding of almost anyone. So few people actually know very much and for
those who are obliged to make decisions about this or that the chances of
coming to any answer that is “right” are not simply limited but highly unlikely.
The best
that can be expected is that in looking at the various options somehow many of
the decisions will prove to be the least worst.
The difficulty is that we cannot know which they will be and often why
they might be the best available.
The outgoing
government in terms of its arrogance and dogmatism may well have been the vainest
in British history so the budget will literally be a bonfire of the
vanities.
Because its
belief in the certainty of its knowledge and in its own spin doctoring it went
on to make huge spending commitments on the basis of figures it had thought up
in its own fevered imaginations.
Assumptions became doctrines and guesses plans for action with the money
found by unlimited credit creation.
So what
does the present government “know”? The
chaos arising from the constant reorganising and reconfiguring of policies in
the recent past makes almost any of the internal information available wholly fictional.
The
manipulation of basic statistics makes them less reliable than reading the
entrails of a sheep and all the target setting and management structures have
created a maze where there is no way to the exit once you are in. The mess is beyond belief and it only belief
we have.
Out there
the major financial organisations do not know how much toxic debt there is or
where it is or what effect it will have.
They do not really know much about their own accounts continually having
nasty surprises. They cannot know what
happens next. They have lost control and
just follow events.
In terms of
tax payments the amount of obfuscation and deceit means they now rarely know
where their own money is or for that matter how much of it exists. Yet we have had a government and The City
preaching to us that all we have to do to have a wonderful life is to put our
trust and incidentally all our money in their sticky hands.
We do not
know what the oil producers will do in the coming decade, neither do they. We cannot know what some of the big boys in
world politics might or might not do. In
the EU the Europeans not only do not know what they are doing they cannot agree
what it is they ought to know or why they need to know it.
So they
just cobble together some financial arrangements and place their trust in fate. God is on sabbatical these days in Europe so this could mean anything.
This is my
guide to understanding the budget. There
are no right decisions so just cross your fingers and leave sixpence for the
tooth fairy.
Unquote.
Mad Frankie (Fraser) was a hood employed by 1960's London gangsters to enforce their will. He had his own methods of interrogation which often involved tooth extraction with a pair of pliers. With so much of our economy run by crooks of one kind or another it is still appropriate.
Nowadays he would be much in demand, being a man before his time.
The problem with excessive complexity is that there are too many vested interests insisting on patches rather than solutions.
ReplyDeleteThe solution is simplicity, which means more transparency which isn't good for vested interests.