Among the many and various
political commentators, one Douglas Carswell, is said to be of the Right. A while back I challenged him with the
allegation that his economics seemed more redolent of Gladstonian Liberalism to
which he replied, more or less "banged to rights, Guv."
He has made another foray
into Economic History telling us to look out for the future in the past with
reference to Beware
the Barber Boom reminding us of past errors. This takes us back forty years, ancient
history to many but not to some.
This is a time that I
recall vividly, just having done yet another job move to try to keep ahead of
all the manic reorganisations that were going on in which many of the unwary
found out they were superfluous to requirements.
The upshot of this was
that we moved into a four bed, fair sized well equipped detached house with a
decent garden, overlooking fields yet with bus, rail and motorway
services.
All for £6,750 and we
could run a car, feed three children etc. and have decent holidays on around
£2,500 a year and without much if any use of credit cards.
It was after Anthony Barber,
Chancellor to Edward Heath one of the big spender Prime Ministers had given the
economy a badly timed and ill considered boost that kicked off near hyper
inflation.
It was also the time that
the Bretton Woods international agreements on international capital and money
ended and some economists were cheerfully recommending a spending free for all
to do wonders and to help politicians be re-elected.
In some ways we are still
living with the consequences in that the government now controls more of our
money and yet inflation continues unabated.
We are told that higher prices means that we are more prosperous when
this does not seem to be the case.
The trouble is that we
still buy into the fiction. One of the
nastier consequences of past improvidence is that some of schemes of the past
have caught up with us, notably the Ponzi deal of state pensions.
Politicians of the past
used to giggle in private when they admitted that National Insurance was not
insurance and the pensions were unfunded.
Now the laughing has to
stop as the ageing population wants what was promised believing that because it
paid in the money should be there when it isn't. It has to come either from current taxation
or borrowing and we are already over borrowed.
It was around then that we
also bought into the fiction that any spending that allegedly created jobs was
good. So any big project that would
never ever yield a real return on investment was good especially if big enough
to get the media excited.
Some of these schemes
would never even yield eventually any return on revenue costs all of which
loaded future obligations onto tax payers in immense sums.
Add to that in recent
years the amounts taken out by financial firms handling the money side and
contractors guaranteed profits or protected from cost over runs it has all
added to the burdens.
If Carswell is correct and
Cameron and Osborne have done another Barber, we will all get a short back and
sides if not a head shave.
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