Stato
Well-known member
- Dec 21, 2011
- 7,374
It was under Labour's watch that it happened. It happened because Thatcher, Major, Blair and Brown all inflated and deregulated the financial sector in the UK, and other neoliberals around the world pursued similar policies. The Tories have no right to criticise Labour, as they weren't advocating cuts to the budget in the run-up to the crisis; instead, they were pimping around tax cuts for the very rich, via inheritance tax reductions. To be fair, the only MP that was articulating clear concerns with the levels of debt at that point, it was Cable (although his subsequent volte face has been resentfully taken).
The fault is neoliberalism, the idea that privatisation, deregulation, and financialisation will sort out the economy. Unfortunately, we haven't broken out of that mentality, despite its unpleasant ethos and disastrous track record.
This is the truth. Here's an interesting piece which undermines any criticism Cameron and Osborne make of the last government's approach to the banks and shows that Balls was just as blind to the danger of unregulated markets. Prior to the collapse Labour were cockily congratulating themselves for being business friendly and the only criticism from the tories was that they were regulating too much:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/pol...t-politicians-used-to-say-about-the-City.html
Luckily for Cameron the electorate has a very short memory for anything subtle or complicated. The lie that the problems were all about public sector spending was swallowed because it was simpler and more palatable than the truth. I.e. despite their Oxford PPE educations, none of our politicians have a clue how to control international finance and instead try to placate the City in order to pick the scraps from its table.