sten_super
Brain Surgeon
Where the hell did you get that piece of optimism from? The one thing all parties agree on is that our debt is too high.
Politicians are the wrong people to ask about debt serviceability. Try asking one of the traders on here, someone might deal in government bonds.
This chart makes the point quite succinctly, however.
Are you kidding?
"who plan to talk about the economy over the next 100 days. Here is a very simple fact. [3] GDP per head (a much better guide to average prosperity than GDP itself) grew at an average rate of less than 1% in the four years from 2010 to 2014. [1] In the previous 13 years (1997 to 2010), growth averaged over 1.5%. So growth in GDP per head was more than 50% higher under Labour than under the Conservatives, even though the biggest recession since the 1930s is included in the Labour period!"
Of course GDP was growing more slowly from 2010 (compared to 1997), because the country had been left in a complete mess. To say that the recession is included in the Labour period is laughable. It's not really worth reading more of a blog that's clearly biased bollocks.
I (kind of) agree with you that it's difficult to directly compare performance (and SWL makes the same point in the comments). But broadly speaking, GDP per capita dips during a recession and rises relatively quickly again afterwards; we had a sharp downturn during the recession but there's been far less pickup (see my rather hastily constructed graph attached). He is right in as much as Tory crowing on the economy is rather misplaced - but Labour made this easy for him by being quite so unequivocal about the impacts of austerity in the first place. Unfortunately the whole argument is reduced to political soundbites, which doesn't leave much room for nuance in what is clearly a complex area (the performance of the economy and the relationship between austerity and economic growth).