BenGarfield
Active member
Agree. Anything that is an 'alternative' to state provision such as education, or is a lifestyle choice such as religion, should not get tax breaks.
However I'm not sure this will raise much money.
Some will argue that state spending is a state of mind. Doesn't @BenGarfield suggest the government simply print and spend money and no harm will result?
My prejudice, working in higher education and medical research with feet and fingers across the piece is that the last thing we need is another review of higher education and the NHS, and yet.....we do need change there.
Perhaps removing all the little loopholes that allow certain types to game society for massive personal profit, the grift and corruption of giving massive HMG contracts to friends and family, and an active effort to make the NHS, education, transport and housing 'better' rather than more profitable for friends and family of HMG, may be of some value.
I didn't think the country was f***ed by Broon, and I don't think it is f***ed now. What is important is the direction of travel, and taking care of core business. We have plunged to a level of needless shit-ness now that is hard to fathom. The NHS, the state of the roads, the chucking up of massive housing estates without supporting infrastructure. Avoidable tomfoolery that has been allowed to grow so that friends and family of HMG can turn coin. Nothing that a little time and effort can't fix.
But beware the torrent of negativity that will be blasted at us by the tory opposition aided by their media chums. If we are not all riding around in £60K electric cars, on pristine roads, en route to waiting list-free NHS healthcentres, while booking skiing holidays a week after the general election, it will all be 'See, labour cannot deliver on the promises they didn't make! Boo!'.
Personally, I will feel cheery and engaged if labour get in, not looking around fearfully for the next bit of peevish shitehouse old bollocks that the present load of ****s plans to dish up to salve their wanky core vote. That will be enough for a bit.
Harry, you misrepresent the MMT position which I have explained at length in other threads. Government finances are not like a household. Central government creates new money every time it spends. Tax is the return of some of that money to the treasury which is then destroyed. Tax does not fund government expenditure, and its main roles are to make sure the populace need to use the currency, control inflation - alongside other fiscal measures, deal with equity issues, and discourage spending on undesirable espenditure, e.g., alcohol, smoking etc. Of course the government cannot spend as much money as it likes without harming the economy if its expenditure results in using up too many real resources and could lead to inflation.