Well hopefully. I'm sort of expecting the next government to enter the treasury to find everything that wasn't nailed down has been flogged on whatever resale/social media site the kids use nowadays, so I'm not terribly optimistic of any short term progress.Not solved but addressed… and funded sooner than the second term is really my main point
As well as a note saying “ Dear Chief Secretary, I'm afraid there is no money. Kind regards – and good luck!”Well hopefully. I'm sort of expecting the next government to enter the treasury to find everything that wasn't nailed down has been flogged on whatever resale/social media site the kids use nowadays, so I'm not terribly optimistic of any short term progress.
You think they won't have sold all the stationary then?As well as a note saying “ Dear Chief Secretary, I'm afraid there is no money. Kind regards – and good luck!”
Knowing this bunch of shysters, they will have flogged it off on the cheap to their mates - who will then resell it on your suggested sites for three times what they had paid the UK Government for it.Well hopefully. I'm sort of expecting the next government to enter the treasury to find everything that wasn't nailed down has been flogged on whatever resale/social media site the kids use nowadays, so I'm not terribly optimistic of any short term progress.
Yes it is that simple. The only constraints are the actual resources. And yes it has been done before - mobilisation of resources for the second world war as laid out by the economist John Maynard Keynes in a BBC broadcast and Listener article in April 1942Crikey. Is it really that easy? Why don't the government go the whole hog and just print tonnes of money and give everyone in the country some of it. £10m each would do it. We could all have everything we wanted and everyone would be happy. What could possibly go wrong? I cannot believe that no-one has thought of this before. It's so simple.
Not just me, as well you know, thousands of economists throughout the world, including, for example, Senator John Yarmuth head of President Bidens budget committeeYou should have mentioned this wonderful theory of yours before
It must be tough being the only economically literate person in a completely economically illiterate world. You have my sympathies
Not just me, as well you know, thousands of economists throughout the world, including, for example, Senator John Yarmuth head of President Bidens budget committee
I think he's correct. Up to a point. There is no constraint to government spending. The idea of equating a governent budget with a household budget is (deliberate) stupidity. However, if you are going to pump that level of funding into the economy, and don't want rampant inflation, then you also need to be prepared to take money out of the economy via taxation. The trick is to take money out from where it is less productive and more damaging (in the pockets and assets of the wealthy and wherever it causes social and environmental damage) and put it back in where it is most useful, eg government spending on public 'good'. And this is where Labour have bottled it. Horribly.So you, John Yarmuth and thousands of unnamed others all believe that Governments can spend with no limits or source of funding. Good Luck
Maybe you and John should start your own political party
As you say, the Tories are done.All anti tories should put their feelings to one side for the next few months. They are toast anyway.
Now is the time to properly scrutinise Starmer and the next cabinet.
There is a real danger he will come to power without having had to sweat, or say very much at all.
It is not in the general public’s interest for this to happen, whatever party they support.
As you say, the Tories are done.
Some will argue however that the grey, nothingness of the incoming blandness is nothing other than the shrewdest of master plans, and all in the garden will be rosy, red rosy.
Here is your trophy, 250th use of the word 'cabal'And some won't, but surely nobody is stupid enough to want more of the current cabal and attack any alternative at every opportunity
I'll believe the Conservatives are toast when I see them voted out.All anti tories should put their feelings to one side for the next few months. They are toast anyway.
Now is the time to properly scrutinise Starmer and the next cabinet.
There is a real danger he will come to power without having had to sweat, or say very much at all.
It is not in the general public’s interest for this to happen, whatever party they support.
Here is your trophy, 250th use of the word 'cabal'
Just like how the last Labour government left powerAs well as a note saying “ Dear Chief Secretary, I'm afraid there is no money. Kind regards – and good luck!”
he really isn't. otherwise governments would try to print their way of any political problem. they do try in South America from time to time and collapse their economy and currency every time.I think he's correct. Up to a point. There is no constraint to government spending. The idea of equating a governent budget with a household budget is (deliberate) stupidity. However, if you are going to pump that level of funding into the economy, and don't want rampant inflation, then you also need to be prepared to take money out of the economy via taxation. The trick is to take money out from where it is less productive and more damaging (in the pockets and assets of the wealthy and wherever it causes social and environmental damage) and put it back in where it is most useful, eg government spending on public 'good'. And this is where Labour have bottled it. Horribly.
Oh yes, that's right - I'd forgotten that the Labour Party had caused that world recession. Silly me.Just like how the last Labour government left power
That time it was a joke thoughJust like how the last Labour government left power
so what is your take on all this?As you say, the Tories are done.
Some will argue however that the grey, nothingness of the incoming blandness is nothing other than the shrewdest of master plans, and all in the garden will be rosy, red rosy.