Captain Caveman wrote:
I agree chap, but as you say, 'for some short while' only. Up until pretty recently, Brown was still in la-la land, heavily insinuating that cuts wouldn't even be needed at all, seems to me.
I've long thought he's a bit mentally touched. My wife worked in the Treasury for a bit, and she said she was quite shocked by how lacking in people skills he is - people would say "good morning" to him in the lift, and he'd act as if there was no one there, for instance. Also, you only have to listen to him talk about things to quickly realise he's actually
not very clever.Quote:
To be fair this isn't my main point; I doubt anyone here will be too shocked at 'no more boom and bust' Brown's inconsistency in economic matters. No, it's the fact that Labour themselves are planning vast cuts, greater even than Thatcher's in scale, that will doubtless have correspondingly greater social consequences - where will this leave the 'Evil Thatcher' naysayers then?
Well indeed, but anyone saying "hahaha, you've had to do what you criticised Maggie for" isn't particularly helpful at this point. As we all know, times change, and whether cuts might not have been needed 12 months ago, they're needed now. Whether or not Maggie's cuts were necessary is a point for those masters of the retrospecto-scope, the economists, to argue over - I know little enough about it to say one way or the other.
What is for sure is that cuts
are needed to rid us of the current defecit (whether or not there are also tax rises in certain areas), and it is down to (a) how much (b) where and (c) when.
I'm quite in favour of Canada's approach - a straight 10% off everything, and leave the departments to sort out the details. Ringfencing things just means other areas will be disproportionately hit, and is, more than anything, being used as a populist smokescreen by Cameron - "we're not nasty, we'll protect education and health!". And anyone who believes "efficiency savings" are possible is every bit as much in la-la land as Our Dear Leader.