The crucial fallacy underlying Labour’s rhetoric

Having just read Chuka Umunna’s speech yesterday, I am sorry I was not able to make the debate. There is one particular fallacy underlying Labour’s rhetoric and this particular speech’s bluster: government cannot live forever beyond its means.

Evidence I have presented elsewhere shows that the total tax burden has been around 42% of GDP for 40 years, whoever has been in power. It looks like there is a practical limit to how much of national income the state can seize. If the state spends over about 40% of GDP for a long time, it must borrow and yet never repay. That this reality was hidden through currency debasement – inflation – for a generation is one of the most important causes of the present crisis.

In Economics in One Lesson, Henry Hazlitt wrote:

The precaution of looking for all the consequences of a given policy to everyone may seem elementary. Doesn’t everybody know, in his personal life, that there are all sorts of indulgences delightful at the moment but disastrous in the end? Doesn’t every little boy know that if he eats enough candy he will get sick? Doesn’t the fellow who gets drunk know that he will wake up next morning with a ghastly stomach and a horrible head? Doesn’t the dipsomaniac know that he is ruining his liver and shortening his life? Doesn’t the Don Juan know that he is letting himself in for every sort of risk, from blackmail to disease? Finally, to bring it to the economic though still personal realm, do not the idler and the spendthrift know, even in the midst of their glorious fling, that they are heading for a future of debt and poverty?

Yet when we enter the field of public economics, these elementary truths are ignored. There are men regarded today as brilliant economists, who deprecate saving and recommend squandering on a national scale as the way of economic salvation; and when anyone points to what the consequences of these policies will be in the long run, they reply flippantly, as might the prodigal son of a warning father: “In the long run we are all dead.” And such shallow wisecracks pass as devastating epigrams and the ripest wisdom.

But the tragedy is that, on the contrary, we are already suffering the long-run consequences of the policies of the remote or recent past. Today is already the tomorrow which the bad economist yesterday urged us to ignore. The long-run consequences of some economic policies may become evident in a few months. Others may not become evident for several years. Still others may not become evident for decades. But in every case those long-run consequences are contained in the policy as surely as the hen was in the egg, the flower in the seed.

From this aspect, therefore, the whole of economics can be reduced to a single lesson, and that lesson can be reduced to a single sentence:

The art of economics consists in looking not merely at the immediate but at the longer effects of any act or policy; it consists in tracing the consequences of that policy not merely for one group but for all groups.

Today is indeed already the tomorrow which the bad economist yesterday urged us to ignore. It’s a pity Labour want us to keep on ignoring it. If their goal isn’t poverty and general immiseration, one wonders what it is.

Something to look forward to from the BBC on money and banking (perhaps)

In this mad age of yet further taxpayer-backed lending, the BBC’s new series may or may not be something to look forward to:

More here.

The BBC’s Robert Peston – Britain’s Banks: Too Big to Save?

My Cobden Centre colleagues Toby Baxendale and Gordon Kerr appear in this documentary by Robert Peston, Britain’s Banks: Too Big to Save?

BBC: Britain's Banks: Too Big to Save?

It’s not bad at all but it’s vital we shift the focus from bashing bankers, which may be satisfying, but which is a sideshow compared to the flaws in the institutional design of the banking system which are the true cause of our present difficulties.

Still, well worth watching.

On complaining to the BBC

Further to this story:

Dear Mr Baker

Thank you for contacting us regarding remarks made by David Baddiel about Norris McWhirter and the Freedom Association on The Alan Davies Show on BBC Radio 5 Live broadcast on Saturday 18 December.
On the show David Baddiel was discussing a television film he has recently made entitled ‘The Norris McWhirter Chronicles’. The film centres around a speech that Mr McWhirter made at David Baddiel’s school in the 1970s. The young Baddiel had expected a talk about the then popular TV programme ‘Record Breakers’ and was disappointed that Mr McWhirter’s speech was of a political nature. The comments made by David Baddiel were quite clearly his personal description of Mr McWhirter’s political allegiances.

The Alan Davies Show is a live, light hearted, entertainment programme and in this context we are satisfied that no broadcasting guidelines were broken.

Thanks again for taking the time to contact us.

Kind Regards

BBC Audience Services

 Some may take comfort in the fact that I received the same response as everyone else.

The Sun Says

The Beeb is today the pompous voice of defeated socialism.

via The Sun Says.

Surviving the BBC on the EU

On Thursday, I gave an interview of about ten minutes to the BBC’s Daily Politics show regarding the EU budget.  A section was transmitted today in their story Brussels bashing ‘back in fashion’ with new Tory MPs:

They didn’t use the section in which I supported the excellent Justine Greening MP.

They didn’t use the section in which I rejected the old spectrum of euroscepticism in favour of a greater free market internationalism which the EU obstructs.

They didn’t use the section in which I backed the Prime Minister.

They used the section in which I said there is a problem when the link between taxation and representation is broken, which I stand by, of course.

Now, I have no complaint about this — I certainly didn’t expect my own 10-minute feature — but it is interesting to see how the Beeb carefully chose my remarks to support their narrative. It puts How to Frame A Patriot (PDF) into perspective.

You can find the relevant episode in full here.

Red Ed – already trying to rewrite history

N.B. Tim Hewish is my Parliamentary Researcher. I asked him to comment on Ed Miliband’s conference speech.

I have just listened to Ed Miliband’s first official speech as leader of the Labour Party.

I am struck by the attempted hoodwink he is trying to pull. He talks about the optimism of the Labour Party:

The optimism of Tony and Gordon who took on the established thinking and reshaped our country…We are the optimists in politics today…We are the optimists and together we will change Britain.

He should not dupe voters in this way. We have had 13 years of the New Labour dystopia – promising the world yet delivering nothing except broken promises. The scars of Labour’s failure are still deep in the consciousness of the electorate. It is foolish to campaign on such a footing. We neither forget so quickly nor that easily.

As with all socialists, he is trying to rewrite history and pass the blame. By trying to fashion another utopian dream so soon after the last unsuccessful attempt; he is in fact not forging an optimistic position from the ashes of New Labour, rather he is producing yet another forgery.

Cobden Centre Radio: Show One, Interview with Dr Tim Evans

Ten plans for financial reformThe Cobden Centre Radio has launched with an interview with Dr Tim Evans:

In the interview, Dr Evans discusses his personal views on how the Cobden Centre came together, its aims and purposes, where he sees its future heading, and how regular readers and listeners can help us with our funding.  Future shows will include interviews with Toby Baxendale, Steven Baker MP, plus many others, and will focus mainly on a Euro-centric or UK-centric viewpoint, as regards the free market, Austrian economics, and all of the other regular topics which we generally cover at the Cobden Centre, to complement the more usual US-centric views of excellent shows such as the Financial Sense hour, King World Radio, Lew Rockwell Radio, Mises Institute media, and Mr Peter Schiff’s regular video blogs.  As the Americans say; Enjoy:

Cobden Centre Radio: Show One, Interview with Dr Tim Evans

No doubt I will give my interview during the conference recess.

Douglas Carswell on BBC bias

Douglas Carswell today discusses BBC bias:

Mark Thompson, head honcho at the BBC, has admitted that the BBC has had a left wing bias.  Progress.

While refreshing to hear Mr T say what the rest of us have known for years, to fix the problem, it is important to grasp the nature of the BBC’s inbuilt prejudices.

The BBC does not tilt to the left in a partisan sense. It’s coverage of political parties tends to be pretty fair and balanced.  Rather, it is the BBC’s outlook – the unconscious presumptions of their producers and reporters - that often makes them seem so leftist.

When examining a public policy problem, BBC reporters almost always appear to presume that state action is the solution.  Too many folk drinking too much booze?  New laws to decree minimum pricing for everyone, rather than existing laws to enforce individual responsibility.  And how many items on the Today programme boil down to a vested interest of some kind demanding state intervention or favour?

You can read the rest of this excellent article here. See also Biased BBC.

Labour’s legacy

A new video from the Party:

Sayeeda Warsi, Co-Chairman of Conservative Party, has written:

Labour’s incompetent handling of our economy will hit all of our pockets. The cuts to come are Labour’s cuts. So, it’s only fair that the people responsible should share some of the pain. That’s why today I have written to each of Labour’s leadership candidates asking them to voluntarily give up their severance pay, worth £20,000 each. Forfeiting this pay would be the first step towards rehabilitation, and the first time they had come to terms with the mistakes of the past.