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Is austerity working- and will it ever end?


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Your argument presupposes that £100 is the perfect level of spending. It could well be argued that £100 per week is living beyond our means, and that we should be aiming to cut back to £85 per week, a rate we can afford and which discourages waste. After all, do we really need those packs of donuts and that wasteful monthly iphone payment?

 

It doesn't. It just presupposes that it was the non-austerity level. :thumbsup:

 

---------- Post added 31-10-2018 at 08:29 ----------

 

In 2007-2008 (pre crisis) the public spending as a share of GDP was 39%.

 

In 2017, it was 41.1%.

 

We are returning to the pre austerity levels.

 

I don't think that's a particularly useful measure.

 

https://tradingeconomics.com/united-kingdom/government-spending-to-gdp

 

It actually continued rising to 2010, because the economy was shrinking. That despite the "austerity" spending having started 2 years before.

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They were normal for the 70's of course. But austerity started from late 2008. What happened in 2008 were a number of cuts, some immediate, some imposed over the next decade.

Austerity hasn't ended because in late 2018 no FURTHER cuts have been made for 1 budget!

Austerity continues until spending goes back to pre austerity level. Define that level how you like.

 

Let's try an analogy to explain.

You have a household food budget of £100/month, it's been this way for a while, give or take.

in Jan you declare "austerity" due to reasons.

Feb £75

Mar £74

Apr £70

May £69

Jun £67.50

Jul £65

Aug £65

 

In August you tell your family that because you didn't cut it any further, "austerity" has ended.

They still have only £65 for food. Not £100.

 

Austerity ends when the spending budget is returned to the long term average spending of £100.

 

No, austerity ends when that £65 goes up to £67, £69 and so on.

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No, austerity ends when that £65 goes up to £67, £69 and so on.

 

And since that is not the case ....

 

NHS staff agreed to a ‘complex’ NHS pay deal that has disappointed staff.

 

While 6.5 per cent sounds good, it is barely a pay rise at all. If inflation matches OBR forecasts, the real-terms pay rise would be just a third of one per cent by 2020/21.

 

October 2017 inflation was above 3%, the OBR forecast was 2.4%, for 2019 the inflation prediction of the OBR for 2019 is 1.8%, it is currently running at 2.4%

 

https://tradingeconomics.com/united-kingdom/inflation-cpi

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No, austerity ends when that £65 goes up to £67, £69 and so on.

 

No it doesn't. A tiny increase against a massive cut is not an end to austerity...

The vast majority of the cut is still in place, austerity is a policy of cuts and/or tax rises designed to reduce public expenditure.

 

---------- Post added 31-10-2018 at 11:02 ----------

 

And since that is not the case ....

 

NHS staff agreed to a ‘complex’ NHS pay deal that has disappointed staff.

 

While 6.5 per cent sounds good, it is barely a pay rise at all. If inflation matches OBR forecasts, the real-terms pay rise would be just a third of one per cent by 2020/21.

 

October 2017 inflation was above 3%, the OBR forecast was 2.4%, for 2019 the inflation prediction of the OBR for 2019 is 1.8%, it is currently running at 2.4%

 

https://tradingeconomics.com/united-kingdom/inflation-cpi

 

And it's not even about pay really. It's about funding overall to the service, and not just that service, every other public service.

 

---------- Post added 06-11-2018 at 11:30 ----------

 

Amusing short video on the end of austerity

 

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  • 3 weeks later...

The UN poverty envoy has reported on his findings about austerity in the UK.

He says "callous policies driven by political desire for social re-engineering".

That's a devastating indictment. More about this is reported here:

https://www.theguardian.com/society/2018/nov/16/uk-austerity-has-inflicted-great-misery-on-citizens-un-says

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Its amazing how much he supposedly uncovered from just a 12 day whistle stop tour around the UK at selected small locations of deprivation, and concluded that its national.

 

Its also interesting to hear that he himself claims his work is not reviewed or checked before it is published.

 

He also uses figures from Institute for Fiscal Studies and the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, both of which have misled with statistics in the past and discussed on here.

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The UN poverty envoy has reported on his findings about austerity in the UK.

He says "callous policies driven by political desire for social re-engineering".

That's a devastating indictment. More about this is reported here:

https://www.theguardian.com/society/2018/nov/16/uk-austerity-has-inflicted-great-misery-on-citizens-un-says

 

I'm not saying he's wrong, but it sticks in my craw a bit that we've got some Aussie rocking up to our shores telling us how crap we are when huge numbers of the aboriginal population are living in far far far worse poverty. Sort your own house out first.

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Its amazing how much he supposedly uncovered from just a 12 day whistle stop tour around the UK at selected small locations of deprivation, and concluded that its national.

 

Its also interesting to hear that he himself claims his work is not reviewed or checked before it is published.

 

He also uses figures from Institute for Fiscal Studies and the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, both of which have misled with statistics in the past and discussed on here.

 

He says the government is in denial. As, it seems, are you.

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I'm not saying he's wrong, but it sticks in my craw a bit that we've got some Aussie rocking up to our shores telling us how crap we are when huge numbers of the aboriginal population are living in far far far worse poverty. Sort your own house out first.

 

He's a UN poverty envoy, not a representative of the Australian government. :suspect:

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