Politics & Government Tim Worstall Politics & Government Tim Worstall

How to kill off a recovery

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One of the things which can be very difficult to get over to a certain type is this idea that fiscal or monetary stimulus are not the only things which can aid a recovery in a battered economy.It really isn't that the State must do more: there is also the argument that in other areas the State must do less. For example, those streamers of red tape with which we festoon industry. Talking about the Equalities Act which has just come in, The Telegraph tells us:

The British Chambers of Commerce estimates it will cost £189million for business to implement the Equality Act. David Frost, its director-general, said: "At a time when the Government is trying to create as many jobs as possible in the private sector this legislation will put people off for fear of getting it wrong. The Equality Act is a very complex bit of employment legislation. If small businesses get this wrong they end up in an employment tribunal."

A spokesman for the Institute of Directors said: "The health provision is undoubtedly an extra burden on businesses. All business will need to be very clued up on the ramifications of what the new regulations are - if you have a whole HR team that's fine, but a lot of our members are small businesses and they don't have that.”

Yes, the Act will weigh most heavily on hte main engine of job and economic growth, small businesses. Gosh, that was well done of Ms. Harman, wasn't it?

To give you an idea of what is now verboeten:

It is expected to lead to discrimination claims from dyslexic workers who have been barred from carrying out certain tasks because of their tendency to make spelling mistakes.

As I've already mentioned elsewhere we really would rather like to be able to discriminate against those who cannot spell in certain jobs: data entry into official databases comes to mind. That Mr. Llareggub gets fingered for the crimes of an alias of a Mr. Dylan Thomas isn't what we want at all.

However, yes, people really do make laws as stupid as this. Try here for an example from the US. If you do discriminate against an epileptic by denying him a job as a driver you get sued for discrimination: if you don't discriminate against an epileptic then you get sued for not discriminating.

We really do have to get back to the idea that there is such a thing as rational discrimination, even rational discrimination purely on a statistical basis, and that such discrimination is often not just rational but extremely sensible.

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Politics & Government Sam Bowman Politics & Government Sam Bowman

Ed Miliband's chance to help Britain's poor

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edmilibandCongratulations to Ed Miliband for winning the leadership of the Labour party. I disagree with him on many key issues, but I think that he genuinely wants to make Britain a better place for the poor, and his victory is a chance for him to take another look at the right policies to do so.

Mr Miliband says he is committed to improving Britain’s health service to ensure high-quality healthcare for all. This is admirable – and achievable, but only if he is willing to think outside the box. Singapore’s system of healthcare, which combines private health savings accounts with catastrophic health insurance coverage, guarantees world-class healthcare for even the poorest Singaporeans within a free market system.

Similarly, liberal reforms in Chile’s pension system and the Dutch education system have given those country’s poorest people ownership over the public services that are provided to them. This has increased the independence of the poor in these countries and given them more opportunities to make better lives for themselves and their families.

Liberal market reforms need not be the preserve of right-wing politicians. New Zealand’s economy boomed under the free market reforms of Roger Douglas, a Labour politician. The previous Chilean government, under the Socialist Party’s Michelle Bachelet, preserved that country’s market-based public services model after accepting that it favoured the poor.

Britain’s poorest have more to gain from economic growth than anybody else, and they are most vulnerable to failing public services. If Mr Miliband is serious about helping the poor, he should take a leaf out of other successful left-wing politicians across the world and focus on public service reform that offers choice and flexibility to the poor by taking the state out of people’s lives. There isn’t really such a thing as right-wing and left-wing policies, just good and bad policies – Ed Miliband now has the chance to make a break with the past and propose reforms that would really help the poor.

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Politics & Government Felix Bungay Politics & Government Felix Bungay

Kindling for the quango bonfire

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bonfireAs David Cameron promised before the election, the ‘bonfire of the quangos’ has begun. 177 of these bodies are for the chop, 4 will be privatised, and another 129 merged. In addition, 94 are still under review, which if scrapped could take the total number of abolished quangos to well over 250. If we include the other 129 mergers, then the Coalition could get rid of nearly 400 quangos.

Already the quangocrats are squealing about their jobs going up in flames. Baroness Deech, a former chairman of the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority attacked the decision to scrap that body. She told the Today programme: ‘It was trailed, and it's raised great dismay.’ I don’t think the public will be complaining about no longer having to fund these pointless bodies and the vast reams of people they employ, often on outrageous salaries. The scrapping of Quangos should provide billions of pounds worth of easy and popular savings for the government.

While I welcome the Coalition’s decision, there are still numerous pointless bodies that have survived the chop. 350 quangos have been approved to stay on, with bodies like the Food Standards Agency, which was in line to be scrapped, surviving the cull. We can only hope that these will be abolished at some point in the future.

In the mean time, the remaining quangos should be fully accountable to Parliament. As well as this, sunset clauses should be put in place for the remaining quangos so that they have to justify their renewal to Parliament after a certain period of time. Such legislation would ensure that the surviving quangos would become more democratically accountable and that they do not outstay their welcome if they become outdated. But all in all, this is a good start by the Coalition.

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Politics & Government Dr. Madsen Pirie Politics & Government Dr. Madsen Pirie

Defending Capitalism

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Following Vince Cable's appalling anti-business rant at the Liberal-Democrat conference, I was invited to appear of the Jeff Randall Live business programme on Sky TV to defend capitalism and business. I was happy to point out that capitalism, for all its imperfections, makes rather a better job than politicians do at running business. It has been the most benign of human enterprises, generating the wealth that has doubled life spans, lifted millions from subsistence poverty, and created resources that we an spend on things like arts and education. It creates the jobs that pay the wages that government taxes, and ultimately creates all of the resources that governments themselves spend.

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Politics & Government Tim Worstall Politics & Government Tim Worstall

In defence of speculation in food

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The anger of the mob, the righteous idignation of the ignorant, is being stirred up again. You can hardly open a copy of the Guardian or Independent but someone is lecturing you on the evil of speculation in foodstuffs. How dare these people trade in futures, commodities, when there are hungry people in the world? Surely there are some things which it is too important to have markets in?

Well, as Mr. Venning always said, the correct answer to any question which begins "Surely" is "No". And the reason for the no in this case is that speculation in foodstuffs stops people from starving.

Adam Smith, of course, explained it at great length (of course) here in Wealth of Nations. What the speculator is doing is moving prices around in time. If there is to be a shortage in the future (say, the crop has failed) then by buying up now to sell at a profit in the future that speculator has brought forward the price rise. Thus people moderate their demand now and the future shortage is smaller. It is, after all, easier to eat a little less for 12 months until the next harvest than it is to eat regularly for 9 months and then nothing at all for three. Well, perhaps not easier but definitely more likely to lead to your actually being alive at the next harvest.

A possible retort to this is that, well, it never actually happens like that, does it? In the absence of speculation, when there are, say, price controls to forbid it, the food doesn't run out, does it?

Yes, actually, it does:

A classic example of price controls making a bad situation much worse occured in 1584-85, when Spanish forces under the Duke of Parma besieged the port city of Antwerp on land and gradually blockaded it from the sea as well. As food became scarce, the city fathers imposed price controls. While food was plentiful elsewhere, and merchants could have delivered vast quantities of supplies before the Spanish tightened their blockade, relief never came. The reason:

Antwerp's price controls meant that merchants would get only the same price for their goods in Antwerp as they would get for selling them elsewhere at a much lower cost and risk. Naturally, the merchants sold elsewhere. At the same time, the artificially low prices set by the city government discouraged the citizens from limiting their consumption of scarce foodstuffs. The result: The population continued to eat heartily as if there was no shortage until the food ran out and they were forced to surrender. In the words of one historian, "the city, by its own stupidity, blockaded itself, far more effectively than the Duke of Parma could have done." Schuettinger and Butler, op. cit., pp. 33.

It's true that the Spanish no longer besiege Antwerp (it's more likely to the the Dutch besieging some Spanish beach these days) but the principles are exactly the same. If there is to be a shortage in the future then we want prices to rise now: to both increase supply and reduce demand now, so that the looming shortage is diminished. That's exactly the service that speculators perform for us and exactly why we want to have them in our food supply chain.

For there really are things which are much too important for us not to have markets in them.

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Politics & Government Matthew Triggs Politics & Government Matthew Triggs

Open primaries

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I sit watching the American primary season unfold with more than a hint of envy. Whilst our general elections merely have us choose between the various parties’ pre-selected candidates (often parachuted into seats by party HQ or drawn from the ranks of somewhat enigmatic local party structures), American electors choose who contests the election under each party’s banner. To see why this fuels my good-natured envy, one need only consider how surprisingly radical (in the best of ways) the implications of adopting open primaries on this side of the Atlantic would be.

First, it would do away with the notion of a safe seat altogether. No longer could the 70% of MPs sitting in safe seats even risk remaining unresponsive to their constituents’ wishes. John McCain’s reluctant shuffle to the right when facing an ultra-conservative challenger in the Arizona contest nicely demonstrates a primary’s ability to realign the views of representatives in safe seats with those of their constituents. Furthermore, open primaries stop Party HQ and the Whips from handing out safe seats like sweeties, as rewards for keeping in line and on message. Any reform encouraging MPs to place their constituents’ interests before the party interest is itself to be encouraged.

Second, it would broaden the ideological range of candidates elected to Parliament. Currently, British party bosses can stamp out the selection prospects of Rand Paul-esque candidates, despite their popularity within a constituency, perhaps because their views are too extreme or detract from the national message. Open primaries remove this possibility, allowing localities to choose who represents them, whatever the country thinks a large.

Is it just me, or do open primaries sound like a better way of reinvigorating British democracy than the alternative vote?

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Politics & Government Matthew Triggs Politics & Government Matthew Triggs

If City Hall can find efficiencies, so can Whitehall

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Today has seen announcements by two praiseworthy councils that, dare I say it, strike of innovative cost cutting.

Birmingham City council has shown that “I can reduce redundancies and cut costs” need not be a contradiction. The plan is simple, as Conservative Home explains:

Suppose you have person A in a necessary job retires and person B who wishes to continue in employment but is in a post that is being scrapped. Rather than recruit a new person for the necessary job and make the person redundant for the post being scrapped you redeploy person B to take over from person B.

Not only are there fewer redundancies, the costs of hiring from outside and making person B redundant are eliminated altogether. Taxpayers and council workers both win.

Hammersmith and Fulham’s efficiencies are somewhat different, gained by scrapping unnecessarily burdensome regulation. The council estimates that simplifying the planning system, removing the licence needed to pierce an ear and shredding the 10-page form requiring filing by any school wishing to hold events featuring music, amongst others, would save £200 million were they implemented across the country.

These innovations, good in themselves, are important for two further reasons. First, they lend support to one of the strongest arguments for localism and the breaking up of our centralised state; that smaller bodies are generally better at generating good ideas than sluggish monoliths. Second, they suggest that those busy thrusting bleeding stumps into the face of anyone suggesting ‘cuts’ doth protest too much. If one council can locate £200 million of efficiencies in the small, £4bn Local Government budget, just think of the savings a diligent Treasury official could find. Contrary to what the some in the media might think, nothing like 100% of the impending budget cuts need come from frontline services.

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Politics & Government Matthew Triggs Politics & Government Matthew Triggs

B is for biased

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Via James Delingpole, I see that the last vestige of the BBC’s non-partisan façade has finally slipped:

"Behold the spending review slider! Pay attention, my vicious right-wing audience. You know those 144,625 new affordable homes you want to never see built? Well, cut the Housing Budget by 25% and they never will be! Want to lower the basic pension by £30 a week? Drag that slider to a 30% Welfare cut and watch those poor retirees squirm. Efficiency savings? Cuts to needless bureaucracy? Don’t talk such rot! My viscous free-market perspective necessitates that every penny of my cuts contribute to the great cause of crippling front line services. Up for some poor bashing anyone? I’ll go fetch my golf clubs. Oh I’m salivating just thinking of the devastation my swingeing cuts could achieve were only I at the Treasury!"

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Politics & Government Matthew Triggs Politics & Government Matthew Triggs

In praise of the private sector

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Anyone who has applied for a student loan, completed a tax return or renewed a passport can tell you how thoroughly useless the government and its executive agencies are at providing services.

Indeed, my recent wrangling with the Student Loans Company involved no less than: the sending of an application; the resending of the application because, when processing the original one, the SCL confused my elder brother for my father; the making of three phone calls after, having confirmed that my father and my brother are, indeed, two different people, the SCL waited two weeks before re-processing my application; and a final long (and still on-going) wait as I anticipate the arrival through the post of my loan offer. My need of the word “re-processing” there ought be indictment enough of the public service malady.

These government failures take on even ghastlier appearances when viewed from the towering heights of private sector accomplishment. It seems a comparative miracle that I can buy groceries at midnight from my local Tesco with one hand and simultaneously book a flight to the other side of the world using the i-Phone clasped in the other. Anybody (I’m looking at you Ed Balls) who maintains that the public sector can lead innovation need only look around him to realise how mistaken he is.

Just think about it a moment. Whilst the government struggles to supply basic forms of these services, through the private sector you can: have your bins emptied every week; retire at an age other than sixty-five; access your medical records when you have an accident; book a GP appointment online and choose who delivers your letters.

I’m pretty sure that this list is nowhere near exhaustive. Any additions?

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