The economy needed structural reform(YIMBY planning) as well as fiscal stimulus to revive growth after the great recession. Austerity in a weak economy delayed recovery. I would invest in infrastructure a lot and try to go all in on green manufacturing through an industrial strategy.
Through to calm markets, I would create a cross departmental taskforce to consolidate welfare programs like creating a negative income tax. If I had a lot of political capital, I would look into reforming NHS through an expanded private sector role since that seems to be a big driver of spending.
I would also cut funding to Quangos, consultants, and other non-profits and do more stuff in house.
chjacobsen on
* Chill out a bit, and don’t do too much, too fast.
* Don’t assume cyclical issues are structural. Temporary spikes in unemployment or welfare spending may reflect the economy, not permanent problems. If you need to fix these, do it after the economy recovers.
* Distribute the burden differently – young working-age adults are critical for recovery, while old, wealthy homeowners are less structurally significant. Yet, it was the former who took most of the hit.
* Keep investment up in long term productivity boosters – infrastructure, education, and so on. They help short term by boosting demand and long term by boosting productivity.
Le1bn1z on
It’s worth looking at one of the most successfully executed austerity plans in history – the Liberal government of Jean Chretien’s first term, culminating in the legendary/infamous 1995 budget.
Canada went from 25% of federal expenditures being interest payments to <10% and falling with a balanced budget.
1) Trade and economic growth are good. If you’ve promised to do something insane like constrict trade with your most important partner, instead, don’t do that and go all in on free trade. Also, invest in highly productive sectors, especially in infastructure, and R&D. Interestingly, having your economy grow is really helpful to balancinf the budget, because…
2) Having a long running deficit, especially one that is greater than GDP growth, happens when you bring in less revenue than you spend. It’s also bad. So what you want to do is spend less money and increase tax revenue. This is called arithmetic. Introducing or increasing things like a sales tax can be really helpful in, you guessed it, increasing revenue! Also if there are programs that are subsidising lower productivity and bad labour allocation, you are allowed to stop doing that, and instead use that money to pay down debt.
3) Continue to do this until you have maxed your credit rating to make borrowing for investment not just for government but private citizens cheaper. Cheaper credit and investment are good things.
4) Healthy economies are able to harness the work of new workers to both increase overall output and also producrity by virtue of improved scale of operations and complexity. You can use this exploit by inviting immigrants to come to your country, providing the upside of new workers, but instead of you paying to raise and teach them, they bring forex and pay to join your economy as a useful worker and citizen! It’s like magic, and everybody wins!
Some things you’ll want to avoid:
– Dramatically reducing trade opportunities for your businesses by ending helpful trade deals,
– increase spending while decreasing revenue,
– gratuitously stifle your labour force,
– give up suddenly and spike your deficit without warning. This is not actually austerity, and you need to stop calling it that.
You can improve this method with a Shawinigan handshake. Then ride off into the sunset like a total boss whose 3 terms were a total mike drop for liberalism.
On that note, don’t be Liz Truss. That part is critical.
4 Comments
Thanks for the picture. Very hot 🥵
The economy needed structural reform(YIMBY planning) as well as fiscal stimulus to revive growth after the great recession. Austerity in a weak economy delayed recovery. I would invest in infrastructure a lot and try to go all in on green manufacturing through an industrial strategy.
Through to calm markets, I would create a cross departmental taskforce to consolidate welfare programs like creating a negative income tax. If I had a lot of political capital, I would look into reforming NHS through an expanded private sector role since that seems to be a big driver of spending.
I would also cut funding to Quangos, consultants, and other non-profits and do more stuff in house.
* Chill out a bit, and don’t do too much, too fast.
* Don’t assume cyclical issues are structural. Temporary spikes in unemployment or welfare spending may reflect the economy, not permanent problems. If you need to fix these, do it after the economy recovers.
* Distribute the burden differently – young working-age adults are critical for recovery, while old, wealthy homeowners are less structurally significant. Yet, it was the former who took most of the hit.
* Keep investment up in long term productivity boosters – infrastructure, education, and so on. They help short term by boosting demand and long term by boosting productivity.
It’s worth looking at one of the most successfully executed austerity plans in history – the Liberal government of Jean Chretien’s first term, culminating in the legendary/infamous 1995 budget.
Canada went from 25% of federal expenditures being interest payments to <10% and falling with a balanced budget.
1) Trade and economic growth are good. If you’ve promised to do something insane like constrict trade with your most important partner, instead, don’t do that and go all in on free trade. Also, invest in highly productive sectors, especially in infastructure, and R&D. Interestingly, having your economy grow is really helpful to balancinf the budget, because…
2) Having a long running deficit, especially one that is greater than GDP growth, happens when you bring in less revenue than you spend. It’s also bad. So what you want to do is spend less money and increase tax revenue. This is called arithmetic. Introducing or increasing things like a sales tax can be really helpful in, you guessed it, increasing revenue! Also if there are programs that are subsidising lower productivity and bad labour allocation, you are allowed to stop doing that, and instead use that money to pay down debt.
3) Continue to do this until you have maxed your credit rating to make borrowing for investment not just for government but private citizens cheaper. Cheaper credit and investment are good things.
4) Healthy economies are able to harness the work of new workers to both increase overall output and also producrity by virtue of improved scale of operations and complexity. You can use this exploit by inviting immigrants to come to your country, providing the upside of new workers, but instead of you paying to raise and teach them, they bring forex and pay to join your economy as a useful worker and citizen! It’s like magic, and everybody wins!
Some things you’ll want to avoid:
– Dramatically reducing trade opportunities for your businesses by ending helpful trade deals,
– increase spending while decreasing revenue,
– gratuitously stifle your labour force,
– give up suddenly and spike your deficit without warning. This is not actually austerity, and you need to stop calling it that.
You can improve this method with a Shawinigan handshake. Then ride off into the sunset like a total boss whose 3 terms were a total mike drop for liberalism.
On that note, don’t be Liz Truss. That part is critical.
Good luck!