So what’s up with the UK? Well Mr
Osborne is bending the truth quite a bit when he says what I have laid out
above. There are/will be some tax cuts, notably the decreasing amount for corporation
tax, enterprise zones, dropping the 50p tax rate and the personal rate for income
tax rising to £9,000. But where are the incentives for local government to
decrease their business rates (particularly important due to the government
wanting an emphasis on small business growth)? Why is VAT, capital gains tax
and overall the tax level for the highest earners, who have the most capital to
spend, up? The debt is going up, not down. The lack of cutting by the
government means they are spending more on stimulus than Gordon Brown leading
to the deficit falling slower than first predicted in 2010. No wonder there isn't
any growth the Treasury hasn't got a clue what it is doing. Is it trying
Keynesian stimulus methods that will in the short term create economic growth
but accumulate more debt making the problem worse in the future or is the focus
on market liberation by cutting spending and lowering tax?
There is also another element of
a lack of capital in the UK with any left being spent on depreciation and not
investment creating growth. The UK banks have to keep a high proportion of their
capital stored in case of another crisis, helped out by quantitative easing. The
low interest rate too means there is a lack of savings. Government stimulus as replacement
for this capital shortfall is not appropriate, not only because it’s piling on
the debt mountain, but because government is clueless to what is sound
investment i.e. HS2 and wind turbines. We need to examine firstly lowering the
amount of money the banks keep in case of a crisis and then, possibly sooner
rather than later, raise interest rates so people can create capital through
savings. It’s going to have to happen sometime.
So how can we get growth? Well firstly Government needs to decide to cut taxes and actually reduce government expenditure instead of trying half-heartedly to stimulate short term growth by Keynesian spending. After this is set in place we must then examine the lack of capital in the UK by reducing bank emergency funds and beginning to raise interest rates, because despite this making borrowing for investment less attractive there is little capital to borrow from anyway with fewer savings.
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