Notes on the Front

Commentary on Irish Political Economy by Michael Taft, researcher for SIPTU

December 1st Evening: The Recession Diaries

Recession 95 It would be hard to disagree with the following:

'In truth, Gilmore's speech was a master class; the best that he has ever given and, probably, one of the finest orations given by any political leader at a party conference of any hue in Ireland for many a long year.'

Speaking with confidence and passion, Eamon Gilmore has certainly given his party a badly needed boost – politically and psychologically.  And it was his analysis of the economy that contained some of the most far-reaching proposals made by a senior Labour politician.  For he sketched out the outlines of a new economic stimulus plan.  Stating that neither Fianna Fail nor Fine Gael had the answers, he stated:

'In the short-term borrowing will have to rise, but our national debt is low and can take the strain. That's what the OECD recommended last Monday. But borrowing must be prudent. Used only for investment that demonstrates real return in the future. And Government should set a borrowing ceiling – a limit that must not be crossed. The National Pension Reserve Fund contains over €18 billion. A full seven years ago, Labour argued that part of this money would be better put to work investing in our own infrastructure, rather than playing the market abroad.'

And what would this extra money be spent on?  Renewable technology, green collar jobs, urban regeneration projects, hospitals, schools, community and sports centres; Gilmore even called for buying back Eircom so that we can get a proper broadband network up and running.  Jobs can be created, services expanded, and living standards raised – at least in the medium-term.

Of course, there is more to an economic recovery package than this: there is a need to critique an economy that is addicted to foreign capital, starved of a strong indigenous base, lacking in modern business practices and managerial expertise, bereft of public institutions that can make investment and productivity cohere.  But this is is a starting point where all progressives can rally together and, just as importantly, put a clear distance between the Left and the right-wing parties.

There are two obstacles, however, that must be overcome to ensure that Labour doesn't get stuck at this starting point.  First, it is clear that Gilmore's analysis still needs considerable fleshing out.  While strong on direction, it is considerably weak on details; nowhere was this shown up more than in the interviews and statements made following the speech.

There was no sense of how big this package might or might not be.  The Irish Times claimed it would cost €1 billion.  Gilmore, in an interview with Sean O'Rourke, suggested it could be €2 billion because that is what the EU Commission is seeking (a 1%-of-GDP stimulus).  Regardless of these figures, a stimulus package will have to be much more if it is to address decades of under-investment in our physical and social infrastructure, while at the same time combating recession. 

In interviews with journalists, a series of numbers were put out: doubling the national debt over the next four years, allowing borrowing to increase to 60% of GDP, etc.  Considerable work will have to be done to present a more consistent line on the scale envisaged (e.g. a doubling of the debt or allowing it to rise to 60% of the GNP suggests a level of borrowing to facilitate a €25 to €30 billion package – not the €1 or €2 billion tentatively put forward by Labour spokespersons).  This is not just a mathematical 'dotting the I's' exercise.  The Right and powerful vested interests are waiting to jump on any programme, no matter how mild or moderate, that challenges their obsession with fiscal deficits.  If Labour is not prepared when it enters the public debate, its programme will be torn apart.

Further, Labour will have to escape the limitations of 'no borrowing for current expenditure purposes'.  On This Week in Politics Gilmore stated:

'I don't think we should be borrowing to fund day-to-day spending.  I think you borrow for capital purposes, for your investment in your future, investment in people, investment in education, that's the area where you should borrow.'

Unfortunately, there is no way out of borrowing for current expenditure for years to come.  Fianna Fail projects they willl balance the current budget by 2011.  And I believe the World Cup willl be brought forward to that year and Ireland willl defeat Brazil in the final.  My belief is more grounded (I will discuss Fianna Fail's cooked books and Brazil's weak backline in a later post).  To argue that we must balance the current deficit in the short-term (three years) is to risk untold damage on the economic and social fabric, for it will entail considerable public cutbacks or general tax increases or both, lengthening and deepening the recession. 

In the context of an expansionary programe, rescuing people from the dole by providing work on infrastructural projects will help the current budget.  But remember this: much of capital expenditure results in increased current expenditure.  If you build schools (Gilmore suggested four hundred new-builds) you will need teachers, capitation grants, etc. – all increasing current expenditure.

It would be unfortunate if Labour, having escaped the right-wing fiscal trap of either spending cuts or general tax increases by calling for a programe of increased borrowing, fell right back into that trap by agreeing that we shouldn't borrow for day-to-day spending.  The urgent issue is not balancing the books – current or capital – but rather getting the economy up and running.  The current budget can be addressed on the other side of the recession and its aftermath- a process that will run for years.

The second obstacle Labour must overcome is to develop a political strategy to implement its economic programme.  Whether Labour likes it or not, they will continue to be harassed by the media and by a whole lot of interested voters: will you rule out serving in a Fianna Fail Government (Ursula Halligan was so obsessed by this issue that she didn't even cop the muchmore important news that  Labour was rejecting the fiscal conservative consensus).  Clearly, Gilmore was uncomfortable on this subject, distancing himself from Jack O'Connor's Fianna Fail-frying pan-Fine Gael-fire analogy.  He elaborated to Sean O'Rourke:

'I don't have any personal ambitions (to be Taoiseach)  . . . We've always had the ambition that Labour should aspire to lead a government.  Whether that happens in the period of time that I'm a leader remains to be seen.  I think there there are a lot of people who don't define themselves in terms of Fianna Fail or Fine Gael and want an alternative to that . . Jack O'Connor was expressing his own view.  I've worked with Fine Gael in opposition, we cooperate on a number of issues.  If you look at the last opinion poll the most likely outcome would be a Labour Fine Gael Government . . . I would prefer to see a change of government.'

If a political strategy is to be divined from this, it's that the election result will determine the composition of the government.  For Labour, this is a dangerous route.  If it doesn't declare against Fianna Fail then those who want a change of government may be worried that they won't get it if they vote Labour.  But declaring against Fianna Fail would undermine Labour's 'independence'; it would be a return to the 1980s formulation when Labour ran on an 'independent platform' but everyone knew it would support Fine Gael if the numbers fell right.  Furthermore, it would reinforce the fiction that Fine Gael constitutes a political alternative and that Labour only has a support role (it took Senator Alex White to point out that the most logical coalition partners would be the two right-wing partners). 

But, more importantly, it would strand their emerging economic programme.  For how in the world would Fine Gael coalesce with a party that calls for spending and borrowing their way out of a recession?  In fact, if any party would buy some way into that would be Fianna Fail.  This is a fundamental problem that will not go away.

Without a political strategy how can you implement your economic policy?  And what's the point of a political strategy without a policy to implement?  They are two sides of the same coin.

But one obstacle at a time.  For now, Labour must concentrate on getting to grip with the principles laid down by its party leader – to create an exciting stimulus package that can capture the imagination of voters.  In doing that, they may in time find themselves so distanced from the right-wing parties that coalescing with them as a minority partner is not an option.  And when that comes, Labour can sit down and devise itself a political strategy that will see it real win power – the power to implement its programme.

Eamon Gilmore, in one of the most provocative and welcome speeches made by a Labour leader in a long time, has launched the party on a new direction.  Where it ends up is anyone's guess, but let's hope it's an exciting and progressive place.

7 responses to “December 1st Evening: The Recession Diaries”

  1. James Avatar

    Yes, a really excellent, stirring speech. High marks for both content and style. I can’t remember a better delivered speech by an Irish politician. (Caveat: I thought the segue into Lisbon was odd – why talk about anything other than economics, let alone Lisbon, which is a toxic issue? Especially when what he said probably alienated some of his target audience.)
    Regarding Halligan – I think she is probably the worst instance of a flaw common to all political correspondants: a lack of interest in or knowledge of policy issues. Pol corrs aren’t experts in anything other than politics, hence: Gilmore makes a thrilling (relative to most Irish political discourse and in the context of the time) speech on economics and this gets reported predominantly in terms of the (admittedly important) game of alliances.
    This means politicians face an uphill task in using the media to communicate messages about policy to the masses. This reduction of politics to a policy-free, personality-centred horse-race is hugely helpful to FF/FG.
    On the question of alliances (since it must be addressed), I think that in principle the appropriate stance for Labour is complete indifference as between FF and FG. You’re right that this has the tactical downside of putting off hard-core anti-FFers. But it also has the tactical upside of helping focus debate on policy issues – every question on alliances can be answered the same way: “Labour will go into coalition with whoever will implement Labour’s policies, which are…”.

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  2. liam Avatar

    Michael,
    Agreed about the speech. Just the tonic. I also agree with you that they need to do some sums. Putting out figures like 1 and 2 billion undermines their argument.
    About the alliance question. If I can make a suggestion
    Labour should drive home the line that Fianna Fail and Fine Gael are two different faces of one and the same party, and so therefore make the question redundant. A very effective way to do so would be to combine their names: Fianna Gall comes to mind.
    It has the nice added benefit of summing up the outrage their policies provoke.

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  3. James Avatar

    It’s an old refrain on the left of course that FF and FG are Tweedledum and Tweedledee and might as well merge. But this is surely at least as true of Labour and the Greens, is it not (albeit the Greens clearly give greater emphasis to environmental issues whereas Labour is more focused on traditional social democratic positions)? If so, do we think there is any good reason for those two to exist as distinct organisations?

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  4. Michael Taft Avatar

    James, an excellent point regarding the ‘policy-free, personality-centred’ debate that is served up by the media. It is an obstacle to overcome. However, can I throw out a question. You suggest that every time the question of alliances comes up, the answer should be: “Labour will go into coalition with whoever will implement Labour’s policies, which are…”. The problem I see with this approach is that, were Labour to seriously construct an expansionist economic programme and, in the process, seriusly (and without favour) critique both the Government’s and Fine Gael’s programme, it will be readily seen that there could not possibly be any question of an alliance with these two parties – not as a minority partner. Expansion cannot be reconciled to deflationary. If that is the case, would not Labour be open to the charge that it’s not being honest with voters – by pointing out that there is no alliance possible? And if they do point that out, what next?
    Liam, yes – Fianna Gael or Fine Fail. We could merge Cowen’s and Kenny’s face through photoshop and put the whole thing on t-shirts. However, having done that, Labour will have to go and build it’s own alliance – made up of trade unions, social organisaitons and political parties that agree with it (even the Greens, even though they are in Government). That would make an even more interesting t-shirt.

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  5. James Avatar

    Clearly, no minority party in a coalition can implement 100% of its programme, and Labour ought to acknowledge that. Equally clearly, how badly Labour’s programme is diluted depends on the balance of power between the elements of the coalition.
    However, I think you underestimate the pragmatism of the two main parties. Clearly FG has been moving to the right, but I don’t think this shift runs terribly deep. Ironically, the lack of any deep ideological committments in the two main parties gives great scope to a minority partner to set the agenda (provided that they keep their eyes on the policy prize and maintain a credible threat of exit).
    Frankly I think it’s easier to see a FF/Lab coalition being a clearly left of centre government – not least because there’s a good chance that were this to happen it would be in circumstances where FF had just been battered in an election.
    I accept that this scenario poses a serious 1992-style problem for Labour, i.e. demonising FF before the election and coalescing with it afterwards. In a sense I think this particular kind of “options-open” independent strategy requires Labour to restrain itself from fully exploiting generic anti-FF sentiment – a near impossible task for an oppostion party – and instead focus laser-like on policy, policy, policy. Otherwise the only options are FG or forcing another election (since FF/FG coalition is an extremely long shot).

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  6. Michael Taft Avatar

    James, could I just throw out another option, beyond the FF/FG paradigm. Labour could, having rebuilt its relationship with the trade union movement, and created strong links with the myriad of social organisations, could open up discussions with the Greens, Sinn Fein and independents on the basis of – as you say – policy, policy, policy. In the last opinion poll, these three combined were within striking distance of FF and FG and could force one or the other into a Left-led coalition with Eamon Gilmore as Taoiseach. Shouldn’t the Irish people get the same option that every other peoples throughout the EU (and the industrialised world) have? The option of leading a progressive-led government? As the Carslberg ad says – it’s not always A or B.

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  7. James Avatar

    FF or FG would have to be in a truly drastic situation to accept a Labour Taoiseach – it would be hugely damaging to either party to accept that. One could argue that the leader of a coalition government should logically come not so much from the largest party in the coalition (let’s say FG in an FG-Lab-Green government) but rather from the party at the centre of that government ideologically speaking. If we accept the Greens as being in some sense to the left of Labour that would make Gilmore the candiate for Taoiseach. (The analogy in my mind is Leon Blum in 1936 in the Popular Front coalition of Communists, Socialists and the centrist Radicals.)
    But frankly the idea of a coalition consisting of FG/FF plus Labour/Greens/SF and also independents is not convincing unless the idea was to first unite the left institutionally, i.e. one big party. I don’t see how “the left” can act coherently in such a government otherwise – there will always be too great an incentive for one or other party to split from the coalition and monopolise the left opposition.
    I genuinely would love to hear ideas on this and don’t want to shoot down bold ideas with my pessimism but colour me sceptical.

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Commentary on Irish Political Economy by Michael Taft, researcher for SIPTU