Notes on the Front

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

April 20th Evening: The Recession Diaries

Recession 161 Pat Leahy examines the impact a Left-led government might make on the economy and concludes . . . well, I’m not quite sure what the conclusion is. Indeed, I’m not any wiser about what the impact might be. He does ask the relevant question:

‘But what does the advocacy of a left-wing government actually mean? Does it mean simply that people don’t like the current government, or is there a characteristic left-wing alternative in gestation? And what would such a government do about the principal – in some ways, the only – question of the day: the economic crisis?’

Good question. To my mind, one of the most important questions. The problem is that Leahy treats us to a discussion on taxation and, while this is an important sub-component of economic strategy, it is only a part, not the whole. In short, if I thought the whole debate over the policies of a Left-led government boiled down to where we shift the incidence of taxation, I’d say it’s not worth the effort.

I don’t blame the various individuals quoted in the article – representing the broad spectrum of the Left. When the questions are framed within a set of restrictive parameters, it’s hard to break out and address the core issues of the crisis. Leahy (and I don’t think this is being unfair to him) is one of many, the majority in fact, who believes the crux of the debate is about what combination of tax increases and spending cuts need to be implemented to reduce the fiscal deficit. As it happens, I don’t. The debate should be about generating economic growth – saving and creating jobs while stimulating spending and investment. And when you look out at the world around us there is only one agency that can do that at the moment – the state.

So, while Leahy treats us to a sometimes surreal discussion – how much tax must be imposed, definitions of ‘well-off’, protecting public serivces that were starved of resources even before this recession kicked-in (concluding with that totally discredited McDowellist-line of juxtaposing efficiency and equality) – there are different, outside-the-orthodox-box responses to be made:

‘Mr. Leahy, the first thing a Left-led government will do is massively roll-back the levies on all incomes save for the highest – slash both the income and Health levies. That’s what a Left-led government will do.’

Now Pat’s teeth may fall out if he hears this from a high-tax, high-spend leftie – but then there’s that report from his same newspaper about falling retail spending.

Emperian, a global information services provider, has calculated that while in January the number of people visiting shops fell by 0.8 percent compared with the previous January; falling by 3.8 percent in February – the number fell by 8 percent in March.

'Mark Mullally, property services manager at Experian, said that the increased income and health levies in the budget earlier this month would exacerbate the situation for retailers, as people would have less disposable income.'

 Exacerbate might be an understatement.

Moving on, Leahy, after he picks up his teeth, will then ask – If you’re going to reduce levies, you’re going to have to cut spending; what would you cut?

‘Actually, Mr. Leahy, a Left-led government would do just the opposite. It will increase public expenditure – considerably. It will generate jobs in the public sector and, through public procurement, in the private sector. It will invest in infrastructure and public services. It will subsidise jobs to prevent redundancies. It will pursue wage and income maintenance strategies to stimulate demand. It will dare to spend, borrow, invest and lend.’

I can see Pat’s hand reaching for his mobile to ring the emergency psychological hot-line service for his interviewee. But he won't resist one more question – How can this be done? We can’t afford to borrow anymore. In that name of all that is holy, what are you talking about?

(sigh) 'The Government tell us we can’t afford a stimulus programme because it would mean higher borrowing, which we allegedly can’t afford. But they’re increasing borrowing because of rising unemployment. And they’re proposing a massive borrowing splurge to bail out the banks. So, we can borrow to maintain people on the dole and buy worthless assets. But we can’t borrow to put people back to work and invest in productive assets.' (shrug)

Once we step outside the narrow, deflationary parameters imposed by the orthodoxy, we can conceptualise an alternative programme for the economy. We must first, however, take that step. The Left has good instincts, the better instincts, but for some reason it hesitates to act on them.

Late last year, Labour called for a major stimulus programme and has consistently made the point that the fiscal deficit is the result of economic contraction and rising unemployment, not the other way around. Sinn Fein launched a comprehensive job-creation and training policy document. Such investment programmes would cost billions. This is what almost every other industrialised country, large and small, is doing in one form or another – growing, not deflating economies.

However, in the run-up to the budget, everything got terribly foggy. Labour stated, in its pre-budget submission:

'This deficit is unsustainable, and a major fiscal correction is required.'

From this, Labour argued for a deflationary approach, albeit far less than what the Government had been rumoured to be considering. Nonetheless, the bottom line figures – in terms of borrowing – ended up being rather similar. Sinn Fein produced a range of ‘fiscal’ measures to reduce the budget deficit but still ended up pretty close to where the Government ended up.

The proposals that each party made were far, far better than what the April budget produced: the tax increases focused on higher income groups and wealth, rather than reducing the disposable incomes of low and average income groups. In this respect, it was progressive. However, both parties failed to integrate their stimulus expenditure costs, which would in the short to medium term substantially increase Government spending, into their proposals for the April budget.

No question that progressives must argue for fiscal consolidation measures as part of a total package of economic investment. Those measures must limit the deflationary effect. But at the end of the day, any stimulus programme will cost. For example, a minimal programme would cost 2 percent of GDP – or €3.5 billion. There is no getting around or hiding the fact that calls to increase investment to save and create jobs will mean a higher deficit in the initial stages – more borrowing, more borrowing costs. Neither party factored this in.

The Left’s arguments for stimulus investment and fiscal measures are disconnected. They hang separately, not together. I would suggest this is not because Labour or Sinn Fein, the trade union movement or progressives in general, accept the deflationary programme proposed by Fianna Fail and supported by Fine Gael. They don’t. In fact, they know it won’t work.

Unfortunately we have, so far, failed to integrate the fiscal and the expansionary into a self-support stimulus strategy, failed to start the difficult, challenging work of creating a macro-economic alternative. Because of that, we are trapped, unable, unwilling to step outside the parameters laid down by the deflationary orthodoxy.

Realising this, knowing that our instincts are correct, is a start. It’s not a substitute for work but it is a motivator. Unless we begin this work, however, and step outside the trap, we can talk all night about realignment, political cooperation, a new progressive front that challenges the conservative political consensus for the first time in history.

But come morning time we still won’t have anything to say.

10 responses to “April 20th Evening: The Recession Diaries”

  1. Barry Avatar

    Michael,
    I too am utterly dismayed by the government’s disregard for the fate of people’s livelihoods.
    However, I am also more or less convinced by the argument that our cost base is too high and that it has to be reduced. That means lower everything; prices, wages, the lot.
    Can the state promote fiscal stimulus as well as bring our cost base down?

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  2. dissertation help Avatar

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  3. CMK Avatar

    Great post, Michael, and as ever a potent riposte to the ongoing muddled thinking that ‘informs’ the media consensus and attempts to explain how we get out the current mess. I think your point about a stimulus package and the creation of more, not less, public sector jobs is very well made. It’s counter intuitive in the current debate but you’ve hit on perhaps the key element for future recovery. My firm belief is the state will have to, regardless of ideological baggage, go back to the creation of large semi-state business (in renewable energy, for instance) as the key driver for further economic growth. FDI will continue to be important, but we can’t rely on that as heavily in the future,as we did in the past. And let’s not get our hopes up about the fabled Irish entrepreneurial class. The latter will likely continue taking the easy option of property speculation, gimmicky companies and websites or the all round mickey-mouse economic activities that seem, to me at least, to typify the Irish ‘entrepreneur’. Ireland will never possess a socially conscious entrepreneurial class of sufficient scale to be economically significant. It’ll always be true to it’s nature: selfish, anti-social, anti-worker, tax dodging, fundamentally lazy, perpetually whinging etc. etc. etc. ad infinitum. The state, through semi-state businesses, will have to be the driving force our knowledge based economy going. That means, more public sector jobs, as you correctly point out. The public sector will be the eventual saviour of the Irish economy. It won’t happen of course, but there’s no harm in dreaming…
    Barry, yes costs need to be controlled. A few strategic price controls (in housing, professional fees and energy, for instance) need to be permanently imposed and administered. You can have control over your cost base or you can let the market run riot: but you can’t have the market determining prices and control of your cost base.

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  4. Jim Avatar

    Michael,
    I admire your resilience in writing these superb posts continuously without becoming disheartened. I, and all I do is privately ponder between golf, work and family time; am fit to explode.
    Head and brick wall really do come to mind. I have a massive problem with ff and fg or tweedledumb and twee(can’t muster effort to finish). Can I begin by saying that I am not like the guy from ‘One Foot in the Grave’ naturally, and normally I am revlatively bright eyed and optimistic, but I have been getting a serious growing pain of recent years. To exemplify; I wathced a bit of prime time last night, some FF guy was on – minister for defending my corner inanyway and exhaling when interview is over with a look around for someone to tell me how it went and what was said – kind of guy.
    Now Miriam had pinned this guy down on the shopping in the north issue, he danced around declaring that first of all they (the govt. god love us) first had to ascertain who was causing the price differential. He was admiting therefore that he didn’t know. Miriam bobbed and struck with a ‘you are the minister – you should know’ lance. Your man – reverted to repeat mode that we need to ascertain whether it is the retailer or the wholesaler, or the supplier (looked like he found out there were a number of words for shopping in last six months).
    OH SWEET MOTHER AND MARY OF ALL THAT IS WITHIN OUR SENSES.
    The problem wih Fianna Fail is that they do not have any ideology (perhaps other than brits out and irish good; oh and life is about taking and sorting stuff out for people nodnod winkwink – sure we will look after that, howyrya, youll do the best you can for us – sound man.
    So action man from last night can sit there and discuss who is to blame for the price increases. I am screaming at the tv (frightening the life out of the child) saying ‘what has that got to do with you’
    IN THE NAME OF ALL THAT IS HOLY AND UNHOLY – – HOW CAN YOUY SPEND A DECADE CHAMPIONING THE MARKET AND WITHOUT BREAKING A SWEAT DECIDE THAT YOU NEED TO POLICE THE MARKET AT A FUNDAMENTAL LEVEL. NOT EVEN VIA VAT OR ANYTHING AS INDIRECT AS THAT BUT BY FINDING OUT WHO IS UPPING THEIR PRICE AND BY GOD STOPPING THEM (WE ASSUME, NEVER QUITE GOT TO WHAT WOULD BE DONE).
    HOW CAN WE DO THAT – WELL WE CAN BECAUSE WE DIDN’T KNOW WE WERE CHAMPIONING AN UNFETTERED MARKET IN THE FIRST PLACE. AS PAT SHORT’S SCHOOL TEACHER’S CAHARACTER SAID TO MOLONEY – GO OUT THERE AND DO IT MALONEY CAUSE YOU’VE THE STUFF TO DO IT, CAUSE YOUR THICK ENOUGH!!
    Well is it the man’s fault that he hasn’t a clue what he is talking about – I don’t know and at this stage I don’t care. I believe our focus should be how we improve the Labour party – not scream at people that Labour is better suited than this bunch of.
    I guess maybe my anger and this tirade stems from the feeling that stupidity in itself is a subjective thing at best, and shouldn’t really be seen as the fault of the carrier, it is the misplace confidence that one is not stupid and is indeed worthy , and of leader/representative material, that is the problem. We have two major parties – neither of whom stand for anything other than a historical disagreement. Both attract a generational following of people who want to have power – want to be bigknobs around their area, perhaps to help – perhaps not; and unrelenting machines of group delusion in the form of back slapping for these same ?? in the first place. We need to grow up or else go the whole sad hog and as I said before get the healy-rae family to take over the finance department and the central bank. You can not always look after people and get stuff for them – there is still a limit to stuff. You must stand for something, be it less or more governmental economic involvement or anything else you choose; and as members of the leading national media, it is not enough that you find holes in arguments that are suspended on abysses of incredible voids in logic. Get to the core of this, pull down the masks of competence. PHEW, I needed that.
    Keep up the good work, Michael. Martin O’Dea

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  5. Fergal Avatar

    Hi Michael,
    Well done again.George Orwell wrote that leftists put people off by using “fancy” words, with this in mind could the state let the banks collapse,nationalise the best parts and with the 50 billion this Nama lark will cost provide credit for small industry and launch a stimulus programme.Is this doable?Could it work?Any left-wing party should be attempting to redefine the whole idea of work,hours worked,ownership of means of production,leisure activities,sharing,sustainable over “productivism”and so on.How come Waterford Crystal and SR Technics weren’t transformed into workers’ cooperatives,with capital coming from the wider trade union movement and the state?Keep up the great work

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  6. Liam Avatar

    Martin, Jim.
    Ironically reading comments like yours gives me hope.
    I’ve long held FF in disregard. It began actually somewhere about the growth of the boom, when walking about Dublin city I noticed an ever increasing number of flash cars, an ever increasing mountain of wealth, and an ever increasing number of bodies, curled up in blankets on cold nights with a styrofoam cup. It was then I made up my mind that I’d never vote for them.
    That was ten years/fifteen years ago. And sadly, nothing ever changed.
    The reason I’ve got hope, is that for the first time, I get the sense that people are sick of it, or at least slowly coming to that point.
    Change is never a slow thing. People think it’s a gradual process of evolution, but in reality it’s not. The conditions for change occur slowly, granted, but the actual movement, the momentum, is an avalanche, that comes all at once as the result of a trigger/scream. It’s ever been that way.
    So for the past fifteen years I’ve ranted and raved, but few have cared to listen to me. Why should they? Their lot was improving, or so it seemed. Plus, “sure doesn’t change happen slowly?” they would ask, considering that the rising tide would lift all and sundry.
    But it doesn’t, and this is the point. It takes a sickness, an overwhelming need resulting from altered conditions.
    The guy on Primetime is a functionary. Nothing more and nothing less. He’s exposed, because like all functionaries he has to serve a purpose, and quite blatantly they’re failing.
    So I suppose what I’m saying is, have hope. I know it’s in short supply at present, but that’s the time to have it. Hope when things are going good serves no real end. It’s now it’s required. All the best.
    By the way, Michael does write good posts doesn’t he.

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  7. Alec Avatar

    Just a point, but is there no case to be made concerning our membership of the euro? Did our interest rates not need to rise before before the crash in order to dampen demand, and would a devalued irish currency not improve our ability to export?
    Just wondering what was happening to other small economies with their own currency, how are they doing?

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  8. Michael Taft Avatar

    Barry – apologies for getting back on this so late (was away for a few days). Yes, the cost base can be reduced and is currently being reduced through deflation. So that phenonemon is happening. But there is room for more concerted action. For instance, Forfas showed in its comparative study of the cost of running retail operations here and in other EU cities – that Irish workers were paid less than in Maastricht, but the overall costs of the retail operation was higher here. The main culprits were commercial rent (10 times higher than in Maastricht, IT services, etc. Another area is electricity prices – high in Ireland courtesy of Government policy to maintain an artificially high price regime to induce private companies to enter the market. In fact, tackling the real problems in our cost base would in itself provide a stimulus – in terms of cash efficiencies for businesses and households.
    Jim – I’m sure you feel better for that. And you’re not alone. There are a lot of people who just feel at bursting point. Is there a productive outlet – politically? Big question.
    Alec, no doubt that interest rate movements didn’t assist the Irish economy. But let’s not overlook that Fianna Fail were pursuing pro-cylical policies – pumping an over-heating economy during the boom, and deflating a contracting economy today. Interest rates played their part in the property boom – but so did capital tax cuts, property tax reliefs and a wild-west market in land prices.
    As to other small economies with their own currency – Iceland melted (and is trying to get into the Euro) while Latvia is being run by the IMF.

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  9. Alec Avatar

    Yes Michael, I accept the point re latvia and Iceland, but they are the two examples alsways quoted, surely there are other examples we could also be looking at.

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  10. Michael Taft Avatar

    Alec, I will attempt to do some research and get back to you on that. It’s a good area of study – especially the impact of the recession on other small, open economies and their response to it, on both a monetary and fiscal level.

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