Britain discovers that shrinking government is a lot harder than expanding it.
BY THEODORE DALRYMPLE
In Britain, government spending is now so high,
accounting for more than half of the economy, that it is increasingly
difficult to distinguish the private sector from the public. Many supposedly
private companies are as dependent on government largesse as welfare recipients
are, and much of the money with which the government pays them is borrowed. The
nation’s budget deficit in 2010, in the wake of the financial crisis, was 10.4
percent of GDP, after being 12.5 percent in 2009; even before the crisis, the
country had managed to balance its budget for only three years out of the
previous 30.
Deficits are like smoking: difficult to give up. They
can be cut only at the cost of genuine hardship, for many people will have become
dependent upon them for their livelihood. Hence withdrawal symptoms are likely
to be severe; and hardship is always politically hazardous to inflict, even
when it is a necessary corrective to previous excess. This is what Britain
faces.
For some politicians, running up deficits is not a problem but a benefit, since doing so creates a population permanently in thrall to them for the favors by which it lives. The politicians are thus like drug dealers, profiting from their clientele’s dependence, yet on a scale incomparably larger. The Swedish Social Democrats understood long ago that if more than half of the population became economically dependent on government, either directly or indirectly, no government of any party could easily change the arrangement. It was not a crude one-party system that the Social Democrats sought but a one-policy system, and they almost succeeded.
For countries that operate such a one-policy system,
especially as badly as Britain does, economic reality is apt to administer nasty
shocks from time to time, requiring action. When the new coalition government,
led by David Cameron of the Conservatives and Nick Clegg of the Liberal
Democrats, came into power last year, the economic situation was cataclysmic.
The budget deficit was vast; the country had a large trade deficit; the
population was among the most heavily indebted in the world; and the savings
rate was nil. Room for maneuver was therefore extremely limited.
The previous years of fool’s gold—asset inflation
brought by easy credit—had allowed the Labour government to expand public
spending enormously without damaging apparent prosperity. Labour’s Gordon
Brown, chancellor of the exchequer from 1997 to 2007 and then prime minister
for three years, boasted that he had found the elixir of growth: his boom,
unlike all others in history, would not be followed by bust. During Brown’s
years in office, however, three-quarters of Britain’s new employment was in the
public sector, a fifth of it in the National Health Service alone. Educational
and health-care spending skyrocketed. The economy of many areas of the country
grew so dependent on public expenditure that they became like the Soviet Union
with supermarkets.
Britain was living on borrowed money, consuming today
what it would have to pay for tomorrow, the day after tomorrow, and the day
after that; the national debt increased at a rate unmatched in peacetime; and
when the music stopped, the state found itself holding unprecedented
obligations, with no means of paying them. Without aggressive reforms, it was
clear, Britain would soon have to default on its debt or debauch its currency.
Both alternatives were fraught with dire consequences.
In the end, the new government chose to attack the
deficit from both ends: by cutting spending and by increasing taxes. As many
commentators noted, this approach risked a reduction of aggregate demand so
great that short-term growth would be impossible and a prolonged recession,
even depression, would be probable. Domestic demand would plummet, and
export-led growth, many feared, would not be able to rescue the economy, for
two reasons: first, Britain’s industry was so debilitated that its
competitiveness in sophisticated markets could not be restored from one day to
the next by, say, a favorable change in the exchange rate; and second, the
country’s traditional export markets were experiencing difficulties of their
own.
But the general economic argument was not what fueled
the fierce intellectual and street protests that in recent months have opposed
the government’s efforts to reduce the deficit—efforts so far more symbolic
than real, for state borrowing requirements have only increased since the
coalition’s arrival in power. Nor were the protests directed against the tax
increases. Since the end of World War II, the British have grown accustomed to
the idea that the money in their pockets is what the government graciously
consents to leave them after it has taken its share. When (as rarely happens)
the chancellor of the exchequer reduces a tax instead of increasing it, even
conservative newspapers say that he has “given money away,” as if all money
came from him in the first place. The wealth is the government’s and the
fullness thereof: where such a belief is prevalent, no tax increase will seem
either illegitimate or oppressive.
What did provoke the furious opposition was the
government’s proposals to reduce spending in such areas as education and health
care, as well as its plan to increase tuition at public universities. Hundreds
of thousands of demonstrators, disproportionately consisting of public workers
and students, gathered on London’s streets. One demonstrator, Charlie Gilmour,
became famous. The adopted son of the lead guitarist of Pink Floyd, with a
personal fortune estimated at $160 million, he was the very image of the caviar
anarchist. Dressed expensively in black and booted to match, his dark locks
flowing poetically behind him, he stomped the roofs of cars and stormed the
Cenotaph, the most important war memorial in the country. Later, he claimed not
to have realized what it was, though he was a student—of history, no less—at
Cambridge, and you would need to be either illiterate or virtually blind to
miss the words OUR GLORIOUS DEAD inscribed on it. His contrition and appearance
in court in a suit and tie, in an attempt to avoid a prison sentence, afforded
the nation some light relief in these most difficult times.
The student demonstrators were right to be angry, but
their anger was misdirected. They were merely protesting the prospect of paying
for their education, which would force upon them or their parents the difficult
but important question of whether the university education that they received
was worth the debt that they would incur to pay for it. How easy it is to
proceed to college without having to consider such sordid matters, or make such
difficult calculations, because the state—that is to say, the
taxpayer—subsidizes you!
In fact, British young people have been subjected to a
gross deception, which, if they recognized it, would make them far angrier than
the demonstrators were. The previous government decreed that 50 percent of
British youth should attend university, irrespective of students’ educational
attainment or of the economy’s capacity to make use of so many graduates. In so
doing, it doubled state expenditure on education in only eight years. This
centralized planning had a predictable effect: the standard of university teaching
and education fell significantly, as did the value of the average degree. While
the number of graduates expanded, employers complained that young Britons were
increasingly unable to write a simple sentence properly or do basic arithmetic.
For the students, however, the connotation of
university education lagged behind its denotation: in other words, though
education declined in quality, students felt entitled to the same advantages
that had accrued to graduates back when education was better. Graduates
grumbled about the lowly positions that they had to take after college, which
people who had not gone to college would once have satisfactorily filled. It
was perhaps unsurprising, then, that students, suddenly asked to fund their
delayed maturation for themselves, should explode in wrath. They saw the reform
not as an attempt to align education with the needs and capacities of the real
economy—by making students question the value of education and by encouraging
universities to offer something of real value—but as a means of restricting
access to education to the rich; this despite the fact that the total loan
necessary to obtain a university education, supposedly an advantage for life,
would still be a fraction of an average mortgage.
The biggest demonstration against the government’s
proposals was on March 26. A quarter of a million people took to the streets—in
solidarity with themselves. Many were teachers protesting the proposed cuts in
education spending. Yet after a compulsory education lasting 11 years and
costing, on average, $100,000 per pupil, about a fifth of British students who
do not attend college after high school are barely able to read and write,
according to a recent study from Sheffield University. Considering the
disastrous personal consequences of being illiterate in a modern society, this
is a gargantuan scandal, amounting to large-scale theft by the educational
authorities. No anarchist ever smashed a window because of this scandal,
however; and so it is impossible to resist the conclusion that the
demonstration was in defense of unearned salaries, not (as alleged) of actual
services worth defending.
Protesters were also agitating against proposed cuts
to the National Health Service. The cumulative increase in spending on the NHS
from 1997 to 2007 was equal to about a third of the national debt. After all
this spending, Britain remains what it has long been: by far the most
unpleasant country in Western Europe in which to be ill, especially if one is
poor. Not coincidentally, Britain’s health-care system is still the most
centralized, the most Soviet-like, in the Western world. Our rates of
postoperative infection are the highest in Europe, our cancer survival rates
the lowest; the neglect of elderly hospital patients is so common as to be
practically routine. One has the impression that even if we devoted our entire
GDP to the NHS, old people would still be left to dehydrate in the hospitals.
From 1997 to 2007, the number of people employed by
the NHS rose by a third, with the number of doctors employed by it doubling and
overall remuneration for personnel increasing by 50 percent per head. Yet it
became ever more difficult for patients to see the same doctor twice, even
during a single hospital admission; the standard of medical training declined,
according to 99 percent of surgeons in training, while senior surgeons admitted
that they wouldn’t want their trainees operating on them; and a government
inquiry found that productivity in the NHS—admittedly, not easy to measure—had
declined markedly.
Wherever one looks into the expanded public sector,
one finds the same thing: a tremendous rise in salaries, pensions, and
perquisites for those working in it. In Manchester, for example, the number of
city employees earning more than $85,000 a year rose from 68 to 1,746 between
1997 and 2007. In effect, a large public service nomenklatura was created,
whose purpose, or at least effect, was to establish an immense network of
patronage and reciprocal obligation: a network easy to install but hard to
dislodge, since those charged with removing it would be the very people who
benefited most from it.
One of the Labour government’s gifts to public
employees was overly generous pensions. While Gordon Brown raised taxes on
pensions funded by private savings, he increased pensions for public-sector
workers. In many cases, these government pensions, if they had not been paid
for with current tax receipts and (to a growing extent) borrowing, would have
required funds of millions of dollars to support. In other words, Brown was
Bernard Madoff with powers of taxation. I leave it to readers to decide whether
that makes him better or worse than Madoff.
The press usually defends the public sector, viewing
it as an expression of the general will and a manifestation of a rationally
planned society, manned by selfless workers. It was thus quick to warn of the
direst possible consequences of Cameron and Clegg’s austerity measures: school
overcrowding, unnecessary deaths in hospitals, fewer or no social services. The
streets would run with blood; mass poverty would return.
Unfortunately, it does not follow from the existence
of immense waste in the public sector that budget cuts will target that waste.
After all, most of the excess is in wages, precisely the element of government
spending that those in charge of proposed reductions will be most anxious to
preserve. It is therefore in their interest that any budget reduction should
affect disproportionately the service that it is their purpose to provide:
cases of hardship will then result, the media will take them up, and the public
will blame them on the spending cuts and force the government to return to the
status quo ante. Another advantage of cutting services rather than waste, from
the perspective of the public employee, is that it makes it appear that the
budget was previously a model of economy, already pared to the bone.
I have seen it all before, whenever cuts became
necessary in the NHS budget, as periodically they did. Wards closed, but the
savings achieved were minimal because labor legislation required the staff—the
major cost of the system—to be retained. Surgical operations were likewise
canceled, though again, the staff was kept on. To effect any savings in this
manner, it was necessary for the system to become more and more inefficient and
unproductive. It was as if the bureaucracy had reversed the cry of the people
at the beginning of Lewis Carroll’s Sylvie and Bruno, “More bread! Less
taxes!,” replacing it with “More taxes! Less bread!”
So it is not surprising that the Guardian, which one
could almost call the public-sector workers’ mouthpiece, has reported that
hospital emergency departments are already feeling the budgetary pressure and
risk being overwhelmed, even before the cuts have been implemented in full.
Meanwhile, one can still find plenty of bureaucratic jobs advertised in the
Health Service Journal, the publication for nonmedical employees of the NHS.
One hospital seeks an Associate Director of Equality, Diversity, and Human
Rights; another is looking for an interim Deputy Director of Operations and
Transformation. Part of the “transformation” in that case seems to be a
reduction in the hospital’s budget, and it is instructive that the person who
will be second in command of that reduction will be paid between $1,000 and
$1,300 per day.
The legacy of Britain’s previous government, which
expanded the public sector incontinently, is thus an almost Marxian conflict of
classes, not between the haves and have-nots (for many of the people in the
public service are now well-heeled indeed) but between those who pay taxes and
those who consume them.
In this conflict, one side is bound to be more
militant and ruthless than the other, since taxes are increased
incrementally—and everyone is already accustomed to them, anyway—but jobs are
lost instantaneously and catastrophically, with the direst personal
consequences. Thus those who oppose tax increases and favor government
retrenchment will seldom behave as aggressively as those who will suffer
personally from budget reductions. Moreover, when, as in Britain, entire areas
have lived on government charity for many years—with millions dependent on it
for virtually every mouthful of food, every scrap of clothing, every moment of
distraction by television—common humanity dictates care in altering the system.
The extreme difficulty of reducing subventions once they have been granted
should serve as a warning against instituting them in the first place, but in
Britain, it appears, it never will. We seem caught in an eternal cycle, in
which a period of government overspending and intervention leads to economic
crisis and hence to a period of austerity, which, once it is over, is replaced
by a new period of government overspending and intervention, promoted by
politicians, half-charlatan and half-self-deluded, who promise the electorate
the sun, moon, and stars.
When our new government came into power—after a period
in opposition during which, fearing unpopularity, it failed to explain the real
fiscal situation to the electorate—there was broad, if reluctant, acceptance
that something unpleasant had to be done; otherwise, Britain would soon be like
Greece without the sunshine. But the acceptance was on narrow grounds only, and
this is worrying because it implies that we are far from liberating ourselves
from the binge-followed-by-austerity cycle. A large part of the public still
views the state as the provider of first resort, which means that the public
will remain what it now is: the servant of its public servants.
As soon as the crisis is over, though this may not be
for some time, the politicians are likely again to offer the public security
and excitement, wealth and leisure, education and distraction, capital
accumulation without the need to save, health and safety, happiness and
antidepressants, and all the other desiderata of human existence. The public
will believe the politicians because—to adapt slightly the great dictum of
Louis Pasteur—impossible political promises are believed only by the prepared
mind. And our minds have been prepared for a long time, since the time of the
Fabians at least.
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