It’s the Economy, Stupid

 

It’s the Economy, Stupid

by Mustang- Our man on the beat in Great Britain

 

During the 1992 presidential campaign, where George H. W. Bush sought reelection against William Jefferson Clinton, the United States was in an economic recession.  The impact of this can be demonstrated by the fact that in March 1991, Bush had a 90% approval rating (following the ground invasion of Iraq[1]), but in August 1992, his approval rating was somewhere in the neighborhood of 36%.

James Carville, working for Clinton as his campaign manager, addressed his campaign staff on issues that might work for Clinton during the final run for the White House.  Carville thought the campaign should focus on three things: (1) Change vs. more of the same; (2) Don’t forget about healthcare, and (3) It’s the economy, stupid.

We’ve heard that phrase repeated frequently in subsequent elections.  The problem is that beyond its underlying truth, no one really knows how the economy works.  We do have a sense about the level of our disposable income, but most of us have no clear idea how political policies impact against our financial circumstances.  Not to worry, though … economists don’t know, either.

Here’s something else we do not know: recent history.

European Economic Community

In 1957, several European nations formed what was then called the European Economic Community (ECC).  Great Britain was not part of this effort, primarily because French President Charles de Gaulle refused to allow British membership.  The UK’s admission finally came in 1973, after de Gaulle stepped down as president.  But two years later, in 1975, Britain’s ruling Labor Party held a referendum on whether the UK should remain in the EEC.  Sixty-five percent of the British people answered with an overwhelming “yes”.

In 1983, the Labor Party was trying to win the national election on a platform of withdrawing from the EEC.  The attempt failed and Margaret Thatcher was reelected by a significant margin.

In 1997, fourteen years after the EEC became the European Union (EU) James Goldsmith formed a Referendum Party, pledging to hold a national referendum on the question of the UK remaining in the EU.  Goldsmith’s efforts garnered him less than 3% of the nation’s support and the referendum party failed to win even one seat in the Parliament.

In 2012, Prime Minister David Cameron rejected calls for a referendum on this issue, but a year later, he announced that a referendum would be held were he to be reelected in 2015.  Soon after his reelection, the European Referendum Act was introduced to initiate the process of national referendum.  In 2016, Cameron announced that the referendum would be held on 23 June.  Cameron was a staunch advocate for remaining in the EU; when the vote overwhelmingly demanded withdrawal, Cameron resigned.  Suddenly, the burden of creating an acceptable formula for Brexit fell upon Theresa May, who at the time was serving as Home Secretary … her political background was that of a “one nation conservative.”

This is the recent history of the Brexit novella.  Now, as to economists …

In the USA, there are somewhere around 15,000 non-academic economists.  They earn from around $83,000 to $150,000 annually.  They earn these remarkable salaries even when their predictions and analyses are completely wrong.  In fact, economics is such a lucrative vocation that American universities grant close to 1,000 PhDs every year.  We find these people employed by private corporations, followed by federal and state governments; at the lower end of the income scale we find college professors who earn their pay by spouting economic theory.

In contrast to the foregoing, the United Kingdom only hosts around 1,000 economists, most of whom work for the government in more than thirty different departments.  What this suggests to me is that there is less “noise” about economics in the UK than there is in the United States —which is not to suggest that we understand it any better than our British cousins, only that we’re exposed to more of it than they are.

Economists earn their robust salaries by “studying and analyzing” data in order to identify trends in various economic activities, predict confidence levels, and attitudes among consumers.  To accomplish this, they rely on mathematics and computer programming (normally referred to as models).  From these processes come recommendations about how to improve the economy or take advantage of developing trends.  In the United States, there are no legally required educational requirements or licensure for an economist.  All that’s needed in order to bill oneself as an economist is 21 semester hours of college study, bolstered by a few more hours of introductory statistics, accounting, or calculus.  There are numerous fields within which an economist could be employed, including banking, finance, accounting, marketing, lobbying, and political consulting.  In other words, an economist has about the same veracity in his field as a meteorologist has in his.

I’m no economist.  In fact, the more I know about such things, the less I understand.  Currently, I’m trying to understand the clamor in the United Kingdom regarding its impending exit from the European Union (called Brexit).  Should I rely on anything British politicians are saying about Brexit, I would end up with less understanding, not more.  In this, I join the ranks of most British citizens.  Unhappily, for the British people, their economists know even less than I do.

So —I’ve been searching for a single document that will tell me what “we” might expect to happen in the post-Brexit world.  I’ve sort of found the answer …

According to a paper created by Gemma Tetlow and Alex Stojanovic of the Institute for Government, the result of Brexit all depends on what your definition of the word is, is.  This rather lengthy paper underwhelming concluded, “Brexit will lead to a significant change in the UK’s relationship with other European countries.”

In essence:

1.     There are as many economic projections about the effects of Brexit as there are British economists

2.     Each projection depends on as many varying economic assumptions (otherwise known as guesses)

3.     None of these economic models will be accurate if any of their assumptions are wrong

 

Well, I suppose that economic relationships are at best difficult to understand.  As an example, two years ago, the United Kingdom was the tenth largest export economy in the world.  That’s the good news.  The bad news is that the UK imported from other countries far more than it exported.  We call this a negative trade balance.  In 2016, the UK had a negative trade balance of $235 billion.  Of course, the British trade imbalance is far less than ours, but as a measure of the British economy, comparing it to the trade imbalance in 1995, (using the current value of money) it came to only $52 billion.  The question then becomes, how has membership in the EU benefited the British economy or its people?

There is more that confuses me.  Why wouldn’t the United Kingdom prefer trade with the United States over the European Union?  The US and UK share a common language, a similar legal system, similar institutions, are culturally compatible, and, allowing for sophisticated marketing schemes, American consumers might prefer British goods over those made in China.  In both economies, the service sector is the largest percentage of the national economy.  Neither country produces as many goods as they did forty or fifty years ago … significant because the services sector simply sells things to people who earn their living by selling things to other people.  Wealth isn’t what you sell, it’s what you produce.

The European Union hosts a single market.  There are economists who argue that EU membership fails to serve the interests of the British people, particularly as it applies to agriculture.  EU regulations control the way farmers produce their goods, how much of it they are allowed to produce, and amazingly, how much they can charge.  This is not free-market capitalism—and agriculture is but one sector of several.  Even if we ignore such limitations as language, legal systems, enforcement mechanisms, there is hardly any convincing argument favoring EU membership.

Granted, there is much I don’t understand about the complexities of a national economy —but here is what I do know:  Great Britain is the third largest economy in Europe (after Germany and France).  The agricultural sector is intense, highly mechanized, and perhaps the most efficient in all of Europe.  The UK produces 60% of Europe’s food needs and does so with less than two percent of the total labor force.  The British control large sources of energy.  Financial services are key drivers of British GDP growth.  It’s weakest link: manufacturing.  Why, then, shouldn’t the UK capitalize on its strengths while working to improve its weakest sector?

My guess is that British politicians, much like our own, rely too heavily on the advice of egg-head economists, and not enough on basic common sense.  High tax rates are harmful to every economy.  In Great Britain, social service expenditures are far too high.  Deficit spending is a major problem … one of the highest in the G-7 nations (3.6% of GDP).  Currently, the UK is attempting to lower its corporate tax rate from 20% to 17% … a good first step, but income taxation is a disaster of epic proportions.  British citizens are taxed at 20% of their income up to £46,350, and 40% of their income over that amount to £150,000.  This makes no sense to me; every £1 (or dollar) a citizen pays in taxes equates to £1 (or dollar) that is unavailable for consumer spending or saving.  Consumer spending benefits the national economy; saving money is in the long-term interest of individual citizens.

As Great Britain seeks to reestablish its economy, Brexit may indeed cause an economic slowdown, but in the long-term, the economy could grow substantially … but this depends entirely upon how well British politicians understand the impact of their all-too-often brainless policy decisions.

Maybe there is someone in reader-land who could sort this out for me.  I’d certainly welcome the education.


[1] In the United States, people always approve of ground invasions whenever they don’t have to participate in them.

Mustang has other great reads over at his two blogs – Thoughts from Afar

with Old West Tales and Fix Bayonets

Great Britain and BREXIT – An Objective View

 

UK BREXIT

An objective View

by Mustang (Our man on the beat)

I should perhaps begin by saying that I never once thought that the United Kingdom joining the European Union was a good idea.  Over the space of forty years of British membership in the EU, the people of Great Britain, increasingly fed up with the onerous taxes placed upon them by the EU Parliament, came to a similar conclusion.

Former Prime Minister David Cameron, in a political move he calculated would fail, agreed to place the question of continuing EU membership before the British people.  The result of that referendum reflected the overwhelming desire of the Brits to reclaim their national identity, and like the child he is, Cameron resigned.

Teresa May was elected to replace Cameron.  To be fair, the task in finalizing Brexit has been an onerous task.  Ms. May has not only had to contend with the animosity of the EU member states (which at times, has been damned insulting to the United Kingdom), she’s also had to fight the Labor Party as well.  I should also note that the Leader of the British Labor Party is a devout Marxist who champions the notion of a new world order on the global socialist model.  For May, it has been an uphill battle from her very first day in office.  With that said, Teresa May is no Maggie Thatcher.

EU membership is supposed to provide distinct advantages to member states, such as “free trade,” but the cost of membership has far outweighed its benefits.  EU Membership requires that nations give up their national identity and their autonomy.  According to the EU membership application process, states must comply with all standards and rules, and every decision made by the home legislature is subject to the approval or veto of all other member states.  Currently, there are 35 chapters of rules, regulations, and policies with which each member state must adhere, and these (individually and collectively) are quite substantial.

These EU regulations detail the conditions and obligations of member states in such areas as energy, environment, immigration, cross-border movement, transportation, communications, and banking/finance.  Each member state must also “pay their fair share” of membership.  Let’s just call it what it is: a tax.  To the weight of the tax (which is always passed along to the citizens) we must add the impact of EU regulations, which have the effect of stifling British commerce in a very substantial way.  So, the British people want out —and I don’t blame them one bit.

A short word about Britain’s fair share of the EU tax burden.  In 2008, the British people were forced to pony up to the tune of £2.7 billion (about $2 billion).  In 2013, the UK’s “fair share” was £11.3 billion.  The EU, as with every government, has never seen a tax that it didn’t like.  To put this tax burden into perspective, the UK’s annual gross domestic product is $2.95 trillion; the US GDP is $19.49 trillion.

So, while we generally think of the UK as a highly productive society, that productivity is but a small percentage of our own.  What this means is that the average citizen in the UK scrapes to get by.  While their per capita GDP is $44,000/annually (ours is about $60,00), their tax burden substantially reduces British purchasing power.  British citizens pay a 20% tax at the basic rate, 40% for incomes over £34,500, and 45% for incomes exceeding £150,000.  Add to this the Value Added Tax of 20%.  It may seem that the average British citizen earns a good income, the picture changes significantly after taxes.

Think of it this way: when average Americans decide to purchase a newer car, they are likely to visit a new car dealership.  There are such things in the United Kingdom, but most people “upgrade” to a new used car.  It’s all they can afford.

At this point, we should wonder what the kerfuffle is all about.  Teresa May has not done a very good job negotiating the Brexit agreement with the European Union.  The agreement that she’s settled on places her country at a substantial economic disadvantage.

I don’t have all the details, of course, but I know that under May’s proposal, the UK will continue as an “associate member” of the EU, which means that the UK will still be taxed, and the EU will continue to control (to some extent) the UK’s trading relationships with other countries.  It is also my understanding that given the agreement that May has worked out, the UK would be prohibited from negotiating a free trade agreement with other countries … the US, for example.  If this is true, even in spite of Brexit, the UK is not the master of its own destiny.

Conservatives in the British Parliament do not support such a deal with the EU.  Yesterday, there was a question about national confidence in the leadership of Teresa May; last night, the Parliament voted to decide whether to retain Teresa May as Prime Minister.  They voted to keep her in the job.  What this means, to me, is that even conservative members of Parliament aren’t convinced that Brexit is the right choice for Great Britain.

How sad is that?  It leads me to conclude that politics in the UK remains as fractious as it always was.  Political division is the history of the British political system —and this may go a long way in helping to explain our own politics.  After all, Great Britain is our mother country.  Our apples, or so it seems, have not fallen far from the tree.

Prime Minister May’s terrorism solution? Restrict the Internet

It would be one thing if control of the internet was focused on radical Islam converting others to mayhem and violence. But if history tells us anything, control of speech ends up as  the first step and the hallmark of moving toward a totalitarian State. So if you have concern that Prime Minister May might be a bad choice in the upcoming British election, check out my earlier post Could the British Labor Party Corbyn Win the British Election?  Here we go with the latest.

British Prime Minister Theresa May called for a bold measure after her nation suffered yet another deadly terror attack in the heart of London.

No, May did not call for reforming the United Kingdom’s immigration policies or shutting down known extremist mosques. She instead called for restricting the internet.

“We need to work with allied democratic governments to reach international agreements to regulate cyberspace to prevent the spread of extremist and terrorism planning,” May stated in her Sunday speech. She also declared that the “pluralistic values of Britain” must be established as “superior” to any other value set.

The UK already has a lengthy record for targeting so-called “Islamophobia” spread on the Internet. Back in 2013, the British government arrested several citizens in the middle of the night over their “racist” comments following a Muslim extremist decapitating British soldier Lee Rigby in broad daylight.

In February 2016, U.K. police arrested a Scottish man who was upset over the large number of refugees who were set to settle in his small town. A month later, authorities detained a London man for his apparently “Islamophobic” tweet in response to the Brussels terror attack.

And this is just the United Kingdom being discussed here. Pretty much every single Western European country is obsessed with silencing “hate speech” online and Germany has gone as far as to threaten to hit Facebook with a massive $53 million fine if the platform doesn’t comply with its demands to censor “offensive” views.

More at  Daily Caller

Could the British Labor Party Corbyn Win the British Election?

Could Labour’s Corbyn Actually Win the British Elections? | The Nation

Theresa May seems to shrink by the day, with her lead now in the single digits, while Corbyn has found his voice. So goes the headline. A guest post by Mustang gives us his thoughts on the matter:

British Elections

British elections are nothing if not fascinating.  At present, elections are in full swing, with voting to occur on 8 June.  While I am not at all surprised leftists vying for control of the House of Commons, I am amazed that a leading labor contender has any hope at all gaining a position in Parliament.

Jeremy Corbyn, leader of the labor movement and a former leader of the opposition is one of those leftists who despite communism’s horrendous track record continues to embrace policies guaranteed to destroy a nation’s economic viability and social stability.  What makes Corbyn an astonishing study is that for a time, he was not even able to maintain the confidence of other important labor leaders.  In 2016, labor MPs passed a vote of no confidence [in Corbyn] (172 to 40), but within a few months Corbyn did retain his party’s leadership with 62% of the House’s labor vote.  Corbyn’s record is one that leaves me scratching my head.

Writer Kate McCann recently told us in the Daily Telegraph, “Labour has drawn up a secret plan to allow thousands of unskilled migrants to enter the UK following Brexit.”  Corbyn intends to reinstitute a visa scheme that allows unskilled workers to move to the United Kingdom —where they will compete with British workers in such areas as farming and industrial production.  No doubt the long-term plan, if this arrangement is ever re-implemented, will set the stage for wage increases, growth of minority populations, and raising the cost of goods and services to consumers.  Increased prices will curtail spending, and this in turn will increase levels of middle class unemployment.

My conclusion is that Corbyn’s plan is no more than an assault upon the middle class, which in any civilized society is the engine of a vibrant economy.

Corbyn’s background is probably typical of those involved with the so-called progressive movement: he became entranced with socialist ideals and the British labour movement while still a young lad and has been stuck on stupid ever since.  As an aside, I think we ought to dispense with such terms as “progressive” because the word suggests something other than what it is.  Again, turning to the man who would know, Vladimir Lenin instructed us, “The purpose of socialism is communism.”  In this sense, Corbyn has much in common with Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders: he has never seen a mass-murdering communist he didn’t adore.

The question remains: who in their right mind would vote for a man like this to represent them in Parliament, and why would any middle-class voter support an avowed communist?  The answer probably lies, as it does in the United States, in how much free stuff Corbyn is willing to offer in exchange for votes.  My bet is that large numbers of minorities living in the UK will turn out for more free stuff.  Again, where does all this inane thinking originate?  Schools?  At church?  From consuming stagnant water?

As I said earlier, British elections are fascinating; I’ll be watching the results of the upcoming competition with interest.