The Alternative Budget 2025, Part 3: Creating a new fiscal framework
Reeves, and the folly of increasing basic income tax rates
The UK doesn’t lack homes; it lacks affordable ones. Developers won’t build what people can’t buy, and the Treasury won’t fund social housing. Poverty, rent stress, and political anger rise together. The answer is public investment, not market faith. Read on Funding the Future → #HousingCrisis #Economics #UKPolitics
Growth is not coming back — and nor should our democracy depend upon it In an article in the FT yesterday, its long-term columnist, Martin Wolf, suggested we must sacrifice both people and planet to growth to supposedly save democracy. Almost everything he wrote was wrong. It's time to move on from the ideas of neoliberal dinosaurs dedicated to destruction to a politics of care.
The great British energy rip off is now killing our green energy hopes – and the chance of cheaper electricity
What do you do when the target’s wrong? The Bank of England is missing its 2% inflation target, but so what when the target is artificial, meaningless and decidedly harmful? Isn't it time we had better economic policy rather than spending time fretting about missing goals that were set in the 1990s for reasons that no one can now recall, or explain?
We could have avoided a crash Everyone now agrees we are heading for a global financial crash. It's only a matter of when, and not if. And the sad thing is, if only we'd reformed our tax reliefs on pensions and ISAs we might have avoided this disaster that's now in the making.
Inequality is not falling Right-wing politicians and commentators are claiming that inequality is falling in the UK based on a tiny change in one national statistic, which is itself statistically insignificant. This is not the case in reality. Inequality is rising. In this post, I explain why and what we can and should do about it.
Fascism, Trump, Reform, and the silencing of dissent Criticising Trump was deemed to be a terrorist act in the USA last week. Reform is already trying the same approach here - accusing Starmer of inciting terrorism for criticising Farage. In both cases, the direction of travel is the same - and is towards full-on fascism. We should be profoundly worried.
Bond markets do not rule – governments do The FT is demanding that the government bow down to the demands of financial markets that will profoundly harm the well-being of the UK and most people who live in it. In the process, they reveal their lack of economic understanding and their own weak relationship with democracy and the right of elected politicians to govern.