Lots of new spending, but where’s the reform?
Even he gets nothing else done, Rishi Sunak knows how to deliver a Budget speech. Some Chancellors are bumptious, others deathly dull. He was neither. Furthermore, his jokes were well-judged and actually funny. All-and-all, an assured performance from a very new Chancellor.
Except for one thing, a verbal tic: He kept referring to the “Conzervative” government — and, no, that’s not a typo.
Who are these Conzervatives? What do they want? What have they done with the Conservatives who used to run the country?
Judging by the Budget, Conzervatism is all about spending lots and lots of money. There was a massive £30 billion package of measures to offset the economic impact of coronavirus. There was also a longer-term programme of increased infrastructure investment, massively higher funding for R&D and more money for public services.
Clearly, this is directed at the Government’s levelling-up agenda. But while a substantial increase in the level of long-term capital expenditure is necessary, it is not sufficient. As the now-vanished Conservatives used to tell Tony Blair and Gordon Brown, it’s not just how much you spend that counts, but how well you spend it. And on that front, the new Conzervative government lacks a coherent reform agenda.
If you’re spending tens of billions of pounds extra, then at the very least include some genuinely imaginative projects: the sort of game-changers — like Phillip Blond‘s idea of an “MIT of the North” — that might make all the difference.
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SubscribeZome miztake, zurely.
Although almost certainly much more appealing than sozializm, which could’ve been foist upon us exactly as a pandemic took hold, had the tw*tterati left actually had the numbers and means to back up -and enforce- their Vision and Beatification of the Most Enduring Saint Jeremy and His Gospel at the GE.
Rishi is doing okay so far, considering the ground beneath all our feet is shaking so alarmingly at present. But surely, 2020 would test the patience and powers of a real Saint, at least so far, not a quarter into the year.