‘It seems to be JK Rowling week on the BBC.’

 

We’ve heard a lot about the Muslim sex gangs in Rotherham and elsewhere and the failure to act by any of those in authority due to concerns about race and culture.

Part of that was of course that the girls were white and working class….they didn’t count quite as much as the nice daughters of the social workers or policemen or media who looked on and who decided to turn a blind eye.

Here a whole class of people has been betrayed and abandoned…to protect the authorities from claims of racism but also the ethnic communities that the sex gangs come from…especially as it turns out that it was particularly white girls being picked on as the Muslims didn’t want to attack girls of their own faith.

The BBC (and other media) must have also played its part in hiding the truth…there must have been complicity with the police and social workers in agreeing what would and would not be reported.

It is remarkable that any of those journalists who ducked the issue and agreed to censorship can now hold their heads up without any shame or remorse.

Maybe those responsible will be brought out into the open in 23 years or so as with Hillsborough.

Their behaviour is of course in stark contrast to that normally at the BBC where working class ‘victims’ of government cuts and inaction are meat’n’veg to BBC anti-cuts agitators with always a ready welcome in a warm BBC studio if you have a tale to tell that paints a doom laden scenario of how ‘cuts’ are affecting you.

Have a look at this, an interview with J.K. Rowling about her new book ‘Casual Vacancy’….dealing with class warfare, drugs and teen sex.

Rowling states that the book is essentially about a girl named Krystal…and it is asking ‘What are we going to do about Krystal?’ (and girls like her).

Clearly ‘Krystal’ is from the same sort of background as the real victims in Rotherham and the book raises all sorts of questions about ‘society’ and of course Middle Class attitudes.

The BBC laps it up….apparently the Guardian and the BBC were given privileged access to the book…so work that out.

However, apart from the interviewer, James Runcie, being a good friend of Rowling, he is pretty keen to bring out all these social issues and start insinuating blame.

I mentioned that Rowling says the book is asking ‘what can be done to help girls like Krystal’…the BBC decided the main theme was something different.

The casual vacancy is a vacancy for a post on a local council…and the majority Tory council want to fill it with a likeminded soul…in order that they can change local boundaries and remove a troublesome council estate from their responsibilities. Boo hiss! Nasty Tories.

Now that is part of the book (and it is a fiction by a lefty writer) …but despite the title it is not its main theme according to the author. The BBC begs to differ.

 

Funny how caring the BBC can be about the white, working class drug addled girls whose knickers are kept up purely by the power of their elastic in the eyes of the BBC and its ilk when it suits the BBC’s own agenda.

 

But the really interesting point was made by Rowling in which she said she was fed up with the point scoring and soundbite culture of modern politics…which she blamed on the ‘beauty parade’ that is democracy.

True enough….politicians don’t explain themselves well enough….hence we get working class youngsters refusing to take up student loans because of the fear of ‘debt’….conveniently highlighted by the Today programme this morning, always ready to take the government to task on behalf of the working class!

But who is really to blame?

The media…it is the media that sets the agenda…it decides who gets airtime, how much airtime and on which subject…it then decides the questions, and decides the answers…in the editing suite…if it’s live they can interrupt and cut you off or bring in another guest to quash your point or to take up time.

Politicians have very little say in what they can get over to the public especially in the face of a hostile interview…however subtle that hostility is.

The BBC also fails in its duty to educate….always ready to stake out a student protest about tuition fees but less ready to spend valuable airtime on the basics of informing them about the fees.

Jonathan Aitken stated that the BBC were poisoning the well of democratic debate….he was right…even if he did his own bit towards that himself.

THE GREAT THAW

 

From the BBC’s very own ‘Civilisation’ series by Kenneth Clark.

Seems that much has been conveniently forgotten since 1969 about the beneficial effects of a nice summer’s day (and it would seem about Christianity and the Church authority as well….keep watching)

 

The Great Thaw

There have been times in the history of mankind when the earth becomes warmer or more radioactive. I don’t put this forward as a scientific proposition but the fact remains that 3 or 4 times in history man has made a leap forward that would have been unthinkable under ordinary evolutionary conditions.

One such time was about 3000 BC when quite suddenly civilisation appeared…not only in Egypt and Mesopotamia but in the Indus valley, another was in the late 6th century BC and it was not only the miracle of Ionia and Greece, philosophy, science, art all reaching a point that wasn’t reached for another 2000 years, but also in India, a spiritual enlightenment that has perhaps never been equalled.

 And another was round about the year 1100, it seems to have effected the whole world, India, China, Byzantium, but it’s strongest and most dramatic effect was in Western Europe where it was most needed. It was like a Russian spring. In every branch of life, action, philosophy, organisation, technology there was an extraordinary outpouring of energy and an intensification of existence, popes, kings, emperors, bishops, scholars philosophers, saints, they were all larger than life, and incidents of history, our great heroic dramas or symbolic acts that still stir our hearts, the evidence of this heroic energy, this strength, confidence of will and intellect is still standing….[in the Cathedrals.]

 

Note the Medieval warm period and his assertion it affected the whole world.

Curious how that has all been forgotten by many scientists when cash handouts are in the offing for more research.

‘Mrs Thatcher’s Favourite Economist’ Short Version

This is the short version of ‘Mrs Thatcher’s Favourite Economist’…a mere 3 pages instead of 12….having said that the programme was so packed full of things you could object to it had to be done.  However many may not want to read that much…..

Stephanie Flanders looks at the economic theories of three economists in the ‘Masters Of Money’.

Keynes, Hayek and Marx.

Why those three?

If she reduces the selection to them only one is left in her opinion who is ‘respectable’…conveniently the one her ex-boyfriends, Ed Miliband and Ed Balls, look to for inspiration…..Keynes.

Hayek is presented in a negative light, an oddball extremist that only fellow oddball extremists would follow….Flanders tells us he was a favourite of Mrs Thatcher and therefore Flanders is saying Thatcher and her policies must be oddball and extreme.

Marx of course, no one can take seriously in the economic sense…..he is  used as an ideological inspiration for revolution and so produces wars, terror and tyranny if not economic prudence…and so is influential in that sense.

So that of course leaves Keynes, who is the harbinger of the bright and sunny uplands, of a prosperous future that means we can borrow what we like today because tomorrow we’re all going to be millionaires, you’ve got to speculate to accumulate, kushty.

Her programme on Keynes was upbeat and enthusiastic about him and his theory.

However she missed off that Roosevelt’s New Deal ruined the US economy in 1938 and she claimed Hoover was a ‘tax and cut’ man when he clearly wasn’t.

Flanders claimed Roosevelt built the Hoover Dam….clue is in the name!, and claimed it as a victory for Keynesianism (though no one listened to Keynes then)…‘A celebrated example of how to boost an economy…no more iconic example than the Hoover Dam.’ ….no figures to prove that….so nothing to do with Keynes or Roosevelt…good skills!

She claims the command economy of the war shows us how such planning, government control and massive investment can produce growth.

The war was a finite event the spending on which ended as soon as the war ended…unlike welfare or the NHS or policing etc. She never told us how the US paid off its massive war costs. High taxes might have something to do with it.

 

So Keynes is the chosen One…..however one ‘giant’ at least is missing from her modern pantheon of economic Masters….Milton Friedman.

“Mrs Thatcher’s favourite economist”

If as some suggest of Mrs Thatcher that …‘No one can seriously dispute that she mattered – more so than any other twentieth-century politician with the exception of Winston Churchill and , perhaps, Lloyd George.’ then surely her ‘favourite economist’ must merit a mention, a whole programme to himself?

Lady Thatcher said: “Milton Friedman revived the economics of liberty when it had been all but forgotten. He was an intellectual freedom fighter. Never was there a less dismal practitioner of a dismal science.”

Over half a century, Mr Friedman, established himself as arguably the most influential economic thinker of his time. Over that post-war period, “Friedmanism supplanted Keynesianism as the dominant economic philosophy of the industrial world.”

“It’s hard to think of anyone who’s had more of a direct influence on social and economic policy in this generation,” Professor Allan H Meltzer of Carnegie Mellon University.”

 

And look….

Milton Friedman, is now a hero of the Chinese Republic, not Marx, not Keynes:

‘On reaching retirement age in 1976, he joined Stanford University’s Hoover Institution, and from there he continued to campaign for economic freedoms worldwide. This mission took him to China months before the Tiananmen Square massacres. As one observer recalled, the young Chinese “followed Milton around like he was a god”.’

 

and not only Friedman…..

Thatcher is now a hero in China…….

‘The former British Prime Minister is now being held up as an inspiration for future leaders of the People’s Republic of China…Professor Li Min, a lecturer at the institution, said when it came to crisis management Britain’s former prime minister was a model of behaviour.’

 

 

 

So Friedman totally eclipsed Hayek and has sidelined Keynes for decades…..and yet he is almost totally ignored by Flanders.

You can only conclude that is a political decision by Flanders…..Friedman was Thatcher’s favourite and the man who influenced her policies most….the policies that eventually brought stability and prosperity to Britain.

If Friedman is the ‘good’ economist embracing both the free market and some government ‘investment’ when necessary then Thatcher and her policies must have been ‘good’.

Not something perhaps Labour would like to hear the BBC endorsing? And so it doesn’t.

 

A continuous thread throughout the programme is that free markets and austerity bring Fascists in jackboots onto the streets….look at history again and it is Keynesian type economic stimulation which brought Hitler to power as the US ‘stimulated’ its economy and caused the Great Depression (Ben Bernanke…‘We did it!’)…..and now who is on the streets? The left wing agitators, the unions, the students……it’s not Hitler’s Stormtroopers, it’s Marxist revolutionaries.

And finally something odd:

As Flanders went on, apart from the expected upbeat cheerleading of a Keynesian approach to running the economy, I noticed something…I know that the Party conference season is upon us but as she talked I realised I’d heard or read much of the same lines she spouted as coming from Ed Miliband….is she just doing the warm up act for him?

She told us that Keynes saved capitalism from the capitalists, what is Miliband’s latest line? ‘I’m going to save Capitalism from itself’.

Another phrase that kept popping up…‘we’re all in this together’…..a Tory phrase that Miliband has tried to co-opt as his own recently…and now repeatedly echoed by Flanders.

Or Miliband’s ‘We want a market economy not a market society’…….Flanders told us a Keynesian policy was to suggest ‘If we can tame capitalism we can shape our destiny.’…also an echo of Miliband’s ‘predators and producers’ sound bite?

And of course Keynes is just Plan B with a moustache.

 

 

So to sum Flanders up….Keynes theory of spending massively to promote growth is good.

Austerity and Hayek can only bring fascism and war to our streets.

 

And Milton Friedman was….. who?

“Mrs Thatcher’s Favourite Economist”

Hopes stoked for quicker recovery from recession as GDP fall is revised for the second time

This post is sort of apt in relation to the previous one on ‘No political  advertising in the UK’….the BBC has just engaged in one of its most blatant pro Labour, pro spending fluff pieces in the shape of Flanders’ Masters of Money.’

 

This is a long, long look at that series….it could have been longer as we haven’t seen the ‘Marx’ programme yet.

The BBC gives the nod and a wink to Keynes and Labour’s Plan B and here Flanders continues that tradition in cheerleading for Keynes as the harbinger of the bright sunny uplands whilst Hayek was presented as a vain, oddball extremist whose only fans are equally odd or extreme…Flanders says he was Thatcher’s guru of choice…. damning by association, in her opinion?

Was he?

“Mrs Thatcher’s favourite economist”

Seems not. 

Stephanie Flanders began her new series of the great economic thinkers last week….which Jeremy Warner in the Telegraph  called  ‘magisterial’.

It certainly had all the bells and whistles of a grand television production, travelling around the world, numerous famous talking heads and high production values with music and film clips set to stun and ‘inform’ with their piquancy.

However a cooler head might not have been so carried away and taken in by the flummery and showbiz pizzaz……if you can’t hide something the best thing to do is decorate it and that is exactly what Flanders has done. She is covering up the fact that her choice of economists is highly suspect and not a little self serving if you were someone who wanted to persuade an audience that one particular economic theory was the only one with legs.

Her choice of economists? Keynes, Hayek and Marx.

All no doubt of some stature and well known…but just how effective were they personally and why choose them?

The choice is of particular interest. As Flanders points out ‘Keynes is never more relevant’…but who to? The Labour Party….but he was consistently ignored for much of his career by politicians in the 20’s and 30’s.

What about Hayek…who is he relevant to? Well no one really……because his position was so extreme that no one, as Flanders points out at the end of that programme, is going to implement his free market policies…which makes you ask…why did Flanders choose him?

I suggest precisely because he was of the ‘right’ and extreme and so could be associated with Thatcher and therefore associate the Tories with ‘extremist, unworkable’ policies.

Marx was an inevitable choice and really I might suggest a schoolboy one, or schoolgirl. Marx failed in his every utterance and prediction. His thoughts were not even his own and were derived from a great a long line of previous thinkers and contemporaries. Influential? Certainly but not in a good way. However judging by Flanders write up of him in the Times you can’t help thinking he is ‘more relevant than ever’ to her….the programme goes out this Monday.

 

Three economists…all of note but were they the most influential in the last century or more?

Marx was, in the way that Hitler was an ‘influential’ figure for the Jews. Marx led to more deaths and misery in one century than has probably been seen over the course of human history.

Flanders decided not to look at Adam Smith, probably the most famous economist but perhaps he was too far in the past.

But who was the most influential economist who genuinely changed the course of economic history in the world? Milton Friedman.

Flanders continually associates Hayek with Thatcher…she repeats her assertion that Hayek ‘inspired those who built the world around us…..sewing the seeds of today’s financial crisis’ and flicks up a film of Mrs Thatcher….the clear intent to suggest Thatcher created this financial crisis we’re in now…Gordon Brown hardly gets a mention other than to be shown ‘saving the world’ in 2008.

But was Hayek that influential?

Who was Thatcher’s real ‘guru’?

Milton Friedman.

“Mrs Thatcher’s favourite economist”

If as some suggest of Mrs Thatcher that …’No one can seriously dispute that she mattered – more so than any other twentieth-century politician with the exception of Winston Churchill and , perhaps, Lloyd George.’ then surely her ‘favourite economist’ must merit a mention, a whole programme to himself?

Lady Thatcher said: “Milton Friedman revived the economics of liberty when it had been all but forgotten. He was an intellectual freedom fighter. Never was there a less dismal practitioner of a dismal science.

“I shall greatly miss my old friend’s lucid wisdom and mordant humour.”

He was also the winner of a 1976 Nobel Prize.

Mr Friedman believed that tax-funded government spending was appropriate only to the most limited set of “public goods”, such as national defence.

Over half a century, Mr Friedman, the son of Hungarian Jewish immigrants, established himself as arguably the most influential economic thinker of his time. Over that post-war period, “Friedmanism” – the belief that changes in money supply dictate fluctuations in the economy – supplanted Keynesianism as the dominant economic philosophy of the industrial world.

“It’s hard to think of anyone who’s had more of a direct influence on social and economic policy in this generation,” Professor Allan H Meltzer of Carnegie Mellon University.’

Even Ben Bernanke admitted Friedman was right and that government intervention had caused the 1930’s collapse.

‘As Mr Friedman celebrated his 90th birthday in 2002, Ben Bernanke – then a Federal Reserve governor, now chairman of the US central bank – sought belated forgiveness for the error: “Regarding the Great Depression, you’re right,” Mr Bernanke acknowledged. “We did it. We’re very sorry.” ‘

 

And look….Thatcher is now a hero in China…….

‘The former British Prime Minister is now being held up as an inspiration for future leaders of the People’s Republic of China, with words attributed to the Iron Lady being used to train senior members of the Communist Party.

Professor Li Min, a lecturer at the institution, said when it came to crisis management Britain’s former prime minister was a model of behaviour.’

 

Not only Thatcher but also Milton Friedman, not Marx, is now a hero of the Chinese Republic: 

‘On reaching retirement age in 1976, he joined Stanford University’s Hoover Institution, and from there he continued to campaign for economic freedoms worldwide. This mission took him to China months before the Tiananmen Square massacres. As one observer recalled, the young Chinese “followed Milton around like he was a god”.’

 

So given all that why did Flanders not have a programme on Friedman?  Is it because he was both free market advocate and a supporter of government spending, when in the vital national interest?  Is it because a man of such influence supports moderate spending and not the Keynesian spending like a drunken sailor theory? Was it because his policies, and Thatcher’s, stabilised the British economy and brought us into the black only for all that to be ruined by a spendthrift Gordon brown?

Keynes you could say was in fact the ultimate, über capitalist, the very essence of an irresponsible capitalism, his policies of massive borrowing and spending were government speculation, gambling, they were in effect Casino finance that gambled the future of the nation’s prosperity on the hope of future growth…and we’ve tried that already under Brown…it failed.

And yet here we have the BBC, in the shapely form of Stephanie Flanders, giving the big thumbs up to Keynes.

A feeling for her opinion can perhaps be given by a quote from another BBC favourite Lefty economist Paul Krugman(a frequent voice in the programme) eulogising Keynes book: ‘”The General Theory is nothing less than an epic journey out of intellectual darkness.’

 

It should also be noted that Flanders’ and the Labour Party’s economic guru went to school at Eton. Indeed their other hero, F.D. Roosevelt went to the US equivalent of Eton, Groton, he was an aristocratic Democrat.

Now it’s a curious thing that those who worship at the altar of Keynes and the New Deal should try to undermine Tory Cameron’s credibility and his ability to empathise or understand the economics of the ‘plebs’ just because he went to Eton….surely that is evidence of a good pedigree in economic thought….or maybe they know more about Keynes than they let on….lets have a look at him in action……

‘..in Spain where massive government spending on ‘white elephants’ has bankrupted the nation…..(but you know more spending will improve our situation in the UK)……

In Spain the economy is imploding, as Paul Mason relays to us:

The Spanish regions are heavily in debt. People rely on them for free health and education, but they can no longer pay their bills – and they can’t expect much help from central government, as it too struggles under a huge financial burden.

Now quite a lot of the patients are having to do something which for them is extraordinary: they are having to pay – a bit – for their medicines.

During the property boom which has now busted Spain, they were collecting some taxes – from, yes, property.

Now that source of revenue is gone, they are expecting the central government to provide them with the cash they need. But the central government is in trouble too: it cannot borrow – except at punitive rates.

The regions cannot borrow either. Valencia’s deep in debt and who does pharmacist Paula blame? She smiles bitterly. “That is a very hard question to answer,” she says.

Valencia is littered with vanity projects that tell their own story.

The airport that has never seen a single plane land. The theme park built in a place where the summer heat rises above 40C (104F). The land bought at premium prices that is now worthless.

Where massive white elephant projects went unquestioned for a decade, and where the banks that funded them, boards stuffed with appointed politicians, have now gone bust. And where if you need some insulin from the health service, you had better hope you are the first in the queue.’

 

 

OK…I mention Mason’s report on Spain because firstly it brings into stark relief what capitalism brings to the party when it is working properly, and second it highlights the fact that what brought Spain to its knees, massive building projects and government vanity projects building ‘white elephants’ that nobody could afford to buy or use, did exactly the opposite of what the Keynesians are suggesting such projects will do for our economy despite a century’s worth of historical evidence that it is cheap money and housing bubbles that break economies.

What has that to do with BBC bias…apart from the well known enthusiasm for Balls’ Plan B?

Stephanie Flanders’ first programme looked at Keynes…it was in essence an enthusiastic promotion of Keynesian theory and its ‘beneficial’ policies that will turn our economy round. Unfortunately it was also a load of old hokum missing out important information and deliberately misleading viewers at times.

The Hayek (Pronounced as in ‘High Explosive’…ie highly dangerous. Geddit?) programme was far more downbeat and gave the impression of an extremist oddball whose fans were also extremists, including of course Maggie Thatcher, another one pronounced a ‘domestic terrorist’, and who was really only interested in his own glorification and awards for his work.

 

Flanders as said, begins by telling us Keynes is more relevant than ever.

As Flanders went on, apart from the expected upbeat cheerleading of a Keynesian approach to running the economy, I noticed something odd….I know that the Party conference season is upon us but as she talked I realised I’d heard or read much of the same lines she spouted as coming from Ed Miliband….is she just doing the warm up act for him?

She told us that Keynes saved capitalism from the capitalists, what is Miliband’s latest line? ‘I’m going to save Capitalism from itself’.

Another phrase that kept popping up…‘we’re all in this together’…..a Tory phrase that Miliband has tried to co-opt as his own recently…and now repeatedly echoed by Flanders.

Or Miliband’s ‘We want a market economy not a market society’…….Flanders told us a Keynesian policy was to suggest ‘If we can tame capitalism we can shape our destiny.’…also an echo of his ‘predators and producers’ sound bite?

And of course Keynes is just Plan B with a moustache.

 

Flanders claims Keynes saved Britain from the depression. How did he do that then exactly when he was roundly ignored by all politicians in the 20’s and 30’s?

Flanders admitted in her last Stuff’n’Nonsense programme that what saved the British economy from the Depression was massive private investment in housing…not government spending…and then the war (the debts of which we only finally paid off in 2006…and only 1/10th of the value of goods we actually received was repaid…at 2% interest….and we still owe an estimated £225 billion to the US for WWI and we had rationing until the 1950’s imposed upon us).

 

The truth is the British government had always adopted a policy of intervention in the economy, ‘stabilisation’, who can forget the ‘Corn Laws’, and a long process of social change and laws regulating industry came into being during the 19th century….so there never was a ‘free market’ in the Hayek sense.

Both Britain and the US were spending heavily long before Keynes raised his head, and they were also trying to regulate world markets to keep things on an even keel….

‘In a world where the vast majority of nations were in debt, the US played a vital supportive role.’

So the programmes assertion that Keynes encourages us to co-operate internationally is something that has long been in operation….and is therefore not ‘Keynesian’.

 

 

Flanders in fact doesn’t dwell on Keynes in Britain in the 30’s but heads off to the US to flim flam us about the ‘New Deal’….but first she tries to scare us about the prospect of Fascism stalking the streets as throughout the programme we are told that austerity leads to Nazis marching in the streets.

Making Germany pay reparations was a mistake which led to Fascism? Not the spectre of revolutionary Marxists? Isn’t it in fact the Left who have taken to the streets in strikes and violent rampages and of course the Marxist ‘Occupy’ movement.

Unfortunately it seems that is pretty much nonsense…..the evidence is that Germany could afford to pay, and did pay…but only when it wanted to….it frequently evaded payment as a tactic to test the nerve of the Allies and what they would do to enforce the reparations. Keynes was famously opposed to Reparations….purely on economic grounds or something else?

Although Flanders told us Keynes was gay she didn’t mention this….‘The American historian Sally Marks commented that Keynes had fallen in love with Carl Melchior, a member of the German delegation, and that views on reparations “…were shaped by his passion for Carl Melchior, the German financier and reparations expert whom he met during negotiations at Spa shortly after the armistice”.

 

So in fact Germany was not in such a terrible position after all….and indeed kept up payments until the Wall Street Crash meant loans from the US dried up.

Flanders wheels in the big guns….Alistair Darling comes on to say we are making the same mistakes as in WWI….then Larry Elliot, Guardian economics editor….‘We are failing to learn the lessons of history.’

Flanders tells us that Germany printed money and destroyed its economy with hyper-inflation…..isn’t that what the US is doing now…..and in its way, the ECB, with its promise to buy unlimited amounts of bonds to keep the Euro afloat (all paid for by Germany)?

It is not austerity that led to Nazis in power but massive government stimulus…..and it was US President Hoover’s stimulus, in the shape of easy credit and low interest rates, to the American economy, that led to the collapse of the stock market and the depression in Europe which relied on US cash.

The Federal Reserve’s decisions, as admitted above by Ben Bernanke, were what ‘did it’, precipitated the Great Depression……

‘One of the most costly errors committed by it or any other banking system in the last 75 years.’

Germany at the time thought the Fed’s policy was corrupt.

Any echoes with today?…German politicians who think the ECB’s latest policy to save the Euro by buying sovereign debt with Euro Bonds is ‘the Devil’s work!’.  It is the equivalent of printing money and the easy credit terms of the 30’s.

The USA in the 1920’s increased its money supply by massively increasing credit availability…..providing cheap credit….in other words essentially increasing government spending….‘to stimulate, protect and prosper all kinds of legitimate business’

Now where’ve we heard that before?

Hoover introduced protective tariffs and cheap credit to boost economy….doesn’t sound ‘laissez faire’ to me.

Hoover thought that even bad foreign loans that were unlikely to be repaid helped exports and created jobs…sounds very Brownian.

The result of all this, unsound loans, easy credit, was a collapse in confidence and world recession.

Now where’ve we heard that before?

 

Keynes verdict….The successful management of the dollar by the Federal Reserve Board from 1922 to 28 was a triumph!

Hayek……‘The crash indicated the risks of ill informed meddling.’

Flanders still backs Keynes and Plan B:

‘Keynes understood that imposing too much austerity is self defeating’.

Straight from the Ed Balls’ book of wit and wisdom.

I like that turn of phrase…‘Keynes understood’……not ‘Keynes said’…..saying he ‘understood’ suggests that such an idea is obviously correct…and clever Keynes understood that…which George Osborne does not. Just another Flanders dig at Austerity.

Flanders continues the rewriting of history with an apologia for Brown’s ‘mistakes’…… Brown made mistakes in not recognising the uncertainty of the economy which lead to his overconfidence, but it was a mistake that Keynes made himself….and therefore if the Great Man can make such a mistake it’s OK for Brown to do so.

 

Flanders continues her pro-intervention narrative saying Keynes recognised that an economy that sank may not come back up and therefore needed government help….

Recovery is blocked by lack of business and consumer confidence and therefore they do not invest in, produce or buy goods…..You cannot just wait for things to get better…..the government must create the atmosphere that engenders confidence.

That seems to completely forget ‘Business’ itself, as if it were just an adjunct to government policy….and that it was private money that built the houses that kick started the economy in the 30’s….and it is only exports that will bring in growth to our economy now…or wage cuts or a great rise in productivity….nothing government can do will boost genuine growth….she also fails to highlight the new industry and businesses springing up in the 30’s…..J.B. Priestley in ‘English Journey’ mentions them….the gleaming, chrome and glass covered new factories making England look more like California than England.

Then it’s over to America where she deploys her smoke and mirrors…1 million mirrors to be exact….in a ‘vast Keynesian experiment in the Arizona desert’ building the world’s biggest solar power plant.

Isn’t that just a massive make work scheme…paying ‘dole’ money but at a vastly increased rate…..employment paid for on printed or borrowed money?

Extra government spending would produce higher tax revenues we are confidently told…but never how that would happen.

 

She states that Hoover was all about spending cuts and tax rises…she claims ‘we have heard this argument recently’…..clearly meaning the Tories…giving it negative connotations.

Was Hoover a fan of Hayek’s free market?

‘Under Hoover federal spending rose in an attempt to stimulate job creation but the federal budget, a mere 4 per cent of GNP, was too small to make a significant impact in the face of such a major contraction. In 1932 he supported the creation of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation believing that this body could give essential support to the stricken banking system.

During the presidential election campaign of 1932, Hoover was attacked by Roosevelt not for inactivity but for failing to balance the budget and for being too interventionist. Both Hoover and Roosevelt argued for economy in government.’

What Hayek thought was that the economy was far too big and complicated for anyone to understand…and therefore shouldn’t be meddled with as your actions will produce unknown and unintended consequences that could be worse than those you were trying to prevent.

Gordon Brown should have listened to Hayek as he has admitted…he had not understood the complexity of the world economy and the effects of globalisation….strange you might think for an economic expert when history relates quite clearly that even in the 30’s globalisation and the interconnectedness of economies could bring disaster, when one collapsed…others would follow…as with the US leading Europe into recession.

Brown was not the ‘genius’ some suggest….his world was more one where economic policies were shaped for political purposes. Which is why we are where we are.

 

As now it seems Roosevelt had the support of the Media, approval of academia, patronage of intellectuals and historical orthodoxy. Hoover gets a ‘bad press’.

Roosevelt, Flanders tells us, had a different approach…the Keynesian way, to spend his way out of trouble…‘echoing arguments we hear today’…that is ‘Plan B’… cue clip of Roosevelt in dynamic mode….‘action is what we want, action now!’

She says that was no time for a government to sit on its hands (relevant today she thinks…no good Osborne sitting it out?)…something had to be done…by government…..and in response Roosevelt created the New Deal…except he didn’t… Hoover did….and unemployment in the US never dropped below 15% throughout the 30’s.

Roosevelt merely carried on and expanded Hoover’s policies….the New Deal was just a continuation of Hoover’s policy….Walter Lippman said….‘the measures are a continuous evolution of the Hoover measures’.

Flanders tells another big porky in her enthusiasm to big up Roosevelt…..saying…‘A celebrated example of how to boost an economy…no more iconic example than the Hoover Dam.’ and claiming it was Roosevelt’s project…the clue is in the name…The Hoover Dam!

We were then told that the Hoover Dam cost $161 million but produced billions in economic growth…Keynes’ ‘multiplier effect’…..really? And where were the facts and figures for that?

 

 

What was the biggest ‘lie’ told by Flanders? It was a lie by omission ….she failed to mention that Roosevelt’s ‘New Deal’ brought the US economy to its knees in 1937/38. A massive fall in GDP and employment that would have crippled the US for years had not the Second World War intervened.

Flanders likes WWII…it is an example of State management of the economy by planning, a command economy,  that she likes to showcase as a pointer towards how economies could be run…no doubt in 5 year blocks.

This is highly misleading….because she doesn’t lay out just what it cost the US to pay off that war and how they did that…nor that unlike this financial crisis, WWII was a finite occurrence…once it was over the spending on massive armies and munitions and supplies could stop and then a payment scheme worked out…the financial crisis is on going and continuous….all the welfare systems and government responsibilities still need to be paid for…the NHS, schools, army, police, emergency services, local and civil government etc. The only real choice is to cut the spending on these or borrow more…which is the argument now. Keynes and Flanders would borrow more.

How did the US pay off its huge war costs? It of course introduced price controls, rationing and massive tax rises as well as a stealth tax in the shape of war bonds…the value of which fell when they came to be redeemed. It’s economic growth after the war was also huge and far outstripped the debt….but that is not going to happen here Keynes or no Keynes.

We were then treated to a talking head saying…..‘Austerity leads to unemployment going up, endless amount of suffering and the economy will sink’….cue judicious use of film clip….Cameron speaking…people slumped looking very bored…Brown looking and dynamic saving the world.

Flanders trips over to Germany to suggest that the way out of the recession is to boost domestic consumer spending and cut exports…now any fool knows that won’t work….look even Gordon Brown knew that was tosh:

‘It is essential that consumer spending is underpinned by investment and industrial growth. Britain cannot afford a recurrence of the all too familiar pattern of previous recoveries: accelerating consumer spending and borrowing side by side with skills shortages, capacity constraints, increased imports and rising inflation.

Already there are warning signs that this pattern could be repeated. In similar circumstances some of my predecessors have ignored these signs while others have deluded themselves into believing that growth, however unbalanced, was evidence of their success. I will not ignore the warning signs and I will not repeat past mistakes.’

 

The only way out is growth from manufacturing of products, ideas or services……this provides the money that then goes to fund domestic consumption…you have to earn the money to spend it.

Eventually Flanders’ comes clean……sort of…..admitting ‘Keynes’ didn’t work….(and who took over….Milton Friedman…not Hayek)

‘Keynes’ may not have worked because…there was enough spending…or….there was already too much debt so you don’t want to pile more on.

 

However apparently ‘Keynes has an extraordinary legacy that changed lives of billions around the globe.’

She asks ‘What can Keynes do for us now?’ Cue more film of a factory kept open by government money…. ‘Government intervention can keep factory gates open and increase employment.’

And of course the final seal of approval for Keynes…..‘Failure to adopt his policies leads to regional war as inequalities grow.’

 

Oh and one last thing….you have all heard of the Banks that were too big to fail that caused the credit crunch? well in the 30’s the banks were ‘too small to fail’…..so St Vince’s prescription is a little uneducated and suspect….

‘Why was the banking system so vulnerable and what role did this vulnerability play in intensifying the depression?

There are a number of factors that need to be taken into account in an analysis of US banking. The structure of the system is important. Many states favoured unit banking so the US had a large number of very small independent banks most serving rural communities. These small banks were undercapitalised and 11

highly vulnerable. Indeed, during the prosperous 1920s about 5,000 of them failed. Most could not satisfy the minimum capital requirements for membership of the Federal Reserve but there was strong emotional attachment to unit banking in a country which still had half of its population residing in rural settlements. The extent of unit banking was a serious structural weakness.’

Too small to fail.

 

 

 

Let’s Not Have Any Talk Of That Dirty Old Austerity Here My Lad

Quite extraordinary.

This report from the BBC , the headline report, about Nick Clegg’s speech entirely misses out his dire warnings about the result of not continuing with ‘austerity’.

The Telegraph highlights it.

Public spending threatens tolerant society, says Nick Clegg

Public spending is threatening to undermine the country’s economic prosperity and needs to be “completely redirected”, the Deputy Prime Minister has warned.

So yes, if we fail to deal with our debts and tackle the weaknesses in our economy, our country will pay a heavy political price. But the human cost would be higher still. Not only would we fall behind internationally, we would leave a trail of victims at home too. 

So to those who ask, incredulously, what we – the Liberal Democrats – are doing cutting public spending, I simply say this: Who suffers most when governments go bust? When they can no longer pay salaries, benefits and pensions? Not the bankers and the hedge fund managers, that’s for sure. No, it would be the poor, the old, the infirm; those with the least to fall back on.

Wind Up or Wind Up?

I am by no means up to speed on the truth about the effectiveness of windfarms in reducing CO2 emissions, though I know one of the most obvious downsides….that you need another ‘always-on’ source of generation as a back up….as such any information that sheds light on the subject would be welcome..Just don’t rely on the BBC to provide it.

This is an interesting tale from Colonel Blimp in the comments concerning Roger Harrabin’s decision not to publish research that indicates wind farms produce no savings at all in CO2 emissions…and if so the whole exercise is an entirely pointless exercise in spending large amounts of money on the usual Labour inspired white elephants.

Blink and you might have missed UKIP’s conference but this must have been one of the more interesting statements made at it…and yet ignored by the BBC.

Odd you might think as there’s a big controversy over this subject…as noted at Bishop Hill.  Booker in the Telegraph, and the Guardian where the defence for wind farms is stridently put.

 

Harrabin says there just isn’t space to mention such research…..yes, I suppose the BBC website just can’t cope with a few extra lines….perhaps it could remove one of the stories about UFO’s that’s on there now? 

Balance is one thing, deliberately hiding evidence or research that inconveniently sheds doubt on the ‘consensus’ is another.

GIVE A DOG A BAD NAME

I always thought, or hoped, the BBC was a serious news provider that had integrity and a sense of responsibility and was not prone to disseminating bilious, dangerous gossip.

Guess I am wrong.

Lib Dem conference: Simon Hughes attacks ‘racist’ banks

Deputy Lib Dem leader Simon Hughes says he has “seen and heard” banks making racist decisions on lending.

He said banks will “say yes to a well established white individual” but say no to a black business person “with a better financial reputation”.

“I have seen clearly banks, and heard clearly banks, who make racist decisions,” said the MP for Bermondsey and Old Southwark.”

  

Good  that the BBC is prepared to publish such libellous smears about the banks…no names, no pack drill.  Nothing like a bit of uncorroborated anti-bank vilification that is purely designed by Hughes to do the most reputational damage as possible.

Such charges of racism should only be raised with absolute proof.  It seems here that the BBC have decided to publish under the cover of ‘just reporting what he said’ whilst knowing that mud sticks.

Let’s wait and see just how long the bandwagon takes before the ‘victims’ of bank’s racism come crawling out of the woodwork….and make an appearance on Today and the  Victoria Derbyshire show…hankies at the ready!….just don’t expect to hear the bank’s version of any story we hear….all callers to the BBC phone-ins are entirely trustworthy and credible.

 

A few years back the BBC did a programme on business start ups showcasing  some people who were attempting to get their inventions onto the shelves.

One was a young black man who had designed an escape ladder that provided an emergency exit from a burning house.  He couldn’t get the banks to fund him…he openly claimed that it was due to racism.

On the same show a white man (Ken Frogbrook) who had invented a straw matting to soak up oil  spills at sea  couldn’t get any finance despite it working and being a viable commercial product and as such a potential big money spinner, the oil business being the oil business.  He finally got some money….his story was heard on the radio and Joanna Lumley (yes Purdey) stumped up some of her own money. 

Was he a victim of some unknown discrimination by the banks or did they just think the venture too risky or not likely to be sufficiently successful to warrant an investment?  Maybe he had red hair.  We shall never know.

 

It may not say much about racism in the banking world but it certainly says something about their ability to pick a winner.

 That’s the real story for the BBC if it really wants to keep poking the banking industry with a sharp stick…that and the lunacy of the Lib-Dems.

Half The Story All The Time

Not seen any corrective to the BBC’s big Arctic ice melt story…even  though Reuters is running with it:

(Via Bishop Hill)

NASA finally admits it Arctic cyclone in August ‘broke up’ and ‘wreaked havoc’ on sea ice — Reuters reports Arctic storm played ‘key role’ in ice reduction  

 

In a September 18 video posted by NASA on its website, they admit that the Arctic cyclone, which began on August 5, “wreaked havoc on the Arctic sea ice cover” by “breaking up sea ice.”

Global warming activists have been giddy in their hyping of the satellite era record low Arctic sea ice extent while ignoring the satellite era record sea ice expansion in the Antarctic.

Many climate activists have sought to downplay the significance that the Arctic cyclone played on this year’s summer sea ice in the Arctic. But this new inconvenient video report from NASA now makes the warmists’ attempt to deny the cyclones role in 2012’s Arctic sea ice conditions — impossible.

Who Watches The Watchers

Do you think the BBC et al would have been more ready to accept PC Harwood’s version of events regarding the death of Ian Tomlinson at the G20 protests if Ian Tomlinson had been a Tory?

From the official notebook of PC Simon Harwood recording the events that resulted in the death of Ian Tomlinson at the G20 protests in London.

‘I was having a rest break after a long period of time helping to prevent a family of polar bears being brutally exploited and abused by city bankers when a man, now identified as Ian Tomlinson, came up to me and kicked me in the testicles shouting ‘Fucking plod’…..I believe he may have been heavily under the influence of several  kinds of intoxicants including the Guardian newspaper.

I fell to the ground and when I had recovered my breath and my eyes had stopped watering I requested that he didn’t do that again and that he move along.

As I lay there Mr Tomlinson then proceeded to take out his penis and urinated upon me. I told him to desist otherwise I would have to issue him with a warning.

Mr Tomlinson laughed and ground out his cannabis cigarette in my face. I told him I understood his anger at ‘The System’ but  I may have to arrest him if he didn’t stop.

At that he moved off but suddenly a speeding express train thundered through the square and I had to push Mr Tomlinson out of its way to save his life. He fell to the ground and lay there unmoving.

My training kicked in and I proceeded to give first aid…the initial act being to test a casualty’s reactions so I prodded him gently with my baton…he failed to respond, so I prodded him harder. Again no response so I called an ambulance. I then removed my identity tabs so that undue attention would not deflect me from my crucial work ensuring the safety of those protesting about the rape of the planet by greedy industrialists and financiers.

Mr Tomlinson would have made a full recovery I believe had not the ambulance crashed on the way to the hospital and unfortunately Mr Tomlinson died as a result of that RTA.

I write this for your information as Mr Tomlinson’s family would appear to indicate that they are unhappy with my actions.

I have recorded this fully in my pocket book.

 

 If Ian Tomlinson had been a Tory minister would that ‘report’ have been taken as Gospel?

Not saying that the BBC et al are all too ready to believe the police when they want and to disbelieve when they want but the evidence is there that the police are more than ready to twist the truth for their own purposes.

Arrogant And Out Of Touch

It has been a constant mystery for Flanders and Co as to why employment is going up in a ‘recession’.

The most reasonable thought might be that maybe the ‘recession’ is not as bad as painted and that it is the measurement of the GDP figures that is wrong giving us a too low estimation of the economy’s output.

Flanders sniffily dismisses this and attaches herself limpetlike to the ‘it’s all such a big mystery’ theory as well as deriding those who are self employed as people who don’t really count as employed…they’re not in real jobs.

Not saying she has an agenda in trying to question employment figures and tell us something dodgy is going on in the economy…but she has.

 

However if she had read the BBC news site she might have gained some insight into a small but growing part of the economy based on innovation and the entrepreneurship of the ‘self employed’…and further reading might have enlightened her about the failures of methods used to measure GDP and the effect such failure has on the economy and government policy.

Here the BBC illustrates a ground swell of industrial innovation  and manufacturing that employs new technology and the internet to lower the cost of production, speed it up and to share ideas and information around the world:

‘When Karl Marx predicted a revolution putting the means of production in the hands of the workers, he probably didn’t imagine it to be fought by an army of DIYers.

But increasingly tinkerers and hobbyists are proving they are more than equal to the corporate world, and their efforts are challenging the traditional methods of manufacturing.’

And here one of the BBC’s favourite Lefty economists, Stiglitz, reveals that measuring GDP is not quite so simple and methods used are lagging behind the reality leading to governments making policy decisions on the economy based on false information…having obvious harmful effects.

 

‘This report, building on extensive earlier work, describes the additions and subtractions that can and should be made to provide a better measure of welfare.

Policies should be aimed at increasing societal welfare, not GDP.

There are long recognized problems in GDP as a measure of economic performance, but many of the changes in the structure of our society have made these deficiencies of greater consequence.

International comparisons of levels and more importantly of rates of growth play a very important role in the design of policy. Comparisons are indeed possible if the procedures and definitions used to compute the accounts are comparable. Yet there are still “large differences in the ways National Accounts calculations are carried out even among European countries, let alone between Europe and the U.S1”. This may have far reaching consequences. It makes no sense, for instance, to structural reforms intended to import the “best practice” of the country performing the best in terms of growth rate, if the growth rates of the two countries differ mainly because of differences in the ways National Accounts are computed.’

 

 

Not saying Flanders is arrogant and out of touch but a BBC economics reporter might perhaps have a more rounded approach to the world and not just peddle a certain viewpoint that seems rather too politically partisan.