It is difficult to get one’s mind around the vast sums of taxpayers’ money that British finance minister Gordon Brown has planned to hurl at our public sector. The sums are mind-numbing. The spending plans are predicated on some pretty rosy forecasts for the British economy over the next few years, not to mention some fairly dubious accounting methods which reduce the potential bill to the taxpayer from infrastructure projects.
Those rosy forecasts could easily fail to materialise, particularly as mounting red tape, higher taxes and growing interference from the EU clogs the arteries of the UK economy. What is beyond doubt in my mind is that “New Labour”, that strange political entity supposedly different from old tax-and-spend Labour, is dead. Central control of finance, big spending, handouts for the public sector unions – the whole unlovely mix is back. And of course Brown’s announcement on Monday of this spending mania was accompanied by a sharp fall in British equities to the lowest levels in six years. Of course much of the damage to stocks stems from events in the U.S., mired as it is in accounting scandals. But one cannot help but conclude that Brown’s charmed existence for the first five years of his time in the job is about to get a lot rougher.
There may be some upside to all this. Brown’s attempt to improve our creaking health and education system may prove the futility of state monopoly as the ideal way to deliver good service and give the opposition Conservatives ammunition for the case for root and branch reform. But I would not bet the farm on it just yet.