Posts Tagged 'Sammy Wilson'

It’s all about the private sector

Northern Ireland Finance Minister Sammy Wilson...

All lefties now.  Sammy Wilson.  (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

After my contribution to Good Morning Ulster this morning – discussing the need for continued austerity with the tax and spend MP Mark Durkan – several callers questioned my logic that the only contributor to wealth was the private sector.  One caller suggested that my Economics knowledge was deficient (no argument there, it’s not really a science and most Economists make it up as they go).  However, this caller suggested that my simplistic argument relating to the private sector – business – being the only source of growth was flawed.  The caller asked, incredulously, did I not know that 4 things contributed to growth: production, consumption, government spending and exports.

However, I think this caller may, with further investigation, come to the conclusion that without production (private sector) there would be no consumption, no government tax take  and no exports. I rest my case.

However, more worrying, was Mark Durkan’s clear lack of any economic understanding. It appears sometimes that the synapses of doctrinally motivated lefties (and Sammy Wilson is sounding more and more like one – he appeared later on the the programme) aren’t connected the same way as people who have to manage budgets or run businesses. Both Durkan and Wilson argue that it would be better that the government borrowed more to employ people to build infrastructure than to have them hanging around on the dole. The argument is so patently absurd that it barely merits a response, but here goes.

First argument against is that we can’t afford it. UK public spending is at absurdly high – grotesquely high – levels.  Public debt is now above £1 Trillion. To service that debt costs hundreds of billions – despite the UK’s relatively low bond yield levels. If bond yields creep up (and they will if debt increases) the cost of borrowing – and the required tax take – will go up too.

Second argument – it’s not clear what UK infrastructure is needed. For example, should we building roads when what we really need is better broadband infrastructure? And why should the UK government be getting involved in Internet provision when it can’t even run the NHS efficiently? Oh and if infrastructure is provided under PFI (like the grandiose new Invest NI building on Bedford Street) will we be, as taxpayers, paying through the nose to property developers in perpetuity?

Third argument – the unemployment reduction myth. Sammy Wilson on GMU this morning, argued that the government should be developing infrastructure to employ the unemployed. Last time I looked the majority of the unemployed were not highly skilled engineers, planners, legals – or the other types of people needed to undertake infrastructure work. Even construction workers these days need to have vast experience to undertake the types of infrastructure projects Sammy Wilson, no doubt, has in mind. And most of the firms capable of delivering big ticket infrastructure projects would probably be better off working in the high-growth (but infrastructure poor) BRIC economies than in the UK.  Plus such projects would yield valuable export revenue at a time when the UK needs it most.

Fourth argument against Keynesian interventionist spending is that it increases dependence on the state at a time we need increased dependence on commercial led growth. State spending is merely a prop – it’s not the real economy, stupid. What we need is proper demand led growth where businesses here develop good products and sell them – ideally overseas, resulting in expansion in wealth from overseas expenditure. Nothing creates employment faster.

Fifth argument. We need lasting jobs not interim, start-stop employment. Infrastructure projects take forever to plan and get off the ground and typically they have absurdly long pay-back periods (and low associated employment once they are complete).  Just look at the Titanic “signature project”. Years of planning, hordes of construction workers and a big launch.  Now a few ticket tellers and lots of people wondering how the thing will sustain itself.

And I could go on. But I have paying clients to support and work to complete.  But Durkan, Wilson and all the other lefties in Stormont need to get a grip. Austerity WILL get worse. The block grant will decline in real terms and possibly in actual terms. Therefore, for the Executive, there has to be a Plan B other than continued begging bowl politics. We need a focus on stimulating proper, export driven businesses here. We need more businesses moving here and creating the skills needed in this economy. We need a regionally focused economic policy – and we could start by reducing corporation tax quickly, biting the bullet in terms of block grant reduction, and focusing on building sustainable, commercially led employment – squeezing out the public sector.

Wilson and Durkan will not get their way. Things will get worse before they get better. But both need to start facing up to the fact that bitter pills will have to be swallowed.

CCHQ Shafts Northern Ireland Conservatives

Michael Gove speaking at the Conservative Part...

Big on Society, Small on Principle (Image Wikipedia)

Conservative central office has never really cared for Conservatives who happen to reside in Northern Ireland. CCHQ has a history of being populated by people who think that people here only want to vote for sectarianism of one hue or another. Moreover, it has also employed its fair share of small-minded bigots.

This evening the Conservatives’ little-Ulster fossils have been trotted out to defend the policy of assuming the missionary position for the UUP. Laurence Robertson, who plays second fiddle to Owen Paterson, is probably closer to the DUP than he is to the UUP. But he’s certainly never been a friend of the Conservatives in Northern Ireland.

Barnoness Warsi, Tory Chairwoman, who favours a greater role for faith groups in the “Big Society” also appears to be fan of the Orange-soaked UUP. Big Society in Little Ulster. Great.

It has taken quite a while for the local Conservatives to see that Paterson, Robertson and CCHQ intended to systematically ignore them in seeking a deal with the rudderless and useless UUP. But, then again, the Conservative Party leadership is also in a coalition government with the rudderless and policy-devoid  Lib Dems. So this is familiar territory.

The UUP seems to be in gloating mode that it has stolen a march on local Conservatives. But, frankly, who would want to be involved in a Conservative Party that is devoid of any perceptible Conservative values?

The politics of this once great United Kingdom seems to lack any political party with any vestige of any political principle. Instead we have the politics of local and national populism. Our Executive is incapable of agreeing a budget while, nationally, our Prime Minister, like the one before him, prefers to schmooze with celebrities, as an alternative to articulating any coherent policy positions.

Oh and today the Big Society turned out to be a requirement for us all to shovel grit.

In a world that seems increasingly like a confederacy of dunces Sammy Wilson is beginning to sound rational. Now that is a worry.

Spending Review: Hardly a Bitter Pill for Northern Ireland

PM meets other party leaders in Northern Ireland

Image by The Prime Minister's Office via Flickr

There’s a lot of nonsense and hyperbole being spun around the 4-year spending review announced by the Chancellor today – and the effect of these cuts on Northern Ireland.

The NI resource budget has been cut by 6.9 per cent over four years. As has been pointed out by Secretary of State Owen Paterson “that’s a saving of 1.7p in every £1 the Executive spends” – it’s hardly a doom and gloom laden budget prognosis.  Capital spending will fall by 37 per cent – although this is less than the 50 per cent reduction that the previous administration had mooted.

Paterson has made clear that the NI investment strategy relies on funding from a number of different sources, such as the Reform and Reinvestment Initiative and asset sales.  Therefore the St Andrews commitment to £18 billion investment will be achieved by 2017/18. He’s being a tad vague on ramp-up – but these are uncertain times.

Public spending per head in Northern Ireland is already 25 per cent higher than in England and nothing that was announced today will materially affect this differential. I, for one, would say that more extreme medicine was probably required. Moreover, Northern Ireland will be allowed to roll over any underspend this year into next year.  This is not available to English Departments. This surely provides an incentive to the Executive to make available top-up funds for capital projects – by encouraging departmental underspend.

Sammy Wilson is of the view that Northern Ireland “has been done no favours” with the announcements today. Perhaps not, but the extent of the “cuts” will be substantially less than many local economists had predicted. Moreover, in cash terms, Northern Ireland’s block grant is protected.

This could have been a lot worse – and IS much worse in GB. The Executive needs to build consensus and strike a budget sooner rather than later. And Unison, UNITE and the rest need to get real.

Price of the Silver Bullet? Wise-up Sammy.

DSC01776, Belfast Parliament, Belfast, Norther...

Stormont: Image by lyng883 via Flickr

Sammy Wilson, our perma-tanned Finance Minister, has just made the point on BBC Spotlight that if the the cost of a reduction in corporation tax is a £500m reduction in the the block grant he, and his Assembly colleagues, would say ‘no’ to such a reduction in corporation tax.

This neatly sums-up the sheer lack of any strategic vision on the part of the Finance Minister and his Assembly colleagues.

Regional tax differentials are an extraordinarily handy way to rebalance regional economic inequities. If the Treasury offers Northern Ireland the tantalising prospect of a reduction in corporation tax the Assembly should grasp the opportunity with both hands.

Northern Ireland’s costs of doing business are substantially lower than the Republic of Ireland’s. We have better infrastructure. We have more ready access to the UK economy and markets. And we have very useful clusters of businesses – especially in ICT. A reduction of corporation tax to the same level as the Repeublic of Ireland would be a strategic move in the right direction to putting the Northern Ireland economy at significant competitive advantage over other parts of the UK – including the South East of England.

To forego the opportunity to create huge economic competitive advantage for indigenous business growth and FDI on some aburd point of principle would be foolish in the extreme and Sammy Wilson is crazy and blinkered to suggest he would look this gift horse in the mouth.

The Assembly needs to wise-up on this issue. The prize of a reduction in corporation tax is a huge one. Don’t mess it up.

Sammy Wilson and Northern Ireland’s Budget Crisis

In a post last week I asked how it could be that the current Executive was silent on the subject of budget cuts.  And now Sammy Wilson has finally got round to sitting down with a few civil servants who have told him that such cuts are inevitable. 

The sheer incompetence and mismanagement being exhibited by the Executive is jaw-dropping.  Jumped-up “Ministers” swagger around in their ministerial limos completely disassociated from real-world government logic.  But now the truth must be dawning on the Northern Ireland electorate that most of the people they have elected and put into office are systematically useless. 

And why are they useless?  Because they have little or no skills required to govern – and because most of them have been so immersed in sectarian bickering that they have lost the ability to think about and resolve real world problems like balancing budgets.

The DUP, for example, made election commitments to defer water charges.  Why?  It makes no practical sense to defer charges for services that are provided and infrastructure that’s needed.  Now, given the monstrous hole in the budget, it’s becoming clear that water charges are back on the table.  And so they should be.  They should have been on the table during election time.  But so intent were lazy politicians to get elected they promised anything.  They duped the electorate.  Because I’ll bet you this – I’ll bet that no-one in the DUP actually sat down and did the sums.  I’ll bet that no-one actually asked the question, “What will the consequences be of us deferring these charges on the rest of the budget?”

Now, of course, we’re in a deep recession.  Our workforce is heavily dependent on the public purse for employment – as are other less developed regions of the UK.  Whatever government is elected next year will commit to significant and deep public spending cuts – and that will affect the block grant. 

Therefore, a major structural root and branch review of our budget is required – not merely adding water charges back on the table.  Oh and that review should also address whether there is any demand for the devolution of policing and justice – given the fact that it’s going to cost an arm and a leg. 

Northern Ireland is facing a major crisis.  Something needs to be done – but one thing’s for sure.  Sammy Wilson is not the solution.


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This is my site where I share my world views for anyone who might be remotely interested. Visit only if you think the content is interesting. Oh and comment is free. So go right ahead and agree or disagree. But, please, be kind and polite (especially to me).
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