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The Daily Sceptic

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Michael Taft - Towards a New Economic Narrative

category national | worker & community struggles and protests | feature author Thursday March 12, 2009 00:09author by Mark C - Contact.ie Report this post to the editors

A new 10-point programme for economic recovery and renewal

featured image
Towards a New Economic Narrative

The Right are having a field day in the economic debate. It's time progressives take to the pitch. In 'Towards A New Economic Narrative', Michael Taft of Notes on the Front outlines a ten point programme to kickstart an alternative debate. It includes: Borrow 'Till We Drop * Tax Lay-About Capital, Not Work * Public Safety Committees * Spread It Around * Competition This! * Go On a (Social) Binge * A New Green Deal * Money's Too Tight To Mention * The Enterprise Guarantee * Reinventing Public Economic Activity


This is not the last word. It's the first of many words. But one thing is certain: the Left must become audacious and present a bold economic package to people. It we don't, the Right will continue to drive the debate, the Left will become marginalised and the economy will continue its ever downward sprial.

One could read Michael Taft's articles for style alone, if the content were not of such import. His “The Recession Diaries” published (at least) daily on his blog and also on Irish Left Review makes for fascinating reading. The insights succinct, the criticisms sharp.

For style, consider this: “Let’s be under no illusion. The right is driving this debate. And the main ‘opposition’ in all this has been Fine Gael who wants more of the same. A debate? You need two sides to have a debate. All we have is the sound of one hand slapping us about.”

For content, consider this: “So far, the Left, with some exceptions, has staked out a small ground. It opposes cutbacks, proposes infrastructural projects and more training places, and suggests alternative revenue streams such as cutting tax reliefs. Some good ideas but, to date, they do not cohere into a programme of expansion and renewal. They do not, as yet, constitute a new narrative.”

He wrote an article recently for Irish Left Review entitled “Towards a New Economic Narrative”, from which the above two quotes come, which, one fears, will not be listened to by those who should listen, acted upon by those who have the power, nor given the coverage it deserves by those who are in a position to do so. This article is an attempt to counter this fear.

In “Towards a New Economic Narrative” Mr Taft lays out ten proposals which could help to regenerate the Irish economy, ranging from “expanding fiscally”, to “expanding demand”, to “a new enterprise pact”.

The ten points proposed are as follows, with a brief excerpt from each.


Expand Fiscally

1) Borrow ‘Til We Drop
“We need to borrow. We need to borrow big time. You can’t cut-and-tax your way out of a recession - you spend. And borrowing is the main instrument. Borrowing will get us ‘over the hump’. We won’t take money out, we will put money in. In times of recession, borrowing is good.”


2) Tax Lay-About Capital, Not Work
“Just to ensure that we don’t get caught in a debt-spiral, buttress our borrowing with new tax measures - but only on capital and higher incomes. It’s okay to tax these folk - they have higher liquidity which doesn’t end up getting spent or invested productively.”

3) Public Safety Committees
“Inefficient and inequitable expenditure remains out of inertia - or because it benefits a vested interest. Roll out the guillotine.”


Expand Demand

4) Spread it Around
“In 2007, 500 companies made over €26 billion in profits while 90 percent of the top 1000 companies were in profit. Even if the recession reduces this, there’s still a lot of money there to spread around. So renegotiate the wage deal (it’s been done on two previous occasions so there can be no objection from precedent); or bring forward the next wage deal. Whatever we do, make sure that social partnership remains relevant to the times.”


5) Competition This!
“Take up Colm Rapple’s excellent idea to require retailers to provide real-time price information to a revamped National Consumer Agency which would put up the information on an interactive, regionally based website. The Tanaiste said people should shop around - well, let them shop around on the website; and shame the price gougers.”


6) Go on a (Social) Binge
“While the last thing we need is to artificially inflate the construction sector to previously unsustainable levels - the last thing we need is to throw building workers on to the dole queue or let valuable skills leave the country, especially with all the social and environmental work that needs to be done. [...] The biggest drag on demand and the biggest drain on the Government’s budget is unemployment so these measures give us room to manoeuvre, a breathing space - and ensure that people have a warm place to live in and children aren’t taught under leaky roofs.”


A New Enterprise Pact

7) A New Green Deal
“We can muck about with ‘market signals’, ‘tax incentives’ and, of course, the old reliable - pleading with foreign capital to nod in our direction; or we can just do it ourselves.[...] Going green means stepping up, not cutting back, our expansionary programme.”


8) Money’s Too Tight to Mention

We will need to prise open new credit streams. Beating banks about the head will only get so far (no matter how much fun it is). Expansionist policies need expanded credit to turn it into sales, exports, jobs and profits.


9) The Enterprise Guarantee

“We need a deep-rooted, democratic partnership of all stakeholders working throughout all layers of the economy. We need a new enterprise guarantee - as wide-ranging as any undertaking given to banks. Specifically, sector-wide strategies should be created, pursued and monitored through these new structures with the participation of employers, trade unions, the state and other stakeholders. [...] This is the New Enterprise Pact, the high-road to jobs, profits and wealth; this is the new face of Irish enterprise. This, and not the slash n’ burn model, will set the ground for sustainable growth in the future. Make no mistake: creating a new generation of indigenous, progressive companies - which will take time - is one of the most urgent items on the economic agenda.”


10) Reinventing Public Economic Activity
“The Left should argue for a truly pluralist ‘mixed market economy’. Already, we have ‘private sector’ companies who are reliant on the public sector (through PPPS, procurement, grant-aiding, tax relief, etc.). Now we must create new models where the private and the public can develop to their maximum potential and mutual benefit. [...] There’s a name for this: mixed-market economy. The Left should argue for participatory pluralism, not a corporatist/statist one-size-fits-all.”

You can read the full text of “Towards a New Economic Narrative” at the “Related Link” below.

Related Link: http://www.irishleftreview.org/economic-narrative/
author by excpublication date Fri Mar 13, 2009 11:55author address author phone Report this post to the editors

He notes the Indymedia Article and provides an updated contextualisation of his 'new Economic Narrative' essay.

http://notesonthefront.typepad.com/politicaleconomy/200....html

author by john again - bubble-up economistpublication date Tue Mar 17, 2009 13:49author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Here's an alternative alternative economic program:

- Nationalise the gas. All OUR base belong to US.

- institute a Special Strategic Retraining Initiative to transform furloughed builders into small-scale market gardeners

- liberalise trading regulations to promote flea markets and farmers markets & subsidise venues

- institute price-controls in insurance for markets, food producers, crafts, cottage industries

- institute price-controls in retail and wholesale; a sharply progressive tax on profits (they have this in e.g. belgium), targetted and food, clothing, books, gardening stuff, knitting, sewing, baking

- more & bigger grants for sustainable power (some of this already happening), solar, wind, hydro, insulation

- radical overhaul of tax laws: devise a fair and progressive tax regime, with the express intent of using a share of profits to support irish society; implement it simultaneously with the annulment of all previous tax laws with thier million-and-one loopholes (probably hoping for too much here ;)

- appropriate properties empty for more than X months to be made available at very minimally priced 1-year leases to the disadvantaged, family housing and also non-residential spaces for youth and community projects

- green spaces around towns and cities to be made available to households to grow food (e.g. allotments in phoenix park) for nominal charge

In short, reskilling the unemployed towards farming,
using empty houses for social housing,
keynsian spending for energy generation & conservation & food production.

The worst-case scenario is that the depression turns out to be L-shaped rather than U- or V-shaped (cf Nouriel Roubini), and if that were to occur (risk factor is maybe 40%?) than we definately wouldn't want to be indebted up to out eyeballs.
The IMF would have us in effective indentured servitude .. check out Argentina, Madegascar, Ukraine, Iceland, .....

 
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