Plan C - Social Liberal Approaches To A Fair, Sustainable Economy
Plan C - Social Liberal Approaches To A Fair, Sustainable Economy
Plan C - Social Liberal Approaches To A Fair, Sustainable Economy
A Social Liberal Forum publication by Dr. Prateek Buch Foreword by Will Hutton
Prateek Buch This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercialNoDerivs 3.0 Unported License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, 444 Castro Street, Suite 900, Mountain View, California, 94041, USA. For permission to re-use this work or parts thereof please contact [email protected] Acknowledgments: Many thanks to Social Liberal Forum Chair David Hall-Matthews, as well as James Graham, Naomi Smith and Mark Blackburn for help with this work. Thanks also to Mark Pack, David Grace, Tim Leunig, Andrew Meyer, Will Straw and Matthew Oakeshott for robust discussion of economic issues.
Contents
Foreword Plan C Introduction and executive summary Chapter one the case for social liberal economics Chapter two reducing the deficit whilst supporting sustainable prosperity Chapter three innovation, investment and infrastructure for jobs Chapter four fair finance fit for purpose Chapter five towards a just, adaptable and secure flexicurity economy Conclusion Further reading 4 6 9 17 20 25 29 34 35
Foreword
It was as obvious in the last decades of the nineteenth century as it is in these first decades of the twenty first that unalloyed capitalism creates intolerable strains in the societies of which it is part. Indeed it becomes dysfunctional. Entrepreneurship and innovation are destroyed in societies where power resides with incumbents and excessive concentrations of corporate power and personal wealth obstruct the birth of the new. And societies with low trust, low social mobility and in which ordinary people find it impossible to live lives they have reason to value do not provide sufficient reservoirs of workers and consumers upon which successful capitalism depends. Capitalists preach the gospel of the survival of the fittest, unaware that proportionality of reward, constraint on the abuse of power, readiness of public authority to mitigate unknowable business risk and the creation of a social contract are essential to capitalisms effective functioning. The paradox is that a more bounded capitalism that accepts mutual obligations to the society of which it is part delivers better than unbounded capitalism a truth with which the great social liberal theorists between 1870 and 1945 wrestled. Green, Hobhouse, Keynes and Beveridge spelled out a more subtle relationship between state and individual than the classic liberalism of Mill and Bentham. They sketched a role for intermediate institutions, for social insurance, for activist fiscal, monetary and financial policy, for public intervention in the design of markets and for a purposeful role of the state to promote investment and innovation. But they were sandwiched between two great twentieth century ideologies free market capitalism and socialism. Socialists argued for the socialization of risk not its mitigation, and distrusted the plural distribution of political and economic power. Keynesianism became traduced into the doctrine of tax and spend combined with alleged carelessness about public debt. Meanwhile free market fundamentalists tried to argue that any deformity of capitalism required more capitalism. Today both traditions are stone dead killed by their self-evident inadequacies and theoretical failings. We are rediscovering the ideas of the great social liberals who have so inspired my own thinking and this short pamphlet is a good contemporary expression of those insights. Social liberalism within the Liberal Democrat party and its close cousin, the new social democratic tradition within the Labour party, are in my view the joint intellectual and political cornerstone for the re-visioning and reconceptualization of Britain. They chime with the British publics deep attachment to fairness, proportionality and respect for the individual along with a readiness to rally around those who are unlucky through no fault of their own or who face unacceptable risks. I am pleased to be invited to write a few words introducing a policy document that contains so many recommendations and ideas I have consecrated much of my working and intellectual life to advancing.
This is the plan notwithstanding quibbles about some details and the obvious need for a more expansionary macro economic policy that could begin to make a difference to our country. Will Hutton March 1st 2012
The ideas of economists and political philosophers, both when they are right and when they are wrong, are more powerful than is commonly understood. Indeed the world is ruled by little else.
John Maynard Keynes General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money, 1936
The Social Liberal Forum exists to promote social justice and actively narrow gaps in power and opportunity between rich and poor, and here we present our proposals for fulfilling that rhetorical demand for a fairer economic framework. In recognising that orthodox economic policy has failed either to deliver prosperity for all during times of plenty or fairness in times of austerity, we set out the principles upon which a sustainable economy that promotes social justice can be built. We begin by exploring the underlying causes of the UKs economic stagnation, moving beyond the sterile tendency to pin all blame on profligate government spending and/or greedy financiers. Debates about the structural deficit and global financial crisis should not distract attention from the prolonged period of joblessness and sluggish economic output that has lasted since 2008. With the UK economy still operating considerably below capacity and little sign of improvement, we believe that this should be an urgent priority for economic policy. A nuanced diagnosis of what caused the ongoing financial crisis, and the subsequent downturn in economic activity from which we are yet to recover, has serious implications for how the governments budget deficit should be dealt with.
We begin by proposing an approach to the fiscal deficit that is sensitive to a broad range of economic indicators, bringing government spending back in line with revenues in a manner compatible with sustainable rises in living standards. This approach differs from expansionary fiscal contraction (which we refer to as Plan A), as well as from a Plan B predicated on returning to many of the conditions before the crash. We then explore the principles behind a Plan C for a social liberal economy, making the following recommendations in three broad areas: 1. innovation, investment and infrastructure for jobs, for which we propose:
investing in Enterprise Zones such that they become integral to an innovation ecosystem that can incubate innovative business Such an ecosystem approach would see an enterprising state take a more pro-active role in driving innovation, which is vital for growth
the creation of Public Interest Corporations to deliver job-rich infrastructure projects and other solutions to economic challenges these would bring together public and private stakeholders on equal terms such that risk and reward are evenly spread
an expansion of the Youth Contract to provide the necessary conditions for young people to find fulfilling work
full and timely implementation of the final report of the Independent Commission on Banking, including higher capital requirements and separation of retail and investment banks the establishment of a National Investment Bank, with three distinct divisions to support housing, small to medium enterprises (SMEs) and export activity Such a bank could be funded from the issuance of bonds at favourable rates, as well as a combination of measures to raise revenue from a fairer, more transparent tax system focused on taxation of wealth and financial transactions
establishing publicly accountable regional banks, and fostering a diverse and well-regulated ecosystem of alternative financial institutions such as credit unions, peer-to-peer lenders and local stock exchanges fair and transparent remuneration, linked to the proposals for fair pay discussed below
3. moving towards a just, adaptable and secure flexicurity economy, for which we propose:
a social liberal approach to the distribution of risk and reward, delivering fair pay at both ends of the income scale increased workplace democracy to ensure that high pay is tackled through effective empowerment of workers and shareholders a living wage adoption of the principles of flexicurity, to make our institutions and workforce more resilient to waves of change, including: - provision of robust employment insurance alongside appropriate skills training for those who fall out of work - help in substituting new employment for jobs lost to competitive pressures abroad - a defined role for businesses, unions and employees in providing for an adaptable and secure workforce.
These proposals form the basis of a Plan C for the UK economy, but of far greater importance is the social liberal philosophy that animates them that an empowering state should pay attention to vulnerability, inequality and obstacles to self-fulfilment. There is a role for government in shaping markets such that risk and reward are fairly distributed and citizens are resilient to market volatility, without excessive control or regulation. The discussion that follows expands on these ideas, which we believe can drive an efficient economy producing sustainable prosperity for all.
Unemployment
(Sep-Nov)
Real GDP
(Q4)
Manufacturing output
(November)
Indicator Exports
Latest (November)
Comment Volumes up 5% over the last year (imports up 3%) level third highest on record little sign yet of impact from euro zone crisis Sales volumes up 0,6% in latest month and up 2.6% over last year sales values up 6.2% over last year bad weather depressed sales a year ago At near record low due to higher unemployment and fears about the effect of the euro zone crisis CIPS indicator at highest level since May 2011 suggests sector is expanding again Third consecutive surprise increase in activity at a ten-month high consistent with a growing economy Dropped back to 4.2% (RPI 4.8%) likely to fall sharply towards 2% target rate during 2012 Regular pay up 1.9% over the last year; total pay up 1.9% - well below inflation rate real earnings falling Government borrowed 13.7bn in December down on a year earlier year-to-date figure also lower Moved a little higher during the last month but remain at historically very low levels
Retail sales
(December)
Consumer confidence Manufacturing confidence Services confidence Consumer price inflation Average earnings growth Public sector net borrowing Bond yields
(December)
(January) (January)
(December)
(Sep-Nov)
(December)
(January)
Table One: according to a range of indicators the UK faces economic stagnation. Table reproduced with kind permission from Tony Dolphin, Senior Economist and Associate Director for Economic Policy at the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR). It is unlikely that any one political party, economic tradition or policy basket will or could - effectively tackle all these crises on its own. It is equally unlikely that orthodox policy tools will overcome the challenges we face, not least because they stem from a faulty diagnosis of how we came to be where we are today. What is needed is a pluralist approach to the most profound crisis in both capitalism and
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democracy we have faced in living memory, based on an effective dissection of the causes of the crash, coupled with solutions that deliver social justice through economic efficiency and fairness. This pamphlet does not contain ready-made answers to the severe trauma we are experiencing. Nor do we present a shopping list of policies that, given the ever-changing economic landscape, would appear dated before they have been discussed. Rather, the chapters that follow seek to navigate a path between conflicting accounts of how this crisis of economic governance came about, and to propose some indicative policies that flow from broad principles for emerging from the debris of the crash with a fairer and more sustainable settlement. We will discuss past mistakes but our aim is positive. We see it as the role of the government as well as of society to build an optimal framework within which both a just capitalism and a socially liberal democracy will flourish.
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political-economic spectrum, excessive public debt, manifested as structural budget deficits, are crowding out a private sector-led expansion of economic activity and hence renewed growth and more jobs. To the spending doves on the left, it is the public austerity implemented to tackle the deficit that continues to prevent a dynamic recovery, dampening demand and turning the recession into long-term stagnation. Both narratives contain kernels of truth masked by ideological blinkers, which obscure the complex causes underlying the current crises in banking, sovereign solvency and sustainability. Both miss essential insights that, if overlooked, will lead to remedies that worsen the disease they aim to cure.
The financial crisis and its unresolved consequences remain a root cause of poor economic performance
Many economic commentators point to the (largely unresolved) turbulence in financial markets since 2007/8 as the root of our current crises. These financial shock-waves saw money markets seize up, transnational financial giants such as the US investment bank Lehmann Brothers collapse, and myriad of supposedly successful financial corporations, from Northern Rock and RBS in the UK to AIG and Fannie Mae in the USA, effectively nationalised. Unforeseen by conventional economists and characterised by most in hindsight as a failure by banks to price the risk of default on complex financial instruments, the crash was also a failure of governments to regulate systemically risky activity. The financial storm was not unique in itself, nor did it only affect the UK; the reach of globalised finance and the interconnected nature of Western economies meant this much was inevitable. Nonetheless the extent to which the financial crisis spilled over and caused both fiscal and general economic crises varied country by country. Both Vince Cable and the Social Liberal Forum predicted long before the event that the UK was particularly exposed to risks of excessive debt and over-reliance on an underregulated financial services sector. As the most globalised economy in the G8, it was obvious that the UK needed to manage that risk much better.* It is important to recognise the crucial role that the banking crisis of 2007/8 played in bringing about our current stagnation. Both deficit hawks and spending doves need to incorporate a better understanding of the ongoing financial crisis into their explanations of our economic problems. The former need to acknowledge that burgeoning public deficits are partly due to the justifiable bailout of systemically important banks and the drastic drop in tax receipts ensuing from output lost in the aftermath of the banking crash. The latter must accept that the financial crisis revealed structural flaws in the wider economy that cannot be resolved by
* in the interest of brevity, we will not discuss the precise reasons behind the near-collapse of the global banking system, except in the context of financial reforms discussed in Chapter 4; for excellent reviews of the crash, please see the Further Reading
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somehow resetting monetary liquidity and propping up demand through greater borrowing alone. Both the financial crisis and the weakness in the real economy must be tackled together, head-on. We must acknowledge that failures of public policy played a prominent role in both the illusory boom years preceding the crash and the subsequent deep depression. This is usually given some recognition when criticising the regulation of the financial services sector, implying that more vigilant oversight could in and of itself have prevented the systemic meltdown. Of course it was imprudent of successive governments to rely on light-touch regulation of the banking industry. However, asserting that the country will return to economic health if only banks are more tightly controlled and forced to lend more to business, is lazy thinking. Following the collapse of over-inflated house prices and the value of exotic financial derivatives based on them, we were faced with a credit crisis that threatened to engulf every major UK bank. The New Labour government of 2008 was left with little choice but to take large stocks in struggling transnational giants and effectively bail out the entire banking industry to avert disaster any responsible administration would have done so. By the time the bank rescue was in place, however, the financial crisis had spilled over into a general economic crisis; lending to non-financial business was choked off by tightened credit conditions, in spite of loose monetary policy from the Bank of England, and the slide into the deepest and longest recession in living memory became inevitable as households and businesses alike de-leveraged the unprecedented debt they had accumulated in the boom years. This has resulted in the slowest recovery from recession in over seventy years (see Chart One). GDP: Change from Peak
4% 2% 0% -2% -4% -6% -8% 0 6 12 18 24 30 36 42 48
Chart One: By plotting the change in GDP during and immediately after 20th century recessions, Jonathan Portes, Director of the National Institute of Economic and Social Research, has shown that the 2008/9 recession was the deepest in over seventy years. This also demonstrates that the ongoing recovery has taken longer than any previous downturn. 13
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The pressure group Compass also presented a Plan B. It rightly sought to refocus attention on the recession and included some laudable pro-growth policies, but its stance on deficit reduction (to halt spending cuts completely until recovery is in place) is neither politically nor economically credible. Concern at the failure of Plan A to inspire a recovery has resulted in various government initiatives most of them originating from the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister such as the Youth Contract, bringing forward some infrastructure spending, yet further loosening of monetary policy and the Cities Deal. These initiatives are welcome and discussed positively elsewhere in this pamphlet however they do not go far enough as they are add-ons to the austere spending constraints of Plan A. As such, policy since Chancellor Osbornes 2011 Autumn Budget Statement, which laid bare the need for extra borrowing to compensate for the suppression of demand, can be seen as Plan A+; fiscal consolidation as per Plan A, plus a little more active pro-growth policy. It now appears that Labour has accepted the Coalitions Plan A as the only legitimate framework.
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With Plan A failing to support economic recovery and Plan B not likely to do so either, there is a clear need for a social liberal Plan C. We begin by exploring in brief what a Plan C approach to the economy means for deficit reduction and how it would be achieved. Recognising that healthy government finances are necessary but insufficient to foster fair and sustainable economic progress, we then present the substantive elements of Plan C in three parts: innovation, investment and infrastructure for jobs; fair finance fit for purpose; and policies that move us towards a just, adaptable and secure flexicurity economy. The first two parts attempt to define broad principles and some policies that flow from them to re-shape the economy and generate fairer and more sustainable outcomes. The final part differs in recognising that the rapidly increasing pace of technological change and the rise of new economic powers are putting pressure on advanced economies. With the lifetime of most firms measured in years not decades, it is essential to develop policies that accept the fluid landscape and offer ways of making our economy adaptable to change.
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to support growth, quality jobs and wider economic well-being should not come as an afterthought or still less be shelved in the interests of self-defeating fiscal policy. They must be a core component of a more nuanced public finance strategy, which takes into account the complex relationship with wider economic performance. Undoubtedly the fear of rising interest rates haunts the Treasury but as noted above low bond yields in the UK are as much an expression of the lack of confidence in growth as an endorsement of austerity. Our triple-A credit rating keeps yields low for now, but is not enough to help small and medumsized businesses grappling with reduced credit availability from nervous banks and a huge drop in demand. Plan C seeks to address the latter and will require strong political leadership to implement in the face of old arguments that insist on fiscal conservatism as an end in itself. But it is essential if the interest of both the taxpayer and private enterprise are to be served. The electoral implications of taking this longer-term view might appear difficult as it means spreading fiscal consolidation over more than one Parliament. However the argument that we need a completely balanced budget before the 2015 general election has been undermined by the Chancellors Autumn Statement of 2011, in which he admitted the failure to return to growth meant that fiscal tightening would continue well into the next Parliament anyway. So the question is no longer whether it would be sensible to reduce the deficit more slowly than Plan A indicated. It is now more relevant to ask how we plan to bring the deficit down over the medium to long term and what mechanisms we have to make sure we achieve sustainable prosperity as part of the same strategy. It would be folly to pretend that this can be achieved simply through more public borrowing alone. There needs to be a radical change in the way the UK economy is configured so that it embeds the social liberal values of socio-economic justice into the heart of how capitalism and democracy work. The following chapters move beyond the narrow debate over how much the government should borrow to how best we can arrange our affairs to deliver a sustainable, just economic settlement, in which the positive liberty of citizens to pursue their own goals is paramount.
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UK unemployment trends
25.0 9 8 20.0 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0.0 Mar-11 Jul-11 Mar-05 Mar-06 Mar-07 Mar-08 Mar-09 Nov-04 Nov-05 Nov-06 Nov-07 Nov-08 Nov-09 Mar-10 Nov-10 Nov-11 Jul-05 Jul-06 Jul-07 Jul-08 Jul-09 Jul-10 0
15.0
10.0
5.0
Month Chart Two: Both youth unemployment (solid line) and wider unemployment (broken line, note different scales) began a steady rise in early 2005 and then increased dramatically following the financial crash and the onset of recession. Neither have fallen significantly in response to government policy in fact joblessness continues to rise. Source: Eurostat.
% workforce unemployed
incentives. Such targeted investment in EZs should be aimed at finding innovative solutions to local and national challenges, particularly those regarding the improvement of physical and virtual infrastructure. The scope, design and delivery of these solutions should involve Local Enterprise Partnerships (LEPs) and other regional stakeholders, including elected representatives of local authorities and private businesses. EZs need to act as a facilitative forum through which local economies are strengthened and job markets revived, ensuring that both risk and reward are fairly distributed amongst private and public investors and employees. To some extent the Coalition Government recognises the value of local authority engagement in delivering skills, jobs and growth, and the recently-announced City Deals are an encouraging development. However, welcome though the devolution of decision-making is, the funding made available is unlikely to be transformative and the focus on broadband infrastructure alone likely to prove too narrow. There needs to be an expansion of the infrastructure and resources that promote innovation and collaboration for new and existing firms. Regional economic development can best be promoted via an innovation ecosystem approach, involving both public and private sectors, as set out by Prof. Mariana Mazzucato of the Open University, NESTA, The Big Innovation Centre and others. Concrete policies that would foster such an approach include:
expansion of the remit and resources of both LEPs and of the Technology Strategy Board (TSB) along the lines of DARPA in the USA, with more direct commissioning of innovative solutions reconfiguring the TSBs Small Business Research Initiative to encourage spending on innovation from Small to Medium Enterprises (SMEs) encouraging patient investment in innovative technology through the tax system ensuring Technology Innovation Centres (TICs) encompass physical and virtual networks between universities, investors, business and public institutions to maximise the translation of research and innovation.
Investment in scientific research is known to boost growth, create jobs and enhance well-being therefore it is imperative that in encouraging innovation, we promote both public and private investment in the UKs centres of scientific excellence. There should also be a Green Deal thread running through these policies so that the jobs, training and innovation provided by such schemes help to reach the governments targets for reducing the UKs carbon emissions.
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I believe it will be said of this age, the first decades of the 21st century, that out of the greatest restructuring of the global economy, perhaps even greater than the industrial revolution, a new world order was created... Britain needs more of the vigour, ingenuity and aspiration that you already demonstrate that is the hallmark of your success.
A financial system fit for the 21st century Gordon Brown, then Chancellor of the must provide sufficient liquidity and Exchequer, addressing leaders of the dynamism to promote sustainable City of London in his Mansion House prosperity, but must also manage risk speech, June 2007. more effectively and be less reliant on public guarantees. This would serve the interests of the financial services industry as much as the public purse. No-one should pretend that it is simple to create a stable system, given the inherently cyclical nature and fluid cross-border movement of global capitalism. The government must therefore be willing to insist on the radical structural reforms required to ensure our financial system is fair and fit for purpose. Since the Big Bang reforms to the UKs financial sector in the mid-1980s, mirrored by the piecemeal repeal of the Glass-Steagall reforms in the USA and a deregulatory race-to-the-bottom across the world, successive governments viewed ballooning profits in the financial services sector as an indication of the underlying health of the wider economy. In fact, as pillar after pillar of the financial house of cards crumbled, their failure showed these apparent profits to be based on a rotten core of under-priced risk and a crass failure to take account of systemic uncertainty. Uncertainty is necessarily at the core of all markets. The role of regulators should not be merely to tinker at the edges, but to keep a close watch
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on macro-financial trends, in order to identify and negate risky activity before crises arise. In addition, risk-taking the core business of financial speculators must be properly insured against with higher capital buffers and a robust separation of retail and investment banking. To achieve the aim of a fair financial system, fit for purpose, we must first define that purpose and set out the parameters of fairness we wish to apply.
A financial services sector that serves the nations interest, not just its own
Events of the last three decades have shown that the purpose of the financial services sector has become distorted and eventually lost in the pursuit of gargantuan short-term returns. So here is a Plan C, social liberal, definition of the purpose of financial services: to provide the capital investment and credit required by productive business, and to help spread the risk inherent in taking on business activity, in a manner consistent with an environmentally and socially sustainable economy. Reforms to the sector must work to fulfil these aims, not to prop up existing structures and companies. There is of course a balance to be struck between the provision of investment and credit in support of non-financial firms and maintaining solid public balance sheets. This reflects a tension at the heart of national and international financial policy between ensuring that the economys wheels are well-oiled during the normal business cycle, and lessening both the likelihood and impact of largescale financial crises. This is not the appropriate forum to discuss micro-prudential reforms aimed at restricting risky financial engineering at the level of the individual firm. But, in the interests of reducing inequality and to prevent excessive remuneration from distorting decision-making and incentives in the sector, pay in banks and allied institutions will need to be tackled (see chapter five). Here we set out a macro-prudential view of a safer, more effective financial system and how this could be achieved. There has been much discussion of Sir John Vickers proposed firewall between retail and investment banking. Proponents of true separation argue that the Vickers proposals dont go far enough and will retain some public exposure of risk, while those opposed suggest that even internal firewalls between two arms of a banking corporation will be more costly than is worthwhile. Dealing with the latter argument is relatively easy; the cost to individual firms in ensuring their investment and retail activities are adequately separated will be minute compared to the explicit and implicit taxpayer subsidies the banking industry enjoys. However, those who wish to see integrated banks completely divest their retail arms should note that Lehmann Brothers had no retail activity and yet its failure caused seismic shockwaves that reverberate to this day. Also, several integrated banks survived
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without explicit taxpayer intervention (although all banks benefited from indirect State action such as the implied underwriting of retail deposits). It is clear that whilst protection of retail deposits from the vagaries of high-risk banking reduces taxpayers liability something the Coalition Government can achieve by adopting the recommendations of Vickers Independent Commission on Banking this reform is not of itself sufficient to restore the UKs financial health. Global financial crises are more likely to stem from the systemically risky behaviour of banks that are too big to fail. Or rather, too important to fail: the failure of even relatively small banks can be potentially disastrous, which is why the retail-only Northern Rock was saved from bankruptcy through nationalisation. To make the banking world as safe as possible, then, it is not sufficient to keep retail and investment banking separate. The banking sector also needs to be more competitive than it is today and provide enough of the different kinds of financial services required by various types of business and organisations. To determine how to make such a financial system fit for purpose, we should revisit our statement of purpose and ask, what kinds of institutions and mechanisms are required to provide the productive economy with sufficient capital and credit to go about creating sustainable prosperity? Or, what does Good Banking look like?
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increased tax receipts arising from a general anti-avoidance rule that would bring in a fairer share of corporate profits wealth taxes, such as those on high-value properties and on land values. a financial transactions tax (FTT). Although the globalised nature of finance makes such a tax difficult to implement in the absence of worldwide agreement, the 0.5% stamp duty that HMRC charges on shares traded in London shows that it would be possible at the domestic or EU-wide level, without leading to loss of business.
Going beyond national-level large-scale investment, there is a pressing need for both credit and capital investment in innovation and for SMEs investment that our current financial system is notoriously poor at providing. Thus, a network of publicly accountable regional banks should also be set up, perhaps emerging from the break-up of the currently-nationalised RBS group. Such regional banks, arranged as mutuals or cooperatives, would have closer links to local businesses and have a stake in their success, incentivising lending that leads to economic growth and job creation. The existence of a network of local and community banking institutions is crucial to economic revival. This will especially help if they act as the conduits for government schemes such as credit easing, which currently fail to aid the wider economy because they rely on inadequate existing financial architecture, which remains out of touch with SMEs and still needs to repair its collective balance sheet before carrying out additional lending. This network of new banks would form part of an ecosystem of financial institutions that encompasses credit unions, micro-finance providers, peer-to-peer lending facilities, local stock exchanges and other alternatives to traditional banking and investment. Such an ecosystem would go some way to ensuring that the diverse range of enterprises that form the backbone of the UK economy have access to the types of finance that suit them. First, however, the economy must become less dependent on debt and more on equity-finance. Policy in this area is likely to be very difficult and slow to implement, but working towards an equalisation of debt and equity in the tax system, as recommended in the Mirrlees review, would go a long way to ensuring that businesses are less dependent on ephemeral sources of credit and more on patient investment through equity-funding. Here then is a sketch of what a Good Banking sector looks like, focused on supply-side reforms that would facilitate the conditions for sustainable economic progress. However, Good Banking is not enough on its own. In order to achieve equitable, sustainable prosperity, the social liberal values of fairness and social justice must be embedded as key principles of how state and market are configured. It is to how these values can be put into practice that we finally turn.
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We are intensely relaxed about people getting filthy rich as long as they pay their taxes.
Lord (then simply Peter) Mandelson, addressing Californian computer executives nervous about the UK being a poor host for business, in 1998.
Liberals have always fought to prevent the emergence of an overbearing state that disempowers individuals. However, social liberals recognise that markets or rather their constituent actors are too often organised in ways that disempower and violate the capability L. T. Hobshouse, in Liberalism (1911) of individuals to live fulfilling lives. It is at this point that a central principle of social liberalism comes into play that a liberal, accountable and open state should act as a countervailing force to the inequality that results when the markets invisible hand distorts outcomes through unjust practices.
The function of the State is to secure conditions upon which its citizens are able to win, by their own effort, all that is necessary to a full civic efficiency. It is for the State to take care that the economic conditions are such that the normal man who is not defective in mind or body or will can by useful labour feed, house and clothe himself and his family
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The states role in ensuring that a market economy delivers social justice
The recent trend, in the UK at least, has been for government policy to try to act as a countervailing force in a post-hoc manner. That is to say, attempts to redress some of the unjust outcomes of the market economy have come as afterthoughts designed to patch up underlying iniquities that remain in place. This is exemplified by New Labour policy relating to earnings, taxation and in-work benefits. Tax credits and in-work benefits were trumpeted as great progressive interventions on behalf of a caring state. Indeed, as inflation-adjusted wages continued to stagnate for the majority of the working population, low- and middle-earners came to depend on tax credits to top-up their incomes to an acceptable level. However, this served to support a labour market configured to produce unjust outcomes. New Labours reluctance to tackle the injustice of stagnant median wages in the first place particularly in the face of soaring pay for the lucky few at the very top of the income scale exposed a massive philosophical flaw at the heart of modern social democracy as practised by New Labour and its intellectual bedfellows in other countries. The assumption, infamously encapsulated by Peter Mandelsons claim with which this chapter begins, was that the labour market could self-organise in whatever way it saw fit. Provided the filthy rich paid their taxes, the government could continue to make transfer payments to those who fail to secure a just market wage. This myopic view of social justice recapitulates the fundamental flaws in the idea of redistribution as an end in itself: that redistributing small amounts of money to millions of people will make up for the gross inequality created by an unfair system; that redistributing money alone is tantamount to redistributing capabilities; and finally, that the states role is to act only as an after-the-fact arbiter. The key for a Plan C, social liberal approach to the economy is to challenge these assumptions. Inequalities of rewards are a symptom of the underlying inequality of power in the workplace and to some extent the ballot box. We need a widerreaching redistribution of more than just monetary income. The role of the state is to make the framework within which markets operate fairer so that the outcomes people experience are more socially just in the first place, before any need for heavy government intervention arises. Put simply, social liberals believe that a fairer economy, with rewards themselves distributed more evenly and according to desert, would be a more efficient economy.
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company structure to ensure employees and other stakeholders have a fair say in how their firms are run, even in the absence of widespread employee ownership. A greater voice for ordinary workers may start by helping to break the illusion of the superstar CEO that is used as justification for superstar pay.
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Firms should be asked to set aside a proportion of revenue to be held in trust and used in the training of employees to help them get through periods of unemployment. Unions could be reorganised along the lines of worker cooperatives or friendly societies, which would work alongside company management to ensure that adequate out-of-work insurance and training is provided to all its members on an income contingent contributory basis. Far from replacing state underwriting of universal benefits, which would continue to provide a floor below which nobody should fall, such organisations would help employees cope with the need to adapt to a rapidly evolving economic landscape and help business and employees benefit from greater matching of skills and demand for work. Such radical reforms, altering the relationship between management, workers and the state, would ensure that all three benefit from closer alignments of their individual goals.
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Conclusion
Reviving and reforming the economy to make it greener, fairer and more sustainable than in recent decades is a key challenge facing policy makers. Various politicians, economists, think-tanks and commentators have put forward policies designed to return to the levels of growth seen before the onset of the current crisis and yet these policies are often devoid of a narrative, a sense of purpose behind what they are aiming to achieve. The Social Liberal Forums approach is to recognise that narrative is as crucial to making effective policy as any technocratic solutions, and that this narrative should be based on the values and principles of 21st century social Liberalism the values of fairness and social justice, paired with a vision of an economic settlement that enhances the capabilities of all to live fulfilling lives. It is from these values and this vision that we derive the overarching goal of Plan C: the co-production of truly sustainable prosperity with the spread of risk and reward between stakeholders according to what they can offer and really deserve. Plan C seeks to establish a new economic paradigm that is focused entirely on the need to build sustainable prosperity centred on a social liberal conception of how both State and markets must evolve together to bring this about.
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Further reading
Full references are available on the Social Liberal Forum website: http://socialliberal.net For in-depth analysis of the financial crash and its underlying causes, see:
Fools Gold by Gillian Tett (Abacus, 2010) The Storm by Vince Cable (Atlantic Books, 2010) Fantasy Island by Larry Elliott and Dan Atkinsnon (Constable, 2007) The return of depression economics by Paul Krugman (Penguin, 2008) Globalisation and the role of the state by David Hall-Matthews (chapter in Reinventing the State, Politicos, 2007).
For an indispensible overview of how John Maynard Keyness economic philosophy is central to the social liberal approach, see Keynes: the return of the Master by Robert Skidelsky (Penguin, 2010). The social liberal economic philosophy in the following works has informed much of this work:
L. T. Hobhouse (Liberalism; Oxford University Press, 1944) J. M. Keynes (The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money; first published 1936, 2008 edition published by BN Publishing) William Beveridge (The Report of the Inter-Departmental Committee on Social Insurance and Allied Services, 1942) and J. K. Galbraith (The Great Crash, 1929 and The Affluent Society, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 1954 and 1958)
Social liberal economics has been brought up to date through the writing of
Amartya Sen (in particular Development as Freedom, OUP, 1999; and The Idea of Justice, Harvard University Press, 2009) Will Hutton (The State Were In, Vintage, 1996 and Them and Us, Abacus, 2011) Ha-Joon Chang (Bad Samaritans, Randon House, 2007, and 23 things they dont tell you about capiltalism, Allen Lane, 2010)
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