Deficit-busting and the Chinese curse
An article about Britain in the FT is likely to reflect the choices facing a large number of other indebted and deficit-addled countries (not least Greece.) Its headline Brace yourself, Britain, for higher taxation is self-explanatory; and one of its key points was:
"The notion that the problem can be fixed by eliminating waste was part of the phoney debate. There is widespread waste in the public sector – as in the private – but if it were easy to eliminate it would already have been eliminated."
Another, more entertaining article illustrates the nature of the problem:
"I never realised I was such a hard-hearted brute until I tried out the online “deficit-buster” on FT.com.
It allows you to play chancellor and simulate the UK’s next three-year spending review. You swing the axe - and the deficit-buster tells you all the gruesome consequences in terms of human discomfort.
Before I knew it, two million families with an income of more than £24,400 had lost a benefit worth around £1,000. And all because I thought “means-testing” child benefits was an easy option.
I retraced my steps and swung again. Eleven million people over the age of 60 lost their right to free public transport.
Oops. (And I used to be such a nice son-in-law.)
My wife had a go. She tried to abolish the police - but it wouldn’t let her."
To state the bleeding obvious - we are currently living in the time of the Chinese Curse. The politics of tax is, unfortunately, going to get interesting.
"The notion that the problem can be fixed by eliminating waste was part of the phoney debate. There is widespread waste in the public sector – as in the private – but if it were easy to eliminate it would already have been eliminated."
Another, more entertaining article illustrates the nature of the problem:
"I never realised I was such a hard-hearted brute until I tried out the online “deficit-buster” on FT.com.
It allows you to play chancellor and simulate the UK’s next three-year spending review. You swing the axe - and the deficit-buster tells you all the gruesome consequences in terms of human discomfort.
Before I knew it, two million families with an income of more than £24,400 had lost a benefit worth around £1,000. And all because I thought “means-testing” child benefits was an easy option.
I retraced my steps and swung again. Eleven million people over the age of 60 lost their right to free public transport.
Oops. (And I used to be such a nice son-in-law.)
My wife had a go. She tried to abolish the police - but it wouldn’t let her."
To state the bleeding obvious - we are currently living in the time of the Chinese Curse. The politics of tax is, unfortunately, going to get interesting.
1 Comments:
I think it is the curse of the colonial conquest.
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