This is how the government describes the Budget Responsibility Bill, which is the first Bill described in its King's Speech publication:
Let's be candid about this Bill. It is a little bit of student politics, at best.
Every Budget since 2010, when the Office for Budget Responsibility was created, has been accompanied by an OBR report, except that by Liz Truss and Kwasi Kwarteng. There have been no exceptions. And no one seriously doubts that their mistake will be made again.
In that case, this Bill does, at best, score very cheap points. Labour should really prove that it is better than that.
And what does an unfunded commitment mean? In the current context, it can only mean that quantitative easing will be used.
When was quantitative easing last introduced? In March / April 2020.
Why was it introduced? To fund the furlough and other schemes required to tackle Covid.
What was the timescale for the introduction of quantitative easing? Days at most.
Would that be possible again if we had a similar crisis? No, because the Office for Budget Responsibility generally reckons it takes ten weeks to report.
So what does this Bill do? It outlaws another emergency use of quantitative easing in the event of a national crisis. People would have to die whilst waiting for the Office for Budget Responsibility to forecast, wildly inaccurately, what the consequences might be so that the use of quantitative easing could be described as 'costed'.
Seen in this way, this proposed Bill looks to be totally irresponsible because it constrains what the government can do in an emergency.
No doubt the Bill will include provisions to address this point, but in that case, this looks even more like a bit of student politics.
If Labour wants to be taken seriously when in office, it really should start behaving as if they're grown-ups.
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This smacks of being scared of making decisions that might do some good.
We can’t do this because the OBR says no.
Already Labour is on course to lose the next election.
@ John Fairhall. Exactly! Take this following article about the Bank of England attempting to do the politicians’ job by taking a sledge hammer to crack a nut of the politicians’ own making. Both Putin, Covid (supply chain reduction) and Brexit have been the main causes of high inflation in the UK yet the Tory politicians failed to take sufficient action to protect the incomes of the majority of the workforce, disabled, pensioners, etc. to cope with these inflationary pressures. Now Labour politicians are following in their footsteps. The general election will indeed prove to be a damp squib delivering little of the necessary changes to sort this country out!
https://www.theguardian.com/business/article/2024/jul/18/uk-jobs-market-wage-growth-interest-rates-ons
Oh, I VERY much hope that Starmer’s Faux-Labour Nu-Nu-Labour Hostage Party (as in bound hand and foot and gagged by the BoD, JLM and LFI, 3 racist – for their contempt for Palestinians – and antisemitic – for their “right kind of Jew/wrong kind of Jew trope – bodies) is Pasockified to irrelevance in 2029 – preferably before.
He lied his way into the Leadership, and almost the first act of his Premiership is to send his Foreign Secretary off to shake hands with Netanyahu, a war criminal, and buddy up to Israeli President Herzog wirh promises to try and block the ICJ arrest warrants against Netanyahu and Gallant.
Sir Keir “Zionist without qualification” Starmer is on record as saying that for him Israel comes first. I don’t think he cares about anything else.
The Labour Party has suffered a coup by a Right Wing Zionist 5th column, turning it into a clone of the Likud Party – look at how much money has been given to the majority of the Cabinet by Israel (See https://www.declassifieduk.org/israel-lobby-funded-half-of-keir-starmers-cabinet – RIchard has already commented on the need to regulate such donations)
I want Faux-Labour to shrivel into irrelevance via Pasokification, so the REAL Labour Party can revive.
Or better still, that new Left Vision that Richard has asked the Left to work towards, so as to prevent the UK slipping into Fascist Right Wing populism when Starmer’s hodge-podge dog’s dinner fails – as we know it will.
As you say, it is cheap politics, promising not to do something they were never going to do anyway, and will have to weasel out of if they need to in the event of an unexpected demand (such as pestilence, famine, war, or other disaster).
Rather than just giving a commitment and sticking to it, they are going to “enshrine” that commitment in law to send a political message to the markets.
It can only apply to them! So it is clearly designed to bind their own hands, nothing else. So it must be aimed at progressive thinkers like you Richard. Reeves is establishing Treasury orthodoxy and power over all other departments!
The next goverycan simply repeal the act in a one line bill in less than 24 hours, as the previous government did with the fixed term parliament act. Which this one doesn’t intend to resurrect….
So more of the same, with falling voter share, hardly a long term strategy.
Agreed
Just this morning I was thinking that it is the provision of furlough for Covid which is the most obvious and readily understood example of how government creates money; an argument which can be used to discredit Labour’s “fiscal rules.”
This bill is merely a quick way to squash the discussion altogether by foregrounding the Truss / Kwarteng budget fiasco rather than using furlough as an example to illustrate how government created money can work. Instantly, money creation to address inequality is off the agenda.
In short, without saying it explicitly, by default Labour adopts the mantra “MMT is irresponsible.”
Agreed
This bill sounds so ‘computer says no’. Apparently, we will not even be able to respond to a military invasion without calculating the cost. On the other hand, it would also have ensured that Brexit would not have happened without an Economic Impact Assessment, so not all bad. As usual, the devil will be in the detail.