Wednesday, 6 December 2017


Bootle’s Wand

 

          From ‘Defending bank chiefs’ profligate pay will just add fuel to Corbyn’s ire,’ Daily Telegraph Business 4th December 2017 let Roger Bootle, chairman of Capital Economics, start us off:

A note last week from analysts at Morgan Stanley suggesting that the election of a Labour government could be a bigger risk to the City than Brexit has prompted Jeremy Corbyn to give a disarmingly direct response: “When they say we’re a threat they’re right. We’re a threat to a damaging and failed system that’s rigged for the few.”

 

Of course, according to Mr Bootle, Jeremy’s occupation of No. 10 would be an unmitigated disaster for all kinds of reasons,  more especially that he ‘misses many crucial points and pays scant regard to the consequences of proposed actions.’  Well, perhaps he has, perhaps he hasn’t. Mr Bootle is never very clear or precise. It could be that Jeremy Corbyn has indeed paid regard to ‘the consequences of proposed actions’  but they don’t weigh as heavily on him as they might on Mr Bootle’s particular readers.  But let that pass. For, stunningly, Mr Bootle concedes that ‘Yet he does have a point.’ Jeremy Corbyn has a point? What is going on here?

          It turns out to be a politically-charged point, since Jeremy also mentioned that the chief executive of Morgan Stanley, James Gorman, was paid (in sterling terms) £16.7 million in salary last year, which Roger Bootle accepts as true. This is dangerous territory we are getting into, and Mr Bootle is wary: ‘It may be difficult for senior bankers to comprehend this,’ he writes, ‘but there is a widespread feeling in society that they have not earned the huge sums of money that they are paid.’

          If you didn’t know this before, you read it here.

          What’s more, ‘Rage against bankers is not just a UK phenomenon.’ It seems that if anything Americans are even more splenetic over them. But there is an even wider problem: ‘The excesses of capitalism are by no means confined to banking.’ Has Bootle borrowed from a Morning Star editorial? (Our only Marxist daily here, for the uninitiated.) Roger Bootle qualifies this by stating that ‘the privatisation of large swathes of the British economy, first begun under Mrs Thatcher, and disparaged by Mr Corbyn, was an enormous success.’ Some might differ. How ‘successful’, other than in moneymaking terms, have the privatisations of electricity and gas, water and railways, public housing (hence our present desperate housing shortage) and schools actually been? Parents of schoolchildren, as well as probation and prison officers, the homeless and Southern Rail commuters might demur. Not much is left after all these. Bootle has the good sense to concede: ‘But not all privatisations were equally successful. In some cases, what is essentially a natural monopoly is now operated for the benefit of the senior executives and shareholders…This is not proper capitalism, which thrives on competition. This is the capitalism of the robber barons.’

          Odd. I always thought the old robber barons – Rockefeller, Carnegie, Vanderbilt et. al – were intensely competitive, to the point of buying out or ruining all who stood in their way.

          Be that as it may, apparently the only proper capitalism is that which thrives on competition, including that of James Dyson and – Bill Gates, whose Microsoft has thrived on competition, surely not on acquired monopolistic patents. We admire them (and positively adore Rupert Murdoch) but not the likes of bankers, who have simply been making money out of money, not profiting productively. Though, Bootle says, a propos  something-or-other,  it is not the market’s fault that public bodies like the NHS and the BBC have been in effect hollowed out by capital. ‘This is surely for the public sector to sort out.’ Mr Bootle cannot be blind to the fact that such public bodies are publicly accountable, which means to whichever government is in power at Westminster. Perhaps he did not notice, for example, that it is the governments of New Labour and beyond that have forced PFI on public organisations, and Health Ministers who have imposed the ruinous costs on the NHS of internal private enterprise – meanwhile, of course, holding the purse-strings of all these organisations. So a bit of sleight of hand here, as we come to learn of Mr Bootle’s powers and pretentions as a magician.

          So we shall get a Corbyn-led administration, which will virtually destroy the economy. (It’s in great shape now, of course.) but ‘If this happens, it will be largely the fault of the Conservative Party.’

So far, Jeremy Corbyn has been playing the best tunes. This Government needs to make the case for capitalism, including banking, making clear how beneficial it is for the living standards of ordinary people, while highlighting the disastrous performance of most, if not all, socialist governments abroad and most Labour governments here at home.

In other words, better spin like Tony used to do.

          I wish Bootle had been more specific. What does he mean by saying that ‘most, if not all socialist governments abroad’ have performed disastrously? Are we supposed to conjure up Gerhard Schroeder, Mao Zedong, Julius Nyerere, Hugo Chavez, Deng Xiaoping, Franklin Roosevelt, Leonid Brezhnev or Francois Mitterand? Which of these and possibly other ‘not alls’ were the successes? Can socialism in any guise ever have been successful? Surely not in the Daily Telegraph! What, according to Bootle is socialism?  As for ‘most Labour governments’, which are the ‘not alls’ that succeeded? Did the administrations of MacDonald, Attlee, Wilson-Callaghan and Blair-Brown not all end in disaster? (For God’s sake don’t mention Anthony Eden, Alec Douglas-Home, Ted Heath, John Major or David Cameron!) If not which succeeded? We don’t know. Bootle won’t tell us.

          What Bootle pleads for is making the case for an enlightened capitalism which still allows decent, hardworking rich people to make a lot of money provided ‘they obey the law and pay their taxes’.  (Though they can avoid doing the latter if they choose to be non-domiciled, and if they wait around long enough the highest tax-rates will continue to be lowered.) So here is the solution:

The promotion of capitalism includes restructuring the system to minimise abuses and excesses. Ensuring effective competition holds the key. Unless the Conservatives find a way of pulling this off then we may be destined to appreciate the merits of capitalism only by experiencing its demise.

And that’s it. I can imagine an email winging its way to Roger Bootle from Downing Street: ‘Er, Rog, could you maybe give us some idea of how we could go about this? The Party would be broke without donations from bankers and hedge funds, and from your “robber barons”.’  For Mr Bootle has provided no solution whatever except the magic wand that seems to be passed about from one Telegraph columnist to another.

          And so the best Roger Bootle can offer is that the Conservatives ‘find a way of pulling this off.’ Thanks for nothing, Tories might reply. In any case the government interference of ‘restructuring the system’ sounds a bit socialist to me. What Mr Bootle proposes in generalities looks much like the rather more detailed Labour Party programme which has already been announced and publicised.  Why not take this further?

          Thus I can see now the Tory posters for the next election: ‘Vote Labour, for strong and stable government!’

          This isn’t so silly. During Jeremy Corbyn’s first contest for the Labour Party leadership, the Daily Telegraph mischievously advised Conservatives to sign up for Labour by paying the £3 entry fee in order to vote for Jeremy and so help install an unelectable Labour leader. All they need do now is forget their worries, vote for Jeremy again and then let a victorious Prime Minister Corbyn take the blame for everything that happens subsequently. Much easier than rallying to a clapped-out ideology and cheaper than trying to get the Tory Party elected in these increasingly unelectable times for it. That’s how I would ‘pull this off’!

 

 

 

         

 

 

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