The Queen’s death and funeral took up the first twelve
days of Liz Truss’s tenure, so the new prime minister’s work of destruction
could not get properly underway until last Friday. Then, however, Truss and her
faithful sidekick Kwasi Kwarteng, the new Chancellor of the Exchequer (finance
minister), got to work with amazing speed.
Kwarteng’s ‘mini-Budget’ on Friday was a suicide note that virtually guarantees
defeat for the Conservative Party at the next election, two years from now. There
is growing doubt that Truss’s government can even survive that long.
She is the fourth Conservative prime minister in the past six years, and at
each turn of the wheel, the party she currently leads has grown more mutinous.
Moreover, it did not choose her as its leader.
That choice was made not by her fellow Conservative members of parliament but
by the party’s 160,000 paid-up members, who tend to be old, white, non-urban
and very ideological.
What drew them to her was her fanatical devotion to the cause of lower taxes
and a smaller state, as exemplified in a book she and Kwarteng co-authored ten
years ago called ‘Britannia Unchained’.
So as soon as the Queen’s obsequies were safely past, she and Kwarteng gave them
what they longed for: a Budget that is the political equivalent of
asset-stripping. It contains unfunded tax cuts, mostly to the benefit of the
rich, of around $50 billion a year.
Where will the money come from to make up the lost tax income, plus an extra
£65 billion to help voters cover horrendously high energy costs this winter due
to the Russian invasion of Ukraine?
Why, they’ll just borrow it all. All that extra spending will allegedly boost
the growth rate of the British economy from an average of 1.5% a year to 2.5%,
and the extra tax revenue will easily cover that.
At least that’s what Liz Trust believes, in the firm belief that she is walking
in the footsteps of her heroine, sainted former prime minister Margaret
Thatcher. She is not.
The Blessed Margaret cut taxes, but she also cut government spending. The
Truss-Kwarteng partnership is spending like a drunken sailor on shore leave.
It’s not ‘Britannia Unchained’; it’s ‘Britannia Unhinged’.
Nobody believes this will work except a few right-wing think tanks that try to
justify low taxes for the rich by touting the old ‘trickle-down’ model, also
known as the ‘horse and sparrow’ theory: feed the horses enough oats, and
eventually there will be lots of horse-poop for the sparrows to eat.
The sad news for Truss and Kwarteng is that the ‘free market’ they so revere
isn’t stupid. The value of the British pound is already collapsing.
Former US Treasury secretary Larry Summers says: “My guess is that the pound
will find its way below parity with both the dollar and the euro.”
Meanwhile, investors look at Truss and Kwarteng’s business model, do the math,
and flee. In the words of Paul Donovan, chief economist at UBS Global Wealth
Management, they now see the Conservative Party as a ‘doomsday cult’.
And as interest rates soar to fight runaway inflation, millions of Britons find
they cannot afford to pay their mortgages. The poor cannot even afford to feed
their children. The strikes and protests proliferate.
It’s probably around this time – midwinter, say – that the next rebellion
occurs in the Conservatives’ parliamentary party. However, changing horses
would make little difference unless the policy changes. It wouldn’t.
The next prime minister would be chosen by the same tiny band of Conservative
Party members, no matter who the MPs want – and the members’ mindset favours
the ideological purist over the pragmatic realist. As one MP said: “You
can have as many leadership elections as you like. You are only going to end up
with the nutter winning.”
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has already issued its first warning to
the United Kingdom to get its house in order. Larry Summers accuses the British
government of “behaving like an emerging market turning itself into a
submerging market,” but Truss is not shifting.
It’s a bit like the slow-motion car crash that brought the Sri Lankan
government and economy down, which took more than six months from start to
finish. Liz Truss’s government will not last a year, and the Conservative Party
may then split, leading to an early election (due anyway by 2024).
The Labour party is already seventeen points ahead in the polls, and its lead
may even widen. It will be a wild ride, but the next British government will be
led by Labour, which will rapidly reverse everything that Truss aspires to do.
Gwynne Dyer is an independent journalist whose articles are published in 45 countries.
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