
Keynes
rides again
It
is not just the ideas of Marx that the current crisis is getting
people to look at again. It’s also those of Keynes. In fact it now
seems to be official government policy. In October the Chancellor
Alistair Darling declared that “much of what Keynes wrote still
makes sense” (Sunday Telegraph, 19 October). Then last month
Gordon Brown himself, in America for a summit of the G20, “invoked
the memory of John Maynard Keynes”, according to the Financial
Times (15/16 November), proposing a typically Keynesian approach
to the current crisis, right down to exactly the same terminology:
“Gordon
Brown yesterday heralded an anti-recession strategy founded on tax
cuts for low earners and further cuts in interest rates, in the hope
that Britain will spend its way out of the downturn. Mr Brown . . .
suggested that the government would use tax credits to help poor
families since they were more likely to spend any money handed out.
People on low income had ‘a higher propensity to spend if their
credits are higher’, Mr. Brown said.”
Keynes
was an inter-war years economist who was at one time credited with
having saved capitalism. He argued that capitalism did not
automatically tend towards full employment and that government
intervention to increase spending was needed to ensure this. He was
himself a Liberal, but his ideas were embraced by all three main
parties in Britain. He was particularly liked in Labour Party circles
as his theories seems to justify their reformist attempt to
redistribute income from the rich to the poor with their “higher
propensity to spend”.
As
it happened, post-war Britain did have more or less full employment
for twenty or so years after the war, but this was more due to the
expansion of world markets than to Keynesian “demand management”
policies. When, in the mid-1970s, world market conditions changed,
Keynes’s policies were shown not to work. Instead of stimulating a
revival of industrial production they added a new problem – rising
prices through currency inflation, which in turn led to periodic
devaluations of the pound. In all previous slumps prices had fallen,
but the implementation of Keynesian policies in the 1970s meant that
they continued to rise. A new word was invented to describe the
result: “stagflation”.
In
Britain the funeral oration on Keynesianism (Keynes himself had died
in 1946) was delivered by the then Labour Party Prime Minister, James
Callaghan, at the 1976 Labour Party Conference:
“We
used to think that you could just spend your way out of a recession
and increase employment by cutting taxes and boosting government
spending. I tell you, in all candour, that that option no longer
exists and that in so far as it ever did exist, it only worked on
each occasion since the war by injecting bigger doses of inflation
into the economy, followed by higher levels of unemployment”
(Times, 29
September 1976).
Or,
as Keynes’s biographer Lord Skidelsky put it, “Then Keynesian
policies suddenly became obsolete and the theory that backed it was
condemned to history’s dustbin” (Times, 23 October).
It
is a sign of the desperation of Brown and his government that they
have been forced to rummage through the dustbin of history for a
policy to deal with the current financial crisis and coming
depression. Spending your way out of a crisis was tried by the last
Labour government and, as Callaghan was forced to admit, it didn’t
work. There’s no reason to believe it will this time either.
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