‘Ee’s a funny lad
The Office for Budget Responsibility issued a report yesterday that showed their ignorance of a great many issues and, in the process, highlighted the danger of relying on people who do not understand the substance of what might happen in the real world but who would rather, instead, extrapolate financial data in ways that are utterly impossible.
OK, well, etc. He should have read the rest of the report but it obviates most of what he’s said. But that claim of ignorance. Spud tells us that:
But what they ignore altogether is that if public spending grows to 60 per cent of GDP – as they say is likely – then it is utterly implausible that taxes will stay at 40 per cent of GDP. That simply cannot happen if inflation is to be controlled. Because they do not understand that state spending is funded by government money creation, the result is that they do not apparently appreciate that taxes will have to rise if the state commands so much of the output of the state to meet essential needs – which all of these issues will represent. Unless they do, inflation would follow, like night does day.
Instead, they assume, wholly without reason, that there is a limit to which taxes can go, whatever the circumstances. Only dogmatic belief, and not evidence, can explain this bizarre assumption. They have only to look at other times of crisis (like wartime, in the UK’s most recent experience of existential threat) to realise that no such limit on tax raising exists. But they apparently have not been able to undertake that simple exercise and think that there is a ceiling on tax revenues beyond which it cannot rise. Their neoliberal beliefs blind them to reality.
Hmm.
The state will tax more as it spends more – it will have no choice but do so to prevent inflation, the causes of which the OBR clearly does not understand. If state spending reaches 60% of GDP, expect taxes to be at least 55% of GDP, and as a result, debt will not accumulate as the OBR suggests. In that one observation, I have solved the whole crisis the OBR says exists.
Well, one thought is that perhaps you cannot, in fact, collect 55% of GDP in taxes. Maybe?
As they didn’t in WWII despite Spud’s confident “They have only to look at other times of crisis (like wartime, in the UK’s most recent experience of existential threat) to realise that no such limit on tax raising exists.”
Ahem:
When World War II began in 1939, Britain’s stock of debt stood at 135 per cent of GDP. Spending as a share of GDP rose to its WWI peak of 62 per cent in 1944-45, of which 80 per cent was defence spending. Tax revenues as a share of GDP rose to 39 per cent.