“How can we have this idea that
Scots are thrifty and good with financial management ?”
- Comment
on The Daily Telegraph’s website following news that Gordon Brown has been
ordered to release information about his controversial decision to sell
Britain’s gold reserves when Chancellor. The writer may also have been thinking
about the collapse of the Royal Bank of Scotland and Halifax Bank of Scotland
and Sir Fred Goodwin..
Writing
in the Financial Times, Martin Wolf suggests that the financial and economic
crisis has inflicted huge damage on the reputations of Britain’s two most
significant recent political leaders, Margaret Thatcher and Tony Blair. That
rather presupposes that the latter has any positive reputation left to defend.
Not just within the confines of the UK but internationally, the reputation of
politicians has probably never been lower. Forget the tawdry British expenses
scandal, though that is bad enough; there is a more fundamental problem with
our polity, and it is not just an alarming and justified lack of trust.
Governments throughout the West have proven themselves functionally unable to
steward their nations’ finances. Labour had already made the forced
redistribution of wealth from rich to “poor” a core component of its policy
since election in 1997 (the net income gain for the poorest decile in the UK
has been 12%; the net income loss for the most affluent decile has been 15%.
But poverty has now become an entirely relative rather than an absolute concept,
defined as a level of household income below 60% of the median income, thus
ensuring that within a socialist culture, the poor will always be with us, at least statistically if not in fact, no matter
how affluent our society becomes as a whole. That culture bears the seeds of
its own ultimate collapse; as Margaret Thatcher is rumoured to have said, the
problem with socialism is that eventually you run out of other people’s money.)
The more recent redistribution of the nation’s resources from taxpayers to
banking interests, while comparably involuntary, revealed just how much
government was in thrall to the banking lobby, but it was hardly restricted to
the UK alone. The problem may be rooted in the structure of the modern
democratic system, in which the electorate increasingly and inevitably votes
for putative self-enrichment (call it bread and circuses, if you will) as
opposed to sustainable and productive national investment. In the words of
Hans-Hermann Hoppe’s book, democracy is the god that failed.
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