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It is now clear that plan A isn't working. Wave after wave of economic figures from HM Treasury, national and international economic institutions such as the OECD, the IFS and the IMF have all concluded that the British economy is faltering. The UK jobless total is now at its highest for more than 17 years, while growth has all but stalled.We urge the government to adopt emergency and commonsense measures for a Plan B that can quickly save jobs and create new ones. A recovery plan could include reversing cuts to protect jobs in the public sector, directing quantitative easing to a green new deal to create thousands of new jobs, increasing benefits to put money into the pockets of those on lower and middle incomes and thus increase aggregate demand.This could in part be paid for by the introduction of a financial transactions tax. The government could do far more to create the space for new and innovative industries and companies to flourish. One idea is a British investment bank, to leverage and back investment in low-carbon sectors such as housing, transport and renewable energy.Doing nothing is not an option. We therefore call on the government to put the national interest first and hold an emergency budget that would instigate a Plan B for jobs, fairness and sustainability to rapidly get the economy moving again.
It is now clear that plan A isn't working. Wave after wave of economic figures from HM Treasury, national and international economic institutions such as the OECD, the IFS and the IMF have all concluded that the British economy is faltering. The UK jobless total is now at its highest for more than 17 years, while growth has all but stalled.
We urge the government to adopt emergency and commonsense measures for a Plan B that can quickly save jobs and create new ones. A recovery plan could include reversing cuts to protect jobs in the public sector, directing quantitative easing to a green new deal to create thousands of new jobs, increasing benefits to put money into the pockets of those on lower and middle incomes and thus increase aggregate demand.
This could in part be paid for by the introduction of a financial transactions tax. The government could do far more to create the space for new and innovative industries and companies to flourish. One idea is a British investment bank, to leverage and back investment in low-carbon sectors such as housing, transport and renewable energy.
Doing nothing is not an option. We therefore call on the government to put the national interest first and hold an emergency budget that would instigate a Plan B for jobs, fairness and sustainability to rapidly get the economy moving again.
Signed by a hundred leading economists! It is rightly acknowledged that people of faith have no monopoly of virtue - Queen Elizabeth II
There should always be at least one state investment bank (for a start, it would allow for some projects to be prioritized on different grounds than usual, aka short term returns). That is a nice side-effect of the likelihood of some banks being put into receivership and nationalised for a penny: you may not even need to create it. Earth provides enough to satisfy every man's need, but not every man's greed. Gandhi
With a state investment bank, there is not even the need for feed-in tariffs to finance clean energy projects.
Neither did I say that a state investment bank would solve all problems. But leaving such an important thing as investment purely in the hand of short-term bonanza seekers is crazy. Earth provides enough to satisfy every man's need, but not every man's greed. Gandhi
But .... look
IS electric infrastructure invest by the UK government a Good Idea? Of course. And I doubt I have to 'splain why.
Will it kick-start a round of economic vitality. Almost certainly no.
We know this from the affects on the economy from the history of the Rural Electrification Program carried out in FDR's administration. Yes it brought electric power to the rural areas. It did not promote a wave of use because the farmers couldn't afford to purchase products, e.g., milking machines, that could take advantage of it. She believed in nothing; only her skepticism kept her from being an atheist. -- Jean-Paul Sartre
Yes it brought electric power to the rural areas. It did not promote a wave of use because the farmers couldn't afford to purchase products, e.g., milking machines, that could take advantage of it.
- Jake Friends come and go. Enemies accumulate.
no sense deliberately tilting the playing field against sustainable power in favor of unsustainable power
Its like taking long term investment advice from someone who's doctor said they have three months to live. I've been accused of being a Marxist, yet while Harpo's my favourite, it's Groucho I'm always quoting. Odd, that.
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