Article 16SCV John McDonnell’s new fiscal rule is strong. But it won’t win an election | Andrew Harrop

John McDonnell’s new fiscal rule is strong. But it won’t win an election | Andrew Harrop

by
Andrew Harrop
from on (#16SCV)
It'll take more than one good policy to rebuild Labour's economic credibility, so entrenched is the idea that the party caused the crash

John McDonnell's new fiscal rule tweaks a policy the Labour party first came up with 19 years ago. Back then, in May 1997, Gordon Brown called it his "golden rule". The details have shifted around a bit since, but the essentials haven't changed. Then and now the Labour party believes governments should balance the books on day-to-day spending, but borrow to invest.

The idea has stuck because it's a good one. Almost all macro economists support governments borrowing to make productive investments, and most of them worry when ministers like George Osborne make a fetish of surplus budgets at the expense of stronger growth.

When it comes to economic trust, the messenger as well as the message needs to look the part

Related: 'Living within our means' makes no economic sense. Labour is right to oppose it | Ha-Joon Chang

Related: Labour's economic rock stars will expose the Tories as a one-hit wonder | Anne Perkins

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