Article 23AVS Clinging to illusions – the blinkered elite who still think austerity works | Aditya Chakrabortty

Clinging to illusions – the blinkered elite who still think austerity works | Aditya Chakrabortty

by
Aditya Chakrabortty
from on (#23AVS)
Theresa May and her cabinet refuse to move on from ideas that hurt the poor and help the rich. It's a collective death wish

On 11 September 1929 the Wall Street Journal quoted Mark Twain for its thought of the day: "Don't part with your illusions; when they are gone you may still exist, but you have ceased to live." Whatever that day's subeditors thought they were doing, their choice now sounds as falsely confident as a rambler about to step off a ledge.

Markets were already in turmoil, America was sinking into economic depression and running through the daily news was a thin, high note of hysteria. Still, Irving Fisher and the other wise men foresaw only the slightest of setbacks, and the brokers couldn't take the cash fast enough. As John Kenneth Galbraith writes in his classic, The Great Crash 1929: "The end had come, but it was not yet in sight".

Related: George Osborne made more than 300,000 in a month from speeches

The Theresa May modus operandi can be summed up as: Cameroonism with a very quick paint job.

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