So you think our economy is doing well? Certainly doesn't feel like it. Unless of course you own considerable assets, in which case your personal wealth will have been growing exponentially for the last decade. That doesn't help everyone though, and it certainly won't help the majority of under 30s unless they stand to inherit, in which case good luck to them waiting for us old 'uns (the ones who, by cruel irony, voted for Brexit) to die off.
Look, I'm not trying to say the state of the UK's economy is all George Osbourne's fault, and I don't really think you believe it's all Tony Blair's fault. I am, however, happy to argue that the Tory's reputation for economic competence is not borne out by the facts.
Furthermore, the fallacy that Labour gets into power, overspends, and leaves the Tories to clear up the mess, is exactly that; a fallacy. As is the belief that the correct response to a prolonged recession is to cut back on public spending; in fact cutting public spending during a recession is arguably the worst thing you can possibly do.
I am not saying it is doing well. I am saying it is doing well compared to other Western democracies. The world isn't doing too well and if everybody isn't doing too well then it is much harder to achieve good growth.
My point is that we have done better than virtually all Western democracies since the crash in terms of growth. Germany is still talked about as "the pinnacle" yet we have outperformed them growthwise and if the forecasts are right they will only match us in 2018 and not this year either.
