1. Log in now to remove adverts - no adverts at all to registered members!

Off Topic The Battle for Britain

Discussion in 'Swansea City' started by Stumpy, Jun 8, 2015.

  1. PGFWhite

    PGFWhite Well-Known Member

    Joined:
    Jun 1, 2011
    Messages:
    12,677
    Likes Received:
    6,938
    A letter to the Chancellor.........................

    The chancellor’s plans, announced in his Mansion House speech, for “permanent budget surpluses” are nothing more than an attempt to outmanoeuvre his opponents. They have no basis in economics. Osborne’s proposals are not fit for the complexity of a modern 21st-century economy and, as such, they risk a liquidity crisis that could also trigger banking problems, a fall in GDP, a crash, or all three.

    Economies rely on the principle of sectoral balancing, which states that sectors of the economy borrow and lend from and to each other, and their surpluses and debts must arithmetically balance out in monetary terms, because every credit has a corresponding debit. In other words, if one sector of the economy lends to another, it must be in debt by the same amount as the borrower is in credit. The economy is always in balance as a result, if just not at the right place. The government’s budget position is not independent of the rest of the economy, and if it chooses to try to inflexibly run surpluses, and therefore no longer borrow, the knock-on effect to the rest of the economy will be significant.

    Households, consumers and businesses may have to borrow more overall, and the risk of a personal debt crisis to rival 2008 could be very real indeed. These plans tie the government’s hands, meaning it won’t be able to respond appropriately to constantly evolving economic circumstances, good or bad. The plan actually takes away one of the central purposes of modern government: to deliver a stable economy in which all can prosper. It is irresponsible for the chancellor to take such risky experiments with the economy to score political points. This policy requires an urgent rethink.

    Dr Ha-Joon Chang University of Cambridge
    Thomas Piketty Paris School of Economics
    David Blanchflower Bruce V Rauner professor of economics at Dartmouth College and ex-monetary policy committee
    Prof Mariana Mazzucato RM Phillips professor in the economics of innovation, University of Sussex
    Jared Bernstein Former chief economist and economic adviser to vice-president Joe Biden
    Prof Simon Wren-Lewis University of Oxford
    Prof Victoria Chick University College London
    Prof Ozlem Onaran Department of international business and economics, University of Greenwich
    Prof Engelbert Stockhammer Professor of economics, University of Kingston
    Howard Reed Director, Landman Economics
    Richard Murphy Tax Research UK
    Stewart Lansley Visiting fellow, Bristol University Townsend Centre for International Poverty Research
    Prof Andrew Cumbers Professor of political economy, Adam Smith Business School, University of Glasgow
    Prof Malcolm Sawyer, Emeritus professor of economics, Leeds University Business School
    Prof George Irvin Professorial research fellow, Soas, University of London
    Prof John Weeks Emeritus professor, Soas, University of London
    Prof Prem Sikka, Professor of accounting, University of Essex
    Prof Christine Cooper Accounting and finance, Strathclyde Business School
    Prof Diane Elson, Emeritus professor, University of Essex and chair of UK Women’s Budget Group
    Professor Jonathan Michie University of Oxford
    Prof Robert McMaster Professor of political economy, Adam Smith Business School, University of Glasgow
    Dr Jo Michell Senior lecturer in economics, University of the West of England, Bristol
    Prof Sheila Dow Emeritus professor of economics, University of Stirling
    Prof John Grahl Professor of European integration, University of Middlesex
    Prof Jan Toporowski Professor of economics, Soas, University of London
    Prof Philip Arestis University of Cambridge
    Prof Giuseppe Fontana Professor of monetary economics, Leeds University Business School
    Prof David Spencer Professor of economics and political economy, Leeds University Business School
    Prof Alfredo Saad Filho Professor of political economy, Soas, University of London
    Prof Mary Mellor Professor emeritus, Northumbria University
    Dr Craig Berry Deputy director, Sheffield Political Economy Research Institute (speri)
    Prof David Newbery Emeritus professor of Economics, Cambridge University
    Prof Hugh Willmott Cass Business School
    Prof Steve Keen Professor of economics, Kingston University
    Dr Henning Meyer Research associate, Public Policy Group, London School of Economics
    Prof John Van Reenen Professor of economics, London School of Economics
    Prof Ismail Ertürk Senior lecturer in banking, University of Manchester
    Prof Susan Himmelweit Emeritus professor of economics, Open University
    Prof Valpy FitzGerald Emeritus professor of international development finance, University of Oxford
    Prof Simon Mohun, Emeritus professor of political economy, Queen Mary, University of London
    Stewart Wallis, Executive director, New Economics Foundation
    Prof Klaus Nielsen, Professor of institutional economics, Birkbeck, University of London
    Prof Pritam Singh Professor of economics, Oxford Brookes University
    Dr Andrew Mearman Associate professor in economics, UWE Bristol
    Prof Matthew Watson Professor of political economy, University of Warwick
    Prof Grazia Ietto-Gillies Emeritus professor of applied economics, London South Bank University
    Dr Mary V Wrenn Joan Robinson research fellow in heterodox economics, Girton College, University of Cambridge
    Geoffrey Hodgson Research professor, University of Hertfordshire
    Dr Daniela Gabor Associate professor, UWE Bristol
    Prof Bruce Cronin Director, Centre for Business Network Analysis, University of Greenwich
    Dr Annina Kaltenbrunner Lecturer in the economics of globalisation & the international economy, Leeds University Business School
    Prof Gary Dymski Professor of applied economics, Leeds University Business School
    Michael Burke Economist
    Dr Russell Smith Senior lecturer in economics, Cardiff School of Management
    Prof Philip B. Whyman Professor of economics, University of Central Lancashire
    Prof Tony Thirlwall Professor of applied economics, University of Kent
    Michael Kitson Cambridge Judge Business School, University of Cambridge
    Dr Abigail McKnight Senior research fellow, Centre for Analysis of Social Exclusion, London School of Economics
    Dr Ken Coutts Assistant director of Research, faculty of economics, University of Cambridge
    Prof Robert H Wade London School of Economics
    Dr Kalim Siddiqui Department of strategy, marketing and economics, University of Huddersfield
    Prof Stuart Holland University of Coimbra
    Dr Alberto Paloni Adam Smith Business School, University of Glasgow
    Ewa Karwowski Lecturer in economics, Kingston University
    Professor Marcus Miller University of Warwick
    Dr Gary Slater Leeds University Business School
    Professor David Bailey Aston Business School
    Dr David Harvie Senior lecturer in finance and political economy, University of Leicester
    Barbara Harriss-White Emeritus professor and senior research fellow, area studies, Oxford University
    Dr Bruce Philp Head of department, strategy, marketing and economics, Birmingham City Business School
    Roberto Veneziani School of economics and finance, Queen Mary, University of London
    Dr Julian Wells Principal lecturer in economics, Kingston University, London
    Dr Neil Lancastle Department of accounting and finance, De Montfort University
    Mimoza Shabani Lecturer in financial economics, University of East London
    Dr Ashley L Carreras Principal lecturer in economics and decision analysis, faculty of business and law, De Montfort University
    Prof Michael Lipton Research professor of economics, Sussex University
    Dr Graham Gudgin Research associate, Centre for Business Research, University of Cambridge and senior economic advisor, Oxford Economics
    Prof Geraint Johnes Professor of economics, Lancaster University Management School
    Andrew Simms Fellow, New Economics Foundation
     
    #21
    DragonPhilljack and Stumpy like this.
  2. DragonPhilljack

    DragonPhilljack Well-Known Member

    Joined:
    Feb 25, 2011
    Messages:
    25,369
    Likes Received:
    11,125
    Austerity is a con, but you reap what you sow, and this Tory Scum party will reap a world wind for sure, and hopefully in my life time.....<ok>
     
    #22

Share This Page