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Revealing the hideous off-spring of Margaret Thatcher's "market disciplines" and
the ever-swelling tax-funded state...
LIFE AFTER THE BALLOT BOX is rumored to pay pretty well, no matter
how hateful you become in office.
George
W.Bush has apparently nailed a $7 million book-deal. Tony
Blair earned $275,000 for a half-hour speech (made and paid twice) in
the Philippines. Richard
Nixon bagged $600,000 upfront (in 1977 dollars) plus 20% of the royalties
earned from not admitting anything whatsoever to David Frost.
Good luck to them all, even if those numbers are only half-way accurate. Because
it was there for the taking. Whatever rules (or modesty) barred them from cashing
in during their time in office, those rules no longer applied. And even those
rules allow plenty of wriggle for a political hack on the make.
Like the UK
cabinet minister whose fiancée apparently paid half of their monthly
rent, while he claimed 80% of the cost as expenses. Or like his cabinet colleague
who claimed £60,000 ($90,000) for the house where
his parents lived but he didn't. Or those "double jobbers" elected both
to Westminster parliament and also one of the UK's devolved chambers in Wales,
Scotland or Northern Ireland. Just recently, the Senior Salaries Review Body
(SSRB) noted how Ulster's finest can collect £73,000 per year from
Stormont for the costs of running their offices there...plus another £100,000
or more for their London job too ($260,000 all told). Indeed, "sixteen of
Northern Ireland's 18 MPs are also senior Assembly members," according to
the Belfast
Telegraph's count. But it's all fine, as it entirely within the rules.
Even when, as with former IRA commander (then education minister...then deputy
first-minister of Northern Ireland) Martin McGuinness, they don't actually
take their seat in Westminster but still claim Westminster expenses.
Thus, as the Tyrone
Times reports, McGuinness and his Sinn Fein colleague Michelle Gildernew
received £274,508 between them ($411,000) in parliamentary allowances
last year "despite not sitting a single day in [London's] House of Commons."
But c'mon...it's there for the taking! So why not just take it?
"I'm really sorry for any embarrassment I have caused Jacqui. I can fully
understand why people might be angry and offended by this..."
Thus spake the husband of British Home Secretary Jacqui Smith in late-March,
showing utter remorse after a press-leak revealed how he'd claimed - on her
parliamentary expenses - for two
pay-per-view porn films. He already makes £40,000 a year ($60,000)
for running her constituency office. But "Quite obviously a claim should never
have been made for these films," as he muttered to the gaggle of hacks outside
their home one Sunday morning.
"As you know that money is being paid back," he added - unlike the rest of
the £150,304 the Smith family claimed ($225,000) for keeping that "second
home" in her Redditch constituency some 100 miles from Westminster, London,
and which was paid on top of her £141,866 salary.
Consulting the back of our envelope, and...Ker-ching! We make that a tidy £331,000
between them (the best part of $500,000) for a year's work variously running
the nation and making the tea.
Oh, minus the mucky films, of course.
"We were convinced of the need to bring some of the attitudes of business
into government," said Margaret Thatcher - the Iron
Lady herself - on the shock and awe she brought to the British state. It's
30 years ago this week since she won her first land-slide election. Upon taking
office as prime minister, she established an Efficiency Unit pretty much straight
away, vowing to tackle "waste and ineffectiveness" in the machinery of the
government.
"I have to say to the public sector, this is the amount of money available.
That's what any business would do...and any housewife," Thatcher went on in an
interview with the Sunday Times 15 months later. Making a show to
the journalist in No.10 Downing Street of switching off the lights as they
left a room, "I'm on public sector money and therefore I'm bound to be careful," she
said.
"We really must pay more attention to sound management as an objective on
its own. It's not enough to support ministers, provide supreme service on parliamentary
questions and debates regardless of cost...You have to get supreme management
and efficiency, and we haven't given enough attention to that."
How to raise this attention? Thatcherism, as it soon came to be known, followed
two routes to instilling "market discipline" to the public sector. The first,
simplest and most popular route was to remove the state entirely, privatizing
state-owned monopolies at knock-down prices and selling them on (or back) to
the public, who then made 10 times their money from the initial share offer
price.
The utilities themselves, meantime, were either broken up (as with the railways)
or invited other free-market competitors - whether domestic (telecoms), regional
(water) or entirely foreign (and even foreign-state owned, as with French gas
monopoly EDF's march across southern England). And for the purposes of this
essay today, it doesn't matter whether this "Route #1" worked or not. On-going
state subsidies - plus unremitting inflation in consumer prices - mask whatever
long-term efficiencies were achieved. (Virgin
Trains, for example, earned a tax-funded subsidy of £162 million
($240m) in 2007-8. It's since raised
ticket prices 6% across its network, continuing to under-shoot its punctuality
targets.) Perhaps, like the French Revolution according to Mao, it's still
too early to tell. Whereas route two? The real legacy of Mrs. (now Lady) Thatcher
was the new ethos she thrust upon the workings of government itself.
"Economics are the method. The object is to change the soul," as she put it
in 1988. Because, by applying the harsh discipline of the market - slashing
costs and boosting revenues - "A bigger cake [would mean] a bigger slice for
everyone." Thus the profit motive was forced into Whitehall and down onto the
National Health Service, education, social security offices...anywhere that
out-sourcing or an "internal market" could be seen to reduce costs. Otherwise,
there would be "wrong use of capital investment, because there is no sanction
of the market" as her cabinet colleague (and nemesis) Michael
Heseltine had laid it out way back in 1969.
More specifically, and on the ground for the NHS - still Europe's biggest
employer three decades later - Thatcherism "hoped that by separating the providers
from the purchasers there would be a mechanism," as a text-book
history's since put it, "whereby inefficient providers would lose customers
and so change their practices to become more efficient and hence more competitive.
Money would follow patients so that the efficient, flexible producers would
be rewarded with extra revenue. This should encourage the providers both to
minimize costs and to switch to new efficient methods of treatment as they
become available."
Trouble was, in the state sector, there can be no "sanction of the market"...no
efficiency built on free competition...precisely because there is no profit
or loss leading to expansion or death. So instead, merely the trappings of
private-sector success accrued to the state - the growing budget proposals,
swollen head-count, corner office and over-priced jollies. In the absence of
the profit/loss sanction, the business of government remains government, and
so its own little "captains of industry" should hardly be blamed if they mark
their achievements with an ever-greater cash bonus each year.
If you think you (and your husband) are running the country, then that's some
undertaking - an enterprise which would pay much more if it was outside the
state sector. Which it can't be, of course. But pretending that "market discipline" somehow
informs it only offers a pay rise every time you do your expenses.
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