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Osborne dishonestly trying to rewrite his history


Lordship 516

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The Chancellor is reporting that he abandoned plans to balance the government's budget by the end of the decade, blaming uncertainty surrounding Britain's exit from the European Union. This is totally false - this plan had long ago failed.


In the 2015 Autumn Statement, the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) published forecasts that allowed the Chancellor to declare his policies had been a huge success. The ?27billion windfall that he reported appeares to have evaporated. These forecasts are long gone and of course Osborne is now looking to place blame elsewhere.


In April, before Brexit became a prospect, this year and every year of this parliament, growth was expected to be a lot lower and borrowing to be higher. Osborne then admitted he had broken his fiscal rule that debt as a share of GDP would fall this year, and admitted there would be a higher debt burden in every year of the forecast.


He expected to borrow ?56billion in 2016-17 compared with ?50billion that was forecast in November. ?39billion in 2017-18, up from the ?25billion forecast earlier and for 2018-19 ?21billion, up from the ?5billion originally forecast in November. The deficit was supposed to be zero by 2015.


On top of all this failure, Osborne took money from the disabled to fund tax cuts for the rich. Over half a million people with disabilities have lost over ?1 billion in Personal Independence Payments, with Capital Gains Tax being cut ? Osborne had raised raised this in 2010 saying it was necessary to create a fairer tax system. So he redefined his view of a fairer tax system, with a third of savings he finds coming from cuts to the disabled. I watched him during the debate on this and he was actually laughing openly - no gravitas, no compassion - disgraceful ! If this smug grinning carapace is allowed to continue the UK is doomed to failure.


His brand of austerity has resulted in deflation which has depressed the UK economy. Now we will have high unemployment, significant reduction in investment, spending, general level of priceS rising due to the purchasing power of currency-money falling, instead of price inflation due to a general increase in demand - this will develop into stagflation for which there are few levers available either to the Bank of England or the Exchequer to correct.


Now Osborne has found a convenient hook to hang his failures on. He is madly tweeting, twisting in the wind about how he factored all this into his plans and how he can lead us out of this unholy mess - this is total ****ocks ! This man has zero integrity, zero scruples to tell the truth to the UK population - dissimulation is his stock in trade. He has no shame and I sincerely hope he will not remain as Chancellor. In fact, I hope the new PM, whoever they might be will rule him out for any office of government as he has shown himself to be a sociopath devoid of any feelings, honesty or morality - a fitting fellow traveler for Gove, Johnson et al.

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Jah Lush Wrote:

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> That's a superb summation of Osborne's failings

> and reads like a furious letter to The Times.

> Perhaps you should send it to them. Bravo.


I am an analyst - an econometrist and generally try to reflect reality from the facts & statistics that I am presented with. I dislike most economists as they invariably talk down to the rest of humanity and usually get their forecasts wrong but have all their reasoning finely polished as to why they got it wrong. I dislike most politicians as they usually confuse the connect between microeconomics & macroeconomics, usually in an effort to justify their ideology that is always as fluid as the wind that they cast their words into.


My work is always carried out dispassionately - if I do otherwise then I will get the wrong answer. Where my feelings & emotion come into it is when I see vulnerable lives devastated by cavalier politicians & the civil servants who implement uncaring policies and cause social divides in any country. If anyone wants to learn more about the rich & poor divide then read anything published by Thomas Piketty - he is not perfect but he is more rational than his detractors.


The poor have only their labour which is taxed always. The rich bury their savings/profits into forms of capital that are sheltered from taxes by various methodologies until they decide to cash it in, usually at a very low rate of tax. The tax on labour is high & the tax on capital is very low - so the rich get progressively richer & the poor standstill or get poorer. There is also the divide between the secure versus the poor - that is workers at various levels who have security of tenure in their employment as opposed to those who are in unstable contracts and account for a rising share of workers. This is the opportunity that Cameron, Osborne & Gove et al pontificate about. The opportunity they offer is merely for the poor to be more useful to the rich in order that the rich can work less & gain more & more.


There is an old economists joke - there are two types of statistics - "Those that you LOOK up & those that you MAKE up". GiddyGO belongs to the latter club.

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There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics.


Lordship 516 wrote: "The opportunity they offer is merely for the poor to be more useful to the rich in order that the rich can work less & gain more & more.


Twas ever thus.

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  • 8 months later...

When one voice rules the nation

Just because they're on top of the pile

Doesn't mean their vision is the clearest

The voices of the people

Are falling on deaf ears

Our politicians all become careerists

They must declare their interests

But not their company cars

Is there more to a seat in parliament

Than sitting on your arse?

The best of all this bad bunch

Are shouting to be heard

Above the sound of ideologies clashing

Outside the patient millions

Who put them into power

Expect a little more back for their taxes

Like school books, beds in hospitals

And peace in our bloody time

All they get is old men grinding axes

Who've built their private fortunes

On the things they can rely

The courts, the secret handshake

The Stock Exchange and the old school tie

For God and Queen and Country

All things they justify

Above the sound of ideologies clashing...


Billy Bragg, Ideology

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"I dislike most politicians as they usually confuse the connect between microeconomics & macroeconomics, usually in an effort to justify their ideology that is always as fluid as the wind that they cast their words into.


My work is always carried out dispassionately - if I do otherwise then I will get the wrong answer."



Lordship, whilst I greatly appreciate your OP as satire, I doubt this can escape your own net.


viz an "ideology" of fact versus value (a distinction now generally thought to be unstainable), an assertion of the integrity of recent economic theory that "connects" the micro and the macro (well, in one sense for sure - there is only the micro!: but to make anything of the macro is then an impossible task as you will never pin down the initial conditions), the consistency of your own position as an econometrician that requires you to make all sorts of ideology-saturated assumptions about probability distributions (somehow known before the developing and unknowable action that gives rise to outcomes), the adoption of ultimately rectilinear models of process (for example if they involves matrix algebra), and assumptions about the nature of decision making (here you cannot escape the infantile models of atomistic and acosmic human action on which economics rests).

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jaywalker Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> "I dislike most politicians as they usually

> confuse the connect between microeconomics &

> macroeconomics, usually in an effort to justify

> their ideology that is always as fluid as the wind

> that they cast their words into.

>

> My work is always carried out dispassionately - if

> I do otherwise then I will get the wrong answer."

>

>

> Lordship, whilst I greatly appreciate your OP as

> satire, I doubt this can escape your own net.

>

> viz an "ideology" of fact versus value (a

> distinction now generally thought to be

> unstainable), an assertion of the integrity of

> recent economic theory that "connects" the micro

> and the macro (well, in one sense for sure - there

> is only the micro!: but to make anything of the

> macro is then an impossible task as you will never

> pin down the initial conditions), the consistency

> of your own position as an econometrician that

> requires you to make all sorts of

> ideology-saturated assumptions about probability

> distributions (somehow known before the developing

> and unknowable action that gives rise to

> outcomes), the adoption of ultimately rectilinear

> models of process (for example if they involves

> matrix algebra), and assumptions about the nature

> of decision making (here you cannot escape the

> infantile models of atomistic and acosmic human

> action on which economics rests).


I don't quite understand what is written here - trying to make out whether it was written from a Marxist or possibly a Bhuddist perspective....there is certainly a confusion [for me] of philosophy, religion & behavioural science connotations in the thought process behind the writing. [i would have thought that the first bracket ought to read "a distinction now generally thought to be sustainable]


Whoever wrote it hasn't practiced much econometrics recently [or ever]- much effort is exercised by practitioners to separate the science from the ideologies but we also must recognize social behaviour/conditions of the society that we find ourselves in. We mainly escape our prejudices by using agent based analysis that removes our personal perspectives & use various iterations to test our results before accepting the discrete analysis.


Your comment elsewhere re stagflation is in the economic runes but I haven't yet made a measurable sense of what is happening; I have some analysis but have thus far failed to ascertain what the dynamics are. All I do know is that the medium term doesn't look so rosy. We have to wait & see what all the actors might do.

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This is a good read......


https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2017/mar/17/george-osborne-editor-substance-london-evening-standard?CMP=share_btn_tw


Small extract below. What a phrase.


As for Lebedev, no appointment by him could really be regarded as eyebrow-raising ? particularly when you?re as Botoxed as the nine circles of his friendship inferno are. A starfucker of thermonuclear pretensions, Lebedev is marginally more likely to dip-dye his horse?s mane for a W magazine feature than he is to appoint it features editor. But only marginally.


file.php?20,file=253290

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Lordship, you say "I don't quite understand what is written here - trying to make out whether it was written from a Marxist or possibly a Bhuddist perspective....there is certainly a confusion [for me] of philosophy, religion & behavioural science connotations in the thought process behind the writing."


No none of those. Not the place to drag the topic off GO (on which we all seem to be agreed!) but I think it is now a mainstream philosophical idea that the fact/value distinction cannot be sustained (see particularly summaries by Putnam). It took an enormous amount of intellectual labour to see this point clearly, and it has by no means seeped through into non-specialised thinking (for example, the distinction is still taught in Economics as pretty much beyond dispute).


The case in point is the crystalline purity of econometric/AI modelling (I suspect from what you have said about your own work, and admirably, more of the latter than the traditional former). To hypostatise a 'science' here in which all values are given up for ever greater clarity simply won't do. Isn't laboratory science itself saturated with values (not to mention antagonistic social process)? This is true at the deep level of the metaphors and analogies on which any scientific thinking is constituted. It is also true of the appropriation by science of mathematics as a metaphorical resource (unless you think that the universe is made of mathematics!) This seems also to be orthodoxy - either in the philosophy of science (starting seminally with Hesse) or in the best sociological accounts of what scientists do (Knorr-Cetina) as opposed to what they may say they do.

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@Jaywalker...


Hesse's writings are influential mainly in the physical sciences but could not be regarded as an influential figure in the wider social science context. Knorr Cetina on the other hand does have much value due to her studies in regard to the relationships between science, knowledge & society.


All that navel-gazing stuff is a bit lost on me.


I am more grounded in Descartes, Newton & Leibniz [who gave us analytical geometry, calculus & the binary system all of which I find use for every day] - the rationalists & mathematicians who embraced empiricism also though many empiricists have a lot of difficulty in embracing rationalism. I tend also to add tinctures of skepticism & pragmatism in my approach to my work. Each has their place.


Also - please don't confuse econometricists with classical economists. Quants are regularly at odds or at least uneasy with our classical cousins. Economists are good at big-picture thinking, usually good at talking [bullstuff] and are really really good at politics and influencing government, whereas on the other hand quants are not so good at this, mostly because we are too critical of our own short-comings and very aware of what criteria is missing from the mix - politicians prefer absolutes to conditional thought. Big picture 'blue-sky' thinking has been the cause of most economic failure as the people with the most clout are often people with very little experience of analytical objectivity. Science makes [some] knowledge, knowledge shapes the future. Quants merely try to make sense of the world around us today - we don't try to shape the future; we test hypotheses & attempt to forecast trends. Often we can see black holes but much of the time a suitable solution eludes us. Our successes are greater than our failures so we find ourselves still gainfully employed.

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Jah Lush Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Pseuds Corner.



Perhaps you are right. But then, specialised intellectual endeavour is condemned tout court (so, in this case, we just KNOW that the fact/value distinction is true because we KNOW the difference between (say) the objective and subjective in aesthetic judgement). I assume this is your position rather than saying the specialised language is itself pseudo (I'm open to arguments but you just moo). That people working very hard over extended periods of time have specialised a sense that this distinction is misplaced can then be ignored: they are just "pseuds", presumably because they recruit specialised signifiers (itself no doubt, from your regard, a "pseudish" thing to say).

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