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Nothing wrong with trying to get on with Tories.Both my siblings are.
The problem with Truss's economic ideas wasn't that they were the right ideas at the wrong time. They were absolute batshit at any time. The far right had an obsessive belief that if you cut the taxes of the wealthy, they work twice as hard and we all get richer. Trouble is there is precisely zero evidence that is true.What Truss and Kwarteng did was to ash taxes for the wealthy and borrow an astronomical amount to do so. The markets said they didn't believe that the policy would grow the economy, which means tax intake would stagnate, which means Trussonomics meant permanently borrowing to subsidise the richest few percent in society.The bond markets said "Fine if you want to borrow to do that, but we'll double your interest rate be ause we think you'll bankrupt the country and this is our risk premium."It was the economics of the madhouse. The one positive thing to come out if it is that the IEA and Adam Smith Institute who pushed for it should hopefully never get close to No10 again.
They are at the extreme right of the spectrum of conventional economics. The libertarian right that things taxation is theft and Govt should let the rich get on with making money.
At least Jonathan ashworth was clear....https://twitter.com/BBCPolitics/status/1594282200387682305?t=aNrfRrp5N6WAsbDLgNME8A&s=19
At least Jonathan ashworth was clear....https://twitter.com/BBCPolitics/status/1594282200387682305?t=aNrfRrp5N6WAsbDLgNME8A&s=19
Or what the head of social policy at the IEA says.https://iea.org.uk/media/uk-health-outcomes-would-be-better-without-the-nhs-finds-new-paper/