British government spending cuts will probably increase the fiscal deficit and make the ‘non negotiable’ fiscal rules impossible to achieve

The British press are reporting that the Government there is planning further spending cuts of the order of billions of pounds because the economic environment has changed and the current fiscal trajectory is threatening their self-imposed fiscal rules thresholds. We already heard last week how the Government is significantly cutting Overseas Aid as it ramps up military expenditure. Now, it is reported that billions will be cut from the welfare area and the justification being used is that there is widespread rorting of that system by welfare cheats. There are several points to make. First, getting rid of rorting is desirable. But I have seen no credible research that suggests such skiving is of a scale sufficient to justify cutting billions out of welfare outlays. Second, quite apart from that question, the micro attack on the welfare outlays have macroeconomic consequences. The British Office of Budget Responsibility estimates that the output gap is close to zero which means it is claiming there is full employment. Even if that is true, that state is underpinned by the current level of government spending (whether it is on cheats or not). If the spending cuts that are targetting rorting are not replaced by spending elsewhere then a recession will occur and the Government will surely fail to achieve its ‘non negotiable’ fiscal rule targets. It is a mess of their own making.

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Australian National Accounts – growth rate picks up on back of government spending support

Today (December 4, 2024), the Australian Bureau of Statistics released the latest – Australian National Accounts: National Income, Expenditure and Product, December 2024 – which shows that the Australian economy grew by just 0.6 per cent in the December-quarter 2024 and by just 1.3 per cent over the 12 months (up from 0.6 per cent). GDP per capita also reversed its sequence of negative results as output growth outpaced the underlying population growth. The only source of expenditure keeping GDP growth positive is coming from government – both recurrent and investment. The largest component of national expenditure – household consumption spending – returned to a positive contribution as did business investment and net exports. But the fact remains that non-government spending is still relatively weak and it is public spending that is keeping the economy from near recession growth rates.

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Britain can easily increase military expenditure while increasing ODA to honour its international obligations

It is hard to keep track of the major shifts in world politics that are going on at the moment. I am in the camp that saw the extraordinary confrontation between Trump/Vance and Zelensky as demonstrating how embarrassing the US leadership has become. I am not a Zelensky supporter by any means but the behaviour of the US leadership was beyond the pale as it has been since January. I am no expert on geopolitical matters but it seems obvious to me that the US is now opening the door further for China to become the dominant nation in the world as the US sinks further into the hole and obsesses about who should thank them. And the latest shifts are once again going to demonstrate how dysfunctional the EU architecture has become. If it is rise to the post NATO challenge then its obsession with fiscal rules will have to end and they will have to work harder to create a true federation. I am skeptical. The shifts are also once again demonstrating that mainstream economic thinking is dangerous, something I can claim expertise to discuss. The recent decision by the US Administration to hack into the USAid office is probably not the definitive example of this point because it is more about being bloody minded than ‘saving’ money. It will just further open the door for China though. However, the decision by the UK Labour government to reduce Overseas Development Assistance (ODA) to (according to Starmer/Reeves logic) ‘pay’ for a rather dramatic increase in military expenditure is a classic example of how policy goes astray when mainstream economic thinking in general, and the British fiscal rules, specifically are used to guide policy.

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