I posted this thread on Twitter this morning:
I have already suggested in a blog post written this morning that today is pivotal to what happens in 2022, and maybe beyond. Whether the government decides to lock down today will have a massive impact on lives lost to Covid in 2022, and to the economy. A thread to explain……
First, to look at the data and why I am so worried it could be worth reading my blog post on this, written today.
If that is too long to read the summary is hospital admissions are likely to be between 3,000 and 6,000 a day in spring 2022 and deaths could be between 1,000 and 3,000 a day. These are sober scientific warnings. The high end assumes no new restrictions.
Government scientists are calling for lockdown now. I accept their advice. Responsible people would. I would like to presume we have a responsible government, although there is scant evidence to support that. But what of the economic consequences? That is my concern.
Even in the best current scenario government advisers are forecasting this will be the worst phase of Covid to date. It will be much worse than last year. In the worst case it is catastrophic.
And remember that even though most people will not need hospitalisation and most won't die, millions will be ill. At any point in time in the months to come vast numbers of people will be off sick. There is no point pretending otherwise now. We know that this is going to happen.
In that situation to pretend that life can go on as normal is absurd. It can't. It won't. And very sick people, and their frightened carers, will not let that happen. We have to be realistic about this.
So far what the evidence shows is that the government has not responded in any appropriate way to this crisis. Despite the predictability of this wave (and more to follow) they have not got a plan for this moment. They declared ‘freedom' and washed their hands of responsibility.
So, what to do? First, declare lockdowns. Close hospitality. Require very limited bubbles. Close all hospitality. Close all non-essential shops. Close schools and universities. Require working from home. We have to do this.
The requirement is because a) we have to protect people b) we have to protect the NHS c) we have to protect essential economic services from the utilities to food supply. We cannot do that unless everything else closes down.
But then what? Economic support does have to follow. First and foremost, furlough has to return. But this time there has to be fraud detection built in, whilst support has to go to the 3 million who lost out last time. They cannot lose again.
Second, the social safety net has to be raised. The £20 universal credit payment has to be restored. Other protections have to be delivered to protect those unable to meet bills.
Third, small business loans have to be available again, but once more with anti-fraud measures built in. Proper checks have to be made this time. It would really not be hard to do given how bad the checks were last time.
Fourth, the Bank of England has to indicate its support for the economy. Its recent interest rate increase has to be reversed as a clear signal of that. Negative rates may need to be considered.
Fifth, QE has to return, but only as a short term measure. We cannot fuel inequality with QE as the benefit of it goes mainly to the wealthy. What this means is that the consequences of permanent QE have to be planned for. So far we pretend it will go away, and it won't.
Sixth, emergency tax measures are required, targeted wholly at the wealthy to ensure maximum recovery of QE funds injected into the economy and to mitigate risks of inflation, especially in asset prices.
Seventh, longer term plans need to be drawn up. We need (in no particular order):
- A permanent vaccination service
- A significant increase in NHS capacity
- Investment in ventilation and filtration throughout the economy (a precursor for the investment funded by QE to come)
- A national investment bank to better direct QE into the economy in the long term
- A recognition that QE is now a part of government funding and that government economic reporting needs to change to recognise the fact
- An end to Bank of England independence
- A job guarantee
- An enhanced social security system
- A mass education programme on why we need all this - starting in schools but extending to any and every available media
- Preparation for the environmental change transition to come
In other words, the short term measures that we know did work are required again, but the idea that this time we will go back to what some hanker after and which they call ‘normal' has to end. It no longer exists. We have to rethink how we live.
This happened after the crisis of WW2. Churchill came out of that war wanting to recreate the 30s. That desire was resoundingly rejected for three reasons.
First, because people had suffered enough. It seems we have not reached that point as yet, but at some time in 2022 we will have done.
Second, because the 30s economy Churchill wanted back now looked as though it created the crisis that had been suffered, just as it is now clear that Tory austerity created so much of the risk that we will now face in the weeks to come, by almost halving NHS capacity, for example.
Third, because alternative visions were available. They had been made during the war. The welfare state was the way forward.
I do, however, accept that this is where current hope fails, as yet. MMT makes alternative visions possible, but few have grabbed the consequences as yet.
In Labour, the SNP and LibDems there still remains a profoundly uncomfortable dedication to market-based dogmas. The social foundation of the society we need to build afresh cannot be built on that failed dogma. So there is still work to do.
But in the short term government has to go back into tackling this crisis. It can, and must do that, and then say that the costs will never be repaid because there will be no one to repay it to. The Bank of England can and will pay. And the nation owns that bank.
After that it is beholden on all with something to contribute to say ‘no more' and that, whichever country of the Union we are in, that now is the time for something different and we will never go back again.
Saying that, acting as if that is true, and working to achieve that change has to be the basis for our hope in the months to come. Cling to it, please.
We are all going to need hope, starting with the probably vain one that the government might still do the right thing today.
But if they don't and won't act we have to act is if a better world is possible. It only is if we make it. That is what progressive politics and economics is all about. It's time for both to deliver. Nothing less will do.
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Does it matter that we could all nitpick this basket of measures. I don’t think so. This is a manifesto that would be transformative across society. Every element is logical and cogently argued. Every element threatens everything the government and the Tory Party stand for. That suggests selling it to the Libdems and SNP should be easy, though it won’t be. For Labour to show interest, the current leadership would first have to decide it actually wants to get rid of the government, although the overwhelming proportion of both membership and, I dare to think, the Parliamentary Labour Party really do. The need for political leadership is the greatest obstacle to progress, not the number of people wanting it.
Once again I congratulate you on your contribution to galvanising opposition to the present insanity.
Thank you PaulHenry AND THANK YOU Richard Murphy.
So right Richard.
Its like a nightmare -living in a country ruled by the opposite of a responsible government.
Refusing to take on board the essentially very simple messages about acting early, taking precautions, telling the truth to the population, making places safe, mandating masks etc, learning from countries which have controlled it ( that vaccines are only ever part of the answer) .
A proper govt would treat it as a pandemic, not a political campaign.
Even Javid today seems to acknowledge they have to act ‘before Christmas’- but they are very sanguine about people dying so probably wont do what’s needed.
You (we) have to keep saying this.
Sunak’s silence is interesting. As far as I can see the generally positive impression the public hold of him resulted from the speed at which he recognised the threat in March 2020 and put in place Covid support measures for business such as furlough. He hasn’t done anything this time which makes me wonder whether he is playing to a different audience – if he hopes to become PM, the public aren’t nearly as important as the loony rightwing Tory MPs (by the way, is there a polite way of referring to this group?)
He has already succeeded in raising taxes and disguising it by a smokescreen, giving himself scope to lower them to a loud fanfare before an election. (Am I a conspiracy theorist for wondering whether the tax reduction will be in headline income tax, benefiting rentiers over salary-paid workers?)
On topic though, while there is a lot we don’t know about Omicron it clearly is spreading fast in the UK despite measures which have kept Delta at least roughly constant though not reduced it; it may make most of us susceptible. There simply isn’t data about whether it is milder in practice, and anyway increased numbers can overcome a lower incidence of severe illness. The logical thing is to at least ensure its impact is spread longer so the peak is lower. The public seem to be trying to do that but the government not, maybe they will have to follow suit as they did with the March 2020 lockdown – or perhaps it is that Johnson is hoping this year he can be the Grinch that stole Boxing Day rather than Christmas.
I am sorry that I am bored with comments like this
Just read what the experts said in the report I linked
Why do you think it milder when they can find no evidence for that?
This is not a place for misinformation to be spread whether as an aside or not
I do not apologise fur being annoyed
We are facing a meltdown
We don’t need excuses
Apologies, I didn’t say it was milder. There is no data good enough to say that. I just pointed out that even if it turned out to be, the impact would still be overwhelming due to the very rapid spread.
OK! And apologies too – this is stressing me, and I will admit it
So, once again Johnson, the coward, has failed to take the necessary action to protect the British public. What an embarrassment this failure is?
Seeing the recent interest rate rise – the most irrational thing I’ve seen of late – does not fill me with hope.
The Tories have a habit of being ‘Last minute .com’ unfortunately on matters like this. It will be interesting seeing what they do next.
What I hope will happen is that they will become scared of possible anger and public reaction when things just stop working. One only hopes that they are sensible enough to ward that off because it could get quite ugly.
I read that as ‘last minute.con‘…
A fair summary of the government in every sense
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