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Social Welfare in Britain. No Alternative? The Return to Mass Unemployment. Additional Sources. Keynesian Economics: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keynesian ONS Detailed guide to state of labour market www.statistics.gov.uk/pdfdir/lmsuk1208.pdf The proposed UK Green New Deal:
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Social Welfare in Britain No Alternative? The Return to Mass Unemployment
Additional Sources Keynesian Economics: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keynesian ONS Detailed guide to state of labour market www.statistics.gov.uk/pdfdir/lmsuk1208.pdf The proposed UK Green New Deal: www.neweconomics.org/gen/greennewdealneededforuk210708.aspx Obama’s Green New Deal (details emerging): www.nytimes.com/2008/12/07/us/politics/07radio.html?_r=1
Aims of today’s session to: • Consider the return to mass unemployment from the mid 1970s to mid 1990s • Examine competing explanations • Assess the impact of unemployment on individuals and groups • Evaluate the decline in unemployment from the early 1990s • Consider more recent trends in work and employment • Examine the current financial and employment ‘downturn’
The Keynesian ‘Orthodoxy’ • ‘The government accept as one of their primary aims and responsibilities the maintenance of a high and stable level of employment after the war’ (Full Employment White Paper, 1944)
International Context – US leads • No return to mass unemployment of 1930s – protectionism and fascism • Bretton Woods 1944 – International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank to provide help to countries • General Agreement on Trades and Tariffs (GATT) 1948, plus Dollar Standard – promote world trade • US aid - Marshall Plan to rebuild Europe • Ensured sustained growth – but Dollar standard collapsed in oil crisis of 1970s • Reagan 1980s neoliberal orthodoxy – IMF & WB • Obama 2009?
The Guarantee of Full Employment • First task of governments to ensure enough demand in economy to ensure full (male) Employment • Deflation rather than inflation the enemy • Low interest rates and Hire Purchase to encourage spending • Public investment in infrastructure and services • Social security benefits to unemployed ensure that demand is maintained • Tripartite planning gov’t, unions and employers – e.g. prices and incomes policies • Unemployment and inflation 1970s (stagflation) • Incomes policies collapsed Winter of Discontent 1978-9
A Vindication of Keynes? • ‘Jobs for all’ and the ‘golden age’ of capitalism • Low unemployment (e.g. 2.5% in 1950s) – frictional, though higher in North, Scotland, N. Ireland • Strong employment growth: • rebuilding of manufacturing; sheltered national markets • public sector expansion • Full (male) employment (peak late 1960s) • Keynesianism relatively weak influence in UK – ‘hydraulic’ not full-scale planning leading to stop-go (Glynn 1991, 1999) • Keynesianism politically significant – gov’t claimed credit for full employment
The end of full employment • ‘Stop-go’ of 1960s, followed by rising unemployment • Three sharp global recessions: 1973-75, 1979-81 and 1990-92 • Each recession involved sharp increases in unemployment
Damned Lies and Statistics • Between 1975 and 2001, unemployment never fell below 1 million • Peaked 3+ million (1986 and 1993) • These figures based on Claimant Count, those claiming benefits • Widespread manipulation of statistics: • Changes to eligibility rules • Redefining certain groups (e.g. males 60+) • Discounting (e.g. govt. training schemes) • ‘Preferred’ measure now International Labour Organisation (ILO) definition: ‘available for and actively seeking work’, but excludes ‘economically inactive’
Unevenly Distributed – class, gender and ‘race’ • As in 1930s large numbers untouched by Ut – structural not just frictional and cyclical • Decimated families, communities, regions – esp declining manufacturing areas, but also prosperous South East, particularly: • Unskilled/semi-skilled workers, and unqualified • Ethnic minorities (x2 or x3 average rate) • Inner city residents and outlying estates • People with mental and physical disabilities • Lone parents • The young (under 25) and older (50+) • The long-term unemployed (6+ months) – high number in UK • These groups also gained least from up-turn 1995-2008
Why return of Mass Unemployment 1980s? • As 2009, Cyclical and Structural pressures combined • Vulnerability of British capitalism in a world recession • Primacy of ‘City’ and finance over productive investment – short termism (Gamble 1986) • Acceleration of long-term decline of staples (coal, steel, shipbuilding etc.) and manufacturing (closures, technology, relocation abroad) • Relative decline in international competitiveness (Glynn 1999) • Weak investment and productivity (training, plant, R&D) • Competition increasingly on basis of cost (i.e. low wages) not quality
There is No Alternative (TINA)? • ‘Full employment is not in the gift of governments. It should not be promised and cannot be promised’ (Sir Keith Joseph, 1978) • ‘Rising unemployment and the recession have been the price we have to pay for getting inflation down. That price is well worth paying’ (Norman Lamont, Chancellor, 1991)
The Right ‘Solution’: Supply Side Economics 1 • Diagnosis – High unemployment symptom of failure of Keynesianism • Labour too powerful – pricing itself out of jobs • Benefits too generous and unconditional • Public expenditure too high – crowding out productive investment • Employers too restricted in who can hire and fire • Government printing too much money fuelling inflation
Supply Side Economics 2: Prescription Redistribute power and resources from labour to capital, reversing trend to WW2 (see Harvey) • Abolish Wage Councils protecting low paid, Local Authority ‘Fair Wages Resolution’ • Curb Union power by law – and stand up to the miners • Promote worker ‘flexibility’ e.g. more casualisation, assert right to high and fire • Education to prepare pupils for work more, employers control over training • Less generous benefits (up-rate in line with inflation not wages) and more conditions (Job Seekers Allowance) • Remove restrictions on business as much as possible to enable to create wealth in new financial sectors • In hindsight, despite subsequent boom, did it lay the basis for the current crisis?
Back to Work in 1990s • Started before but continued under New Labour • Post 1993 (almost) month on month decline in unemployment to 2008 • By 2004 unemployment returns to levels 30 years earlier • End 2007: 1.5 m (ILO count); 850,000 (5% on claimant count) • Rising levels of economic activity: fall in men, increase in women • Record levels of employment (jobs growth): 28 million in work by 2006
Giving Primacy to Work • ‘New Labour’ inherits growing economy and improving labour market • No return to ‘old Labour’ commitment to full employment through tax and spend (Powell & Driver 1998) • Primacy of inflation (e.g. BofE independence) over need for work • Significant increases public expenditure 2000 onwards play big role in overall jobs growth
New Labour: enhancing ‘employability’ • No fundamental changefrom monetarism, economy left to determine level of employment • Pursue low inflation as central goal not full employment as such • ‘Supply-side socialism’ or a ‘progressive’ neo-liberalism? (Thomson 1996) • but stronger supply side intervention – sticks and carrots • Emphasis on skills and compelling people into work (New Deals, welfare reform) • Regulation through minimum wages – encourage employers to make workers productive • Tax Credits incentive to enter labour market, help with child care • More conditionality of benefits • Higher investment in primary and higher (but not secondary) education • What they didn’t do: restore trade union power, regulate finance sector Intervene to prevent overheating of housing market • After 2001 big boost from public sector spending boom e.g. NHS • Strong globalization – favoured finance capital, London and South East – where marginal constituencies were • Manufacturing industry continued to decline rapidly
Assessment • From 1993 large and sustained decline in unemployment, accompanied by continuing increases in employment • Return to high employment, but job polarisation (Goos & Manning 2003: • More MacJobs (high wages/rewards, security, training and opportunities) • More McJobs (low wages, part-time insecure, temporary, casual): largely female, ethnic minority or immigrant labour • Continuing unemployment: the young, ethnic minorities, plus ‘in-work’ poor • Rise inactivity prime age male workers Increased incapacity and sickness (2.6 million long-term sick and disabled) (Faggio and Nickell 2003) • Growth of inequality, decline in social mobility (Taylor) • Hutton, Larry Elliot and others calls for regulated, corporatist reform addressing structural economic weakness ignored – opportunity missed?
What happened next… • US economy goes bust: debt, finance, mortgages – UK follows suit • Employment rate falls, Ut rises to 6%, 1.86m by10/08 • Banks almost nationalised, massive interest rate cuts etc • Elliot, Cable (who predicted this) not sure gov’t action will work but must try- • Government ditches monetarist textbooks • ‘U’, ‘W’ or ‘L’ shaped recession, nobody knows • Longer term implications: more regulation, sharing, public investment • Climate change: shift from consumerism? • Obama – will he make a difference with ‘Green New Deal’? Should we have one our own?