venerdì 12 aprile 2013

Il falso mito della Lady di Ferro


Molti dei pezzi scritti dopo la morte di Margaret Thatcher si concentrano sulla sua personalità politica, ammirata da alcuni, detestata da altri. A sinistra si parla di metodi sbagliati, di furia contro le classi lavoratrici, a destra si parla di innovatrice e modernizzatrice. Poco si dice sulla sua eredità economica, e quel poco che viene scritto è di solito un elogio senza critica. Tanti difetti ma la Gran Bretagna è tornata grande grazie a lei. Gli articoli che proponiamo qui sotto raccontano una storia assai diversa. Per Oliver Huitson il successo economico della Thatcher è stato, in realtà, un disastro. La Lady di Ferro sfruttò il petrolio del Mar del Nord per succhiare soldi e rimettere in sesto la bilancia dei pagamenti, un fattore totalmente estemporaneo che fortemente contribuì alla sua politica economica. Per il resto privatizzò brutalmente, favorendo la City e facendo pagare, per decenni, il prezzo di queste privatizzazioni al pubblico britannico - servizi pubblici venduti a basso prezzo e poi "affittati" dai nuovi padroni ai cittadini a caro prezzo. La vendita delle case popolari formò una solida base di consenso anche tra i più poveri ma creò le condizioni per la crisi degli alloggi odierna, e le conseguenti nuove forme di povertà.
Più in generale, l'economia della Thatcher - e dei governi che le sono succeduti - si è basata su un aumento della spesa generato dalla finanziarizzazione dell'economia - a cominciare dai prestiti fatti contro il valore della casa - e non certo da un cambiamento drastico nella struttura economica. La formula è di spremere tutte le risorse disponibili, passate, presenti e, soprattutto, future, senza nessuna attenzione per la sostenibilità del modello economico.
Martin Wolf, del Financial Times, riconosce alcuni meriti a Lady Thatcher, ma arriva a conclusioni non molto diverse. L'economia britannica è una economia debole, basata sulla City e su un mercato del lavoro senza regole, ma è povera di prospettive. Gli investimenti, pubblici e privati, sono deboli e la governance economica è legata soprattutto al mondo della finanza, incapace di vedere a le prospettive economiche che vanno oltre ai 2-3 mesi. La mancanza di uno stato solido, di istituzioni capaci, l'affidarsi acriticamente al mercato, hanno riportato la Gran Bretagna indietro al 19 secolo, invece di farla entrare nel 21. Un paradosso che sarebbe il caso che anche i politici di casa nostra, tecnici o meno, tenessero presente.



Thatcher - black gold or red bricks?   


di Oliver Huitson
da OpenDemocracy

Beneath the ‘sycophancy/street party’ binary of reaction to Thatcher’s death are questions of alternatives and efficacy. When the MP of Finchley took power in ’79, with Britain in a dire economic situation, was there really “no alternative”? The question presupposes that Thatcher’s slash ‘n burn monetarism at least worked.
As the badge pictured above states, “If Maggie is the answer it must be a very silly question!” – which it was. Francis Wheen’s Strange Days Indeed portrays the sheer ridiculousness of the late 70s with considerable wit and atmospheric detail. But Thatcher’s ‘success’ often hides just how silly an answer it really was.
Despite sending unemployment ballooning to 3m and decimating whole communities Thatcher did, from a certain perspective, eventually pull the economy back around even if never matching the achievements of the post-war model in terms of growth. Overseeing two recessions, average growth under Thatcher was around 2%. Yet the means by which she managed those apparently successful economic achievements require some examination. As Anthony Barnett argues, North Sea oil was critical:
“[It] came on stream bringing in an estimated £70 billion in revenues, it turned the UK into an OPEC country, an oil-exporter, and it overturned a chronic balance of payments problem rooted in the post-war period of clinging to imperial over-stretch.”
What happened to the proceeds from this unexpected and unearned windfall? Easy come, easy go – it was spent. Contrast this to both the Gulf states and the Nordic countries, who invested the proceeds of their natural resources to provide ongoing national income, and one of the defining features of Thatcherism is revealed. On top of the oil revenue binge, many vast state-owned industries were also sold off at knock-down prices. Highlighting her economic extremism, these included natural monopolies like gas, water and electricity; the toll booth economy - which would reach its zenith with Major's privatisation of the trains - was core Thatcherism. As Tom Mills notes, “These privatisations proved to be hugely profitable for the City of London and represented a massive transfer of wealth from public to private hands”. This wasn’t so much flogging the family silver as flogging the family home and renting it back – a process continued under Blair. Under the sweeping liberalisation she instigated, Britain now owns very little and we instead pay firms – often based overseas – for the privilege of using our own airports and water supplies, to name but two examples.
Another of Thatcher’s magic potions was 'home equity withdrawal' or remortgaging - drawing down the equity in the borrowers home for (mainly) consumption purposes – new cars, holidays, and so forth. Under the two Prime Ministers that preceded her, James Callaghan and Ted Heath, home equity withdrawal as a percentage of GDP growth was around 36% for both. Under Thatcher, this exploded to over £250bn across her premiership – a staggering 104% of GDP growth. To a significant extent, Thatcher grew the economy by unleashing easy credit, asset inflation (including house prices) and equity draw downs – ‘wealth creation’ indeed.
As an economic programme this is evidently unsustainable – oil runs out, assets run out (add the NHS to the list) and relying on rising house prices is, as the world has so painfully learnt, not exactly a model of financial prudence. The critical point is that without these asset sales and home equity it is questionable whether the economy would have been growing at all.
The story of Blair's New Labour is eerily familiar. Under Major, such withdrawals amounted to only 8% of GDP growth, perhaps reflecting the wider economic climate. But Blair did his homework and let loose – as did Thatcher – a wave of cheap credit, financial deregulation, house price inflation and an equity withdrawal-led consumption boom. Withdrawals under Blair’s leadership totalled around £365bn, that’s a full 103% of GDP growth over the same period. “We have abolished boom and bust” became the Global Financial Crisis.
Thatcherism is the ultimate in live now, pay later. Or rather, let others pay later. Conservative thought is inescapably rooted in time, both forward and backward facing, yet Thatcherism – like much neoclassical economics – is largely void of any temporal narrative; all must be consumed. And consumed now. The relationship between ‘those who are living, those who are dead and those who are to be born’ becomes not one of continuity but of expropriation, the efforts of both past and future are sucked into the current moment and devoured in a gross concertina. 
Her destruction of industry, too, bore the same marks of time compression. Like the textbook models of her intellectual acolytes, displaced workers would effortlessly reskill and slide into more productive and competitive industries: like financial services. Thirty years later, many of those decaying communities are still waiting. Indeed, many of them will be precisely those targeted by Cameron’s welfare purge. Thatcher may be gone but her work continues.
My first memory, incidentally, of anything concerning politics was Thatcher, or rather the effect she had on my otherwise very mild-mannered father. In the late 80s, aged around 5, I was baffled that this woman could generate such visceral loathing. Growing up, I absorbed the highly nuanced understanding that Labour – good, Tories – bad, but this made it all the more disorientating to hear at the kitchen table some years later that “Labour are just the same as the Tories now”. Tony Blair, Thatcher’s “greatest achievement” in her view, had arrived.
Ten years later, in the City, I worked for a long time under a lively (and vocal) working-class Thatcherite, quite a significant demographic in Thatcher’s reign that some find hard to reconcile. He combined a playful, ‘loadsamoney’ vulgarity and Gordon Gecko fantasies with a strident, Gareth Keenan’esque militarism – all of which he found well accommodated in Thatcherism (the Falklands war satisfying the latter). After we’d got the pleasantries out the way (“fucking militant lefty”, “soppy liberal bastard” or combinations thereof) what always marked the end of hostilities was a heart to heart moment, his chair pulled close to mine, sotto voce:
“No no, seriously, I’ll be straight with you, the reason my parents loved Thatcher, what meant more than anything to them - she let them buy their own house”
The ‘right to buy’ policy allowed many to buy their own home at a greatly reduced priced, something they would never have been able to do otherwise, and – all else being equal – that was clearly a positive step. But like so many of her policies, this was ultimately a combination of something for nothing (the gap between purchase price and market value) and the appropriation of past and future resources – the social housing built up by former generations was rapidly sold off and wasn’t replaced, a significant factor in today’s chronic housing shortage. As the Independent writes,
“More than 1.25 million tenants took advantage of the “Right to Buy” scheme, which raised £18bn and converted thousands of Labour voters into Conservatives – though as council-housing stock shrank, homeless beggars appeared on the streets for the first time in 30 years.
How different today’s youth might find their housing predicament if the proceeds of right-to-buy had been ring-fenced and put towards further social housing. But the moment must consume all, posterity be damned.
Post-war, the ‘golden age’ – which in many respects it was – ended long before Thatcher came to power. As Jamie Mackay notes,
“The post-war 'consensus' version of nationalisation had essentially replicated old forms of power.”
On the issue of both economic ownership and control, the divisions persisted and escalated, exacerbated by the monetary devastation of the oil shocks in ’73 and ‘79. This line of thought was echoed by Ken Loach when I interviewed him earlier this year about his new film, The Spirit of ’45. An impressive and moving film, I still left the screening wondering whether it would have had greater impact had he really engaged with the Thatcher issue – she didn’t only win, she won three times. She answered something.
But her answer, like Blair’s, contains a disturbing truth - Britain seems no longer able to generate sound productive growth and prefers the toxic mix of financial alchemy, asset sales to finance a balance of payments deficit, and house price inflation and draw-downs to maintain domestic demand. As Elliott and Atkinson argue in their new book, Going South, Britain’s problems are deep-rooted and quite fundamental: we are in real danger of “de-developing”. Their comparison of the UK with developing countries chimes with elements of Will Davies’ recent article, ‘Britain’s Brehznev-style capitalism’,
British capitalism already has many of the hallmarks of Brezhnev-era socialist decline: macroeconomic stagnation, a population as much too bored as scared to protest about very much, a state that performs tongue-in-cheek legitimacy, politicians playing with statistics to try and delay the moment of economic reckoning.”
If Thatcherism was the answer, it could plainly never remain the answer for very long – it is unsustainable even by its own internal logic, such as it is. Making things for a world market is competitive, it’s hard, it needs sound infrastructure, solid education and joined up government. So much easier to simply flog the assets built up by previous generations and bestowed by geography, and load the next generations with debt (Thatcher ran deficits in all but two of her 11 years). What is this if not a “something for nothing” culture?
Managing the demands of ownership, participation, reciprocity, equity and productivity still seems as far as off today as it did in ’79. The question of what Thatcher really achieved, and what she left behind, needs to be answered afresh by her supporters post-08. She did not save Britain from economic decline but merely postponed it, and gorged on the assets of both past and future in the process. Thatcherism was a remarkably irresponsible, economically stagnant and anti-social creed; we are still reeling from the consequences.

fonte: http://www.opendemocracy.net/ourkingdom/oliver-huitson/thatcher-black-gold-or-red-bricks


Britain should not go back to the future

The UK has been left an economy with a remarkably late-19th century look
Today’s British economy is the legacy of Margaret Thatcher. The governments that succeeded her did not change the broad lines of her policies. John Major privatised the railways. Labour lightly regulated the City of London and made the Bank of England independent. When it did reverse direction – such as with the introduction of the minimum wage – the measures were carefully calibrated. So how should we judge Thatcher’s legacy?
The UK economy has registered at least four clear successes since 1979, notes Professor John Van Reenen of the London School of Economics.
First, roughly a century of underperformance relative to its peers came to an end. In 1979, according to the Conference Board’s database, UK gross domestic product per head (at purchasing power parity) was 76 per cent of US levels, while French GDP per head was 82 per cent. By 2007, UK GDP per head was up to 83 per cent of US levels, while the French level was down to 73 per cent. By 2007, UK GDP per head was third highest in the Group of Seven leading economies, after the US and Canada.
Second, this marked turnround was because of a relative improvement in both employment and productivity. In 1979, output per worker in the UK was 75 per cent of US levels, far behind that in France, at 88 per cent. By 2007, UK output per worker was 85 per cent of US levels, the same as in France.
Third, the improvement in productivity performance was not just the result of a financial bubble: only 10 per cent of the productivity growth between 1979 and 2007 was generated inside finance.
Finally, the collapse in economy-wide productivity performance since 2007 is a mirror image of the greater flexibility of real wages and consequent employment resilience. Moreover, the poor productivity performance since 2007 has not eroded all the prior gains.
The evidence, then, is that the market-oriented and regulatory reforms – labour market liberalisation, withdrawal of subsidies and privatisation – did improve UK performance. But Prof Van Reenen also notes important failures: rising inequality, excessive financial deregulation and inadequate investment in both human and physical capital.
I agree. But I would put these criticisms in a wider context, one that bears on where the post-crisis UK might now go. Thatcher – like many who supported her – had a 19th-century view of the economy, rejecting most of what happened in the 20th century. She was a pragmatic politician: she did not seek to abolish the welfare state. The same was true of US President Ronald Reagan. But her core belief was that all good things would follow from pruning back the state.
The economic history of the UK suggests this view is, at the least, incomplete. The nation did not fall behind the late-19th century US or Germany because its governments did too much. It was far more because it was culturally and institutionally incapable of remaining central during the “second industrial revolution” – an era of rapid innovations and giant corporations. Increasingly, the British became rentiers. That was one reason why the City became the leading global financial centre.
It is not an accident that an effort by a forceful politician to reverse the interventionism of the 20th century has brought the UK so far back to this future. Thus, it has a huge financial centre, weak domestic manufacturing, a deregulated labour market, rising inequality and low private and public investment. It all looks remarkably late-19th century.
As Richard Lambert, former director-general of the CBI, the business organisation, and former FT editor, noted in a recent lecture, the British business sector still shows a “relatively low commitment to long-term investment, [and] to research and innovation”. When the City determines how companies are run, that is sure to happen. A company such as Rolls-Royce could hardly be created today. That is not what the City would dare to support.
So how should the UK build on Thatcher’s legacy? As Andy Haldane, a leading BoE official, notes, radical simplification could still make the economy work far better in some areas – taxes and the reform of financial regulation, for example. In other respects, however, the government has to act much more positively. It needs, for example, to consider its balance sheet, not just its debts. It must see the case for far higher investment when interest rates are so low. It must appreciate more the role it has to play in promoting science-led innovation.
The crisis has shown that the post-Thatcher economy was weaker than many believed. Going back to the 19th century is also not enough. The country needs institutions, public and private, better capable of generating widely shared growth. Is that possible? Perhaps not. But it is today’s challenge. 

ambarabaciccicoccò

Il mondo cambia, o forse no, facce vecchie, soliti discorsi e tutto si riassume con una filastrocca :

Tre civette sul comò (di chi stiamo parlando ? scopritelo !...vi do un aiutino : sono intercambiabili, non potete sbagliarvi) che facevano l’amore con la figlia del dottore (chi è la figlia ? beh vi aiuto, la figlia facciamo finta che sia l’Italia o, se preferite le ammucchiate, noi italiani) e il dottore ? (troppo facile ! é lui !) ma il dottore si ammalò (é vecchio...)…e quindi ? che si fa ?..beh : ambarabaciccicoccò






La scuola è meglio della merda

di Francesca Congiu

L’intervento di Francesca Coin in merito al referendum bolognese sui finanziamenti alla scuola
 mette in luce l’ennesimo paradosso legato alla questione dell’istruzione in Italia e l’uso strumentale di concetti come laicità e democrazia. Tale paradosso ricorda quello illustrato da Ellekappa con una vignetta sulla Chiesa e i diritti della persona: "La chiesa ha tutto il diritto di dire la sua. il problema è che vuole dire anche la nostra".
Poco male (cioè non sorprende) se PDL e Curia sono uniti nella crociata antidemocratica di considerare lecito un finanziamento alla scuola privata, ma trovo scandaloso che il PD bolognese continui a fraintendere i "fondamentali" della democrazia dimostrando di fare politica senza avere un'identità politica o - peggio - facendo proprie le ragioni e l'identità dell' "avversario". La scuola pubblica è battuta se la politica non la difende, perché l'acropoli è sempre più forte dell'agorà. Aggiungo, allo sconforto e alla rabbia che ingenera questa vicenda, la recente notizia del pagamento “a sorteggio” dei docenti precari di una scuola di Grosseto: questi, sottopagati, già vessati dalle intermittenze di un lavoro saltuario sono i nostri docenti, formati e professionalizzati dal "pubblico" e per il "pubblico", che lo Stato - con destra e sinistra complici nella cecità e nell'azione - continua ad umiliare e offendere. Il fatto è accaduto in Toscana, ma queste "fiere" sono aperte in tutta Italia.

Credo esista un progetto politico, ideologico, ben ordito, che cioè qualcuno o molti traggano un vantaggio nel tagliare il filo democratico di cui la scuola si fa portatrice e che si costruiscano teorie astruse e improponibili di “laicità” per giustificare la manomissione dei valori costituzionali, per mettere cioè all'angolo i saperi liberi e democratici, partendo da provvedimenti come la limitazione degli accessi e la scandalosa umiliazione del corpo docente.
E alla fine? Alla fine, dopo aver raso al suolo la credibilità, l'autorevolezza e l'imprescindibilità della scuola pubblica ci si limiterà a ripetersi la tautologia, buona per salvare la cattiva coscienza di chi è causa di questo male, che la scuola pubblica non vale niente, perché non vale niente, perché non vale niente ecc. ecc. Quando discuto di problemi di laicità, merito, democrazia scolastica mi viene spesso in mente una frase contenuta in “Lettera a una professoressa”. Il contesto è la scuola di Barbiana, quell’esperienza educativa che negli anni ’50 mise in luce le gravi ingiustizie sociali della scuola istituzionale, ancora arretrata sui temi dell’uguaglianza e della cura della persona. Questa frase viene  pronunciata da un giovane alunno in risposta ad un pedagogo, aria da progressista, cattedratico - uno di quelli che, per intenderci, oggi punterebbero l'indice contro le carenze del sistema scolastico pubblico, per poi mandare i propri figli a scuola privata. Lucio, l’alunno che ha trovato nella scuola un luogo di scambio, crescita, autonomia, lui con 36 mucche nella stalla, di fronte all'alternativa-zero, risponde al fine pedagogo come oggi in Italia risponderebbero studenti e professori insieme : "la scuola sarà sempre meglio della merda".

House of Cards, A.Davies per la BBC - 1990


La cineteca politica di RI
Giulia Pirrone

House of Cards e' una mini-serie TV che fu prodotta dalla BBC nel 1990 ed ispirata ad un romanzo del giornalista Michael Dobbs. Un thriller politico dai toni molto scuri che e' stato accostato dalla critica a Macbeth e Riccardo III di Shakespeare, ed al Principe di Machiavelli.
Se il titolo vi suona familiare e' probabilmente perché David Fincher (regista fra gli altri di Fight Club e Seven), insieme con Kevin Spacey ne ha recentemente prodotto un remake di grande successo per Netflix.
Il primo episodio andò in onda, per pura coincidenza, due giorni prima delle elezioni del segretario dei Tories che avrebbe dovuto succedere Margaret Thatcher in seguito alle sue dimissioni dalla guida del governo e del partito. Grazie al tempismo ed alla performance di Ian Richardson nel ruolo di protagonista, la serie ebbe un enorme successo in Regno Unito ed e' tutt'ora considerata una delle migliori produzioni televisive della BBC.

Oggi House of Cards dimostra con vanità tutti i suoi anni, facendo allo spettatore continentale lo stesso effetto che un giro in vespa a Capri in una giornata estiva suscita su un inglese: e' prima di tutto un tripudio di folklore britannico, fra tazze di te' in vecchie porcellane, i cruciverba dei quotidiani, grigi colori e colonie di ratti che, indisturbati nei bassifondi, sembrano essere i veri padroni di Londra.

La trama racconta dell'ascesa al potere di un Tory vecchio stampo (patrizio, liberista spietato ed anti-europeista), che dalle retrovie del partito si fa strada per aprire una nuova era dopo i lunghi 15 anni di guida di Margaret Thatcher.
E se si pensa che questa serie TV fu assolutamente contemporanea alla caduta di Maggie, si spiega facilmente il suo successo. Dopo tanti anni in cui la scena politica fu essenzialmente dominata da una personalità' così forte, il Paese non sapeva bene cosa aspettarsi. Tant'e' che il personaggio del protagonista, Francis Urquhart, poco ha di innovativo dal punto di vista politico rispetto alla Iron Lady, di cui semmai e' la deriva, decadentemente spietato e corrotto, con la sola ambizione di rimanere al potere più' a lungo della Thatcher per batterne il record di giorni in carica.










1 episodio intero: