PsychoSerenity wrote:Coito ergo sum wrote:
Well, o.k. then.
The problem with your comment is that you (a) aren't suggesting what economic theory has been shown to work for the vast number of people any better than neoliberal economics, and (b) your basic premise that the UK has been a good example of neoliberal economics in action is a false one. So, your conclusion doesn't follow -- well, it follows, but only from an erroneous premise. And, conclusions based on erroneous premises are useless.
Thirty fucking years of privatisation and deregulation, leaving us with ever increasing wealth disparity and crumbling public services - how the fuck is that not neoliberal economics in action? Yet you declare it to be false based on no evidence whatsoever and therefore my conclusion is coming from an erroneous premise? Fuck off.
Some privatization does not equal neoliberal economics. Neoliberal economics would not include a National Health Service. Britain has been following the mainstream prescriptions of Keynesianism as much or more than any other developed nation. It has cut interest rates, pumped up government spending, printed money like crazy, and nationalized almost half the banking industry. British stimulation of the economy was a Keynesian prescription.
PsychoSerenity wrote:
And you say I'm not suggesting anything? Does "long term infrastructure investments" not sound like a suggestion to you?
No, I said you did not suggest an alternative economic theory that has been shown to have worked for the majority of the population. You said neoliberalism has been shown to have failed for the majority of the people -- well, what theory works? Keynesian economics? What?
PsychoSerenity wrote:
If you want a specific example of economies that have been working better than ours, the Nordic model is clearly a step in the right direction.
Very much free market economies - regulated free markets.
PsychoSerenity wrote:
And there are plenty of other economic theories - something making use of Rawls' Difference Principle would be good.
That's been proven to have worked for the majority of a population? The Rawls' difference principle is not an economic theory, anyway. It's just one of his basic principles -- and states in some general terms that inequalities should only be permitted to the extent they benefit the most disadvantaged group. It's not an economic theory like neoliberal classical economics, Keynesian economics or the like.
PsychoSerenity wrote:
Why the fuck do I need to suggest an alternative that has been shown to work?
You don't have to do anything. But, if all you can do is falsely claim that Britain has been some crucible of neoliberal economics, proving such economics to be bogus, and not offer another alternative that we can look at, then you're really just farting in the wind.
PsychoSerenity wrote:
The fact that what we've got has been shown not to work is enough reason to try something else
Sure, so we should abandon Keynesian economics, since that's primarily been the bulwark of British economic policy.
PsychoSerenity wrote:
- even something untested as long as there's decent theory behind it - otherwise you'd always just be maintaining the status quo like a good little conservative because you're not currently getting hurt and you're too scared of that changing to risk helping those that are suffering. If everyone limits themselves to what has been shown to work, nothing would ever change.
I'm all for abandoning the status quote. So, let's stop with the stimulus, privatize the banking industry, stop printing money, etc. Let's not squash interest rates and such. That sort of Keynesianism obviously not working.
