Job–lite recovery means Britain needs new industries
Despite yesterday’s “bleak employment outlook” the major political parties and British media continue to promote solutions which will do little to alleviate long term unemployment. Even with this most recent rise in joblessness – one spanning demographics of sex, age, and ethnicity – both parties champion “spending cuts” while the media focuses on deficit reduction and the need to “end the welfare trap.” For example, Hamish McRae in the Independent writes, “the government, whatever government, will have both to raise taxes and cut spending. Those of us who banged on about the unsustainable nature of public finances will see ourselves vindicated … for the moment all is calm; the Government is still ‘investing’; the thunderclouds have yet to break.”
Ignored is how these policies will prevent what is being called a “job–lite recovery.” Limited measures, such as the Government’s forthcoming “Back to Work” white paper promising job training for the young and increased benefits for the elderly and disabled, are at best only stop gap solutions failing to address what the OECD refers to as the “structural” problems of the economy. How will job training for instance help if vacancies continue to fall, as the ONS report shows?
The media and policy makers must acknowledge the limitations of the bank bailout and stimulus with its outdated embrace of an outdated free-market ideology favouring banks and the financial sector over workers, a preference shown in the £500 billion given to banks versus only £3 billion for “capital projects.” Instead of reducing VAT, bailing out banks, or introducing “welfare reform” aiming to force claimants to look for non-existent and non-livable jobs, the Government should prioritise long-term employment through investing in new industries combating environmental problems and increasing community development. In the long term it remains to be seen what type of economy will emerge from this crisis – one which is sustainable and advantages all or one that continues to rely on the boom and bust of unregulated growth.
Our guest writer is Peter Bloom, Swansea University
-
matthew bond
-
http://twitter.com/tugsandtost/status/4055231125 matthew bond
-
http://twitter.com/shamikdas/status/4055295761 Shamik Das
-
http://pluralprogressive.wordpress.com/ Luke
-
The Earl
YouGov Tracker
ToUChstone Economic Tracker
George’s Marvellous Deficit Calculator
Most read this week
- Climate change sceptics and rural romantics – the Tories are a shambles on renewable energy
- As order breaks down in Syria, its Christians suffer the consequences
- Don’t believe the spin – the health reforms are Cameron’s just as much as Lansley’s
- Amidst the burning flesh of Homs, Syrians plead: “We are getting slaughtered, save us”
- The shocking effect of Gove’s EMA axe: Youngsters skipping food to get to college
Best of the web
Top issues
Left Foot Facebook
Awards & Rankings
Archive
Tag Cloud
Domestic Progressives
- A Thousand Cuts
- Alastair Campbell
- Andrew Gibson's Blog
- Anthony Painter
- Ayes To The Left
- Blackburn Labour Party
- Chartist
- Conor's Commentary
- Dave's Part
- Diary of a Benefit Scrounger
- Duncan's Economic Blog
- Follow my leaders
- Freemania
- Full Fact
- Go Fourth
- Good Animal / Bad Animal
- Guardian Politics blog
- Harry's Place
- Hopi Sen
- Institute for Government
- Intelligence Squared
- Labour and Capital
- Labour Home
- Labour List
- LabourHome
- Left Central
- Lib-Con Trick
- Liberal Conspiracy
- Liberal Democrat Voice
- LSE politics blog
- Luke's blog
- Mark Thompson Blog
- Matthew Taylor's blog
- Max Atkinson's blog
- Migrants' Rights Network
- New Statesman: free speech
- Next Left
- Nick Pearce
- OurKingdom
- Patrick Bury's blog
- Policy Critical
- Political Reboot
- Political Scrapbook
- Progress
- Red Brick
- RSA Projects
- Runnymede Trust
- Rupa Huq's Blog
- Sadie's Tavern
- Save EMA
- Shamik Das
- Slinger blog
- Tank the Tories
- Tax Research UK
- The Centre Left
- The Green Benches
- The Novocastrian
- This is my truth
- Tim McLoughlin
- Tom Harris MP
- Tom Watson MP
- Touchstone
- Touchstone TUC blog
- Young Fabians Blog







