austerity is the policy of reducing spending in order to decrease the debt. the debt is the money the uk has spent that it didn't have - as of the first quarter of 2018, uk debt stood at £1.78 trillion, or 86.58% of gdp. the deficit is the gap between what the government's income and spending, and whenever there is a deficit, debt increases. debt increased because of deficit in 2017 by £46 million. so, we need to make the deficit into a surplus in order to pay back the debt owed. but is are there other, less destructive and more efficient ways to pay back debt?
in short - yes.
currently, austerity isn't really doing great for itself. in the uk, homelessness has doubled since 2010, 100,000 more children are in poverty since last year, and the nhs, as we regularly hear, is in crisis. the welfare of the people, and the welfare state itself are not the pride of the uk at the moment. as well as this, people are not getting what they used to out of their wages. life is not great for most people. but, it's all in the name of austerity, right? we have to go through this, for however long it'll be (10, 20, 30 years??) in order to sort out the country's ginormous accumulation of debt, don't we?
well, after nearly a decade since the first austerity policies were put in place, the economy still isn't doing great. the tories say they are handling the economy successfully because they are cutting down the deficit, though really what they are doing is cutting necessary services. though we need to make the deficit fall, the manner in which this is being carried out is destroying our country.
borrowing has decreased from 9.9% of gdp in 2010 to 2.6% - a decrease of 3/4, an important step which needed to happen. however, when we look at where cuts have been made the picture seems not so great... for instance, the nhs is not being given the money it needs to survive, with the nhs finishing 2017/18 with £960 million deficit. spending by councils on adult social care has fallen by £1.3 billion since 2010, with 425,000 fewer adults receiving social care between 2009/10 and 2013/14. between 2010 and 2017, 500 children centres and 1,200 sure start centres were closed. funding per student has also fallen in real terms since 2015/16. austerity is stretching public services and many services not have the money they need to provide their services to the people who need them. social services are necessary for the well-being of the people, and the well-being of the people is necessary for a good economy.
increasing poverty together with stagnating wages, falling funding for education and the under-funding of the nhs means that there are children growing up in the uk today, one of the richest countries in the world, are facing acute malnutrition, without medical help. there are children, 30% of children in fact, in poverty, with a lack of opportunities because of poor education facilities. austerity is increasing poverty and not providing a way out. whilst this is happening, mp's wages have increased 1.8%. defence spending remains at 2%, one of the highest in the world when taken as a percentage of gdp. and, let's not forget, may's deal with the dup, giving northern ireland £1 billion spending money to prop up her 'money-saving' government.
austerity prevents growth, increases poverty, causes worse qualities of life and puts strain on the economy. what we need instead is for the economy to grow. the way to help get us out of this mess is to increase gdp, encourage wage increases from corporations and cut some more unnecessary services.
- implementing activist industrial policies, where the government funds certain sectors such as civil aircraft, and eco-friendly industries like the electric car or tidal power industries, helps to grow the economy and provides training, skills and employment for people working in that sector.
- cutting some benefits that the most wealthy in society also recieve, such as free bus passes for better off pensioners, would be a more worthwhile spending cut than those that are being carried out currently.
- increase the minimum wage, or implement wage ratios, in order to raise salaries for the lowest paid workers, which will then feed back into the economy through increased personal spending and increased disposable income. helping increase people's salaries would also help to decrease the number of people in working poverty and some people's reliance on council services.
portugal is one example of how socialist alternatives to austerity can help the economy and society hugely. portugal was one of the worst hit by the economic crisis, and had to be bailed out by the imf. the first thing that the country jumped to, as we did, was to implement austerity measures. poverty increased, unemployment increased, there was an increase in bankruptcies, salaries had decreased 30% - portugal was not in the best state, to say the least. then the socialist government, led by antonia costa, of 2015 overturned the policy of austerity with socialist alternatives. by 2016, there was a 13% increase in corporate industries, the economy has been growing for 13 successive quarters, the defecit has halved and the country is booming!
the strain which debt and austerity are causing on our economy, the increase in poverty and wage stagnation can have dangerous consequences. as history has told us, when there is an economic crisis, extremism brews. with tommy robinson supporters around every next corner the concept of extremism becoming the norm in britain is an unusual but very real prospect for our futures. we need to sort out the economy, and more importantly, the impact it is having on every day people to make sure this doesn't happen!
austerity is killing everything we love about britain and literally putting people's lives at risk due to the dramatic increase in poverty we have seen. we need a change.
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