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The Cause of the Slump is Still Misunderstood, Michael Meacher MP

by Mira Tekelova

 

The debt deflation forces are far larger today even than those that caused the Great Depression in the 1930s, writes Michael Meacher, Labour MP in his newest post on his website:

The news that the public sector net debt has now passed the £1 trillion mark isn’t really news since it’s long been on track to reach £1.4 trillion by 2014.   What is far more disturbing is that the government, in its obsession to cut the public sector deficit regardless, has completely ignored the impact this is having on the private sector deficit in driving the slump.   The government’s answer to drooping demand and consequential languishing growth is to pump colossal amounts of new money into the economy via so-called quantitative easing (i.e. printing money), first £200bn under the Labour Government and now a further £75bn under this government, but it has had virtually no impact at all in stimulating growth, either here or in the US, because the lack of base money (M0 in the jargon) is not the cause of the crisis.   The real problem is what is happening to private sector debt.

It is extraordinary that, according to the first forecasts of the newly formed OBR in 2010, the government was expecting the level of private household debt, already £1.57 trillion, to rise to a staggering £2.13 trillion by 2014-5.   It should be emphasised that this was not something they feared would happen or were simply allowing to happen, but rather it was a deliberate aim of monetary policy that it should happen.   The plan was that the deficit provided the perfect excuse to squeeze the public sector, shrink the Welfare State, but ever-increasing private household debt would provide the extra demand to maintain at least some modestly decent growth.   The opposite has happened.

Read the whole article here.

 

We will also release the video of Michael Meacher’s speech from Positive Money conference tomorrow. Watch this space.

 

 

Options for Banking Reform, Understanding Money & Debt

Mira Tekelova

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