Gordon Brown’s bankrupt ideology

The financial crisis was all the Tories’ fault. So Gordon Brown reckons anyway. Apparently, “what let the world down last autumn was not just bankrupt institutions but a bankrupt ideology”. What was this ideology? Ah yes, “the Conservative idea that markets always self-correct but never self-destruct”.

Let’s ignore the fact that even if this was correct, Mr Brown has been running the economy in one way or another since 1997, and so perhaps should already have spoken out about this ‘bankrupt ideology’ at some point over the past decade.

Instead, let’s take a look at what brilliant new ideas Mr Brown has brought us to replace this erroneous faith we all once had in free markets. Such as the car scrappage scheme. Probably the biggest economic news from the Labour party conference was that the government is to extend this scheme, which involves giving drivers a £2,000 subsidy (£1,000 of which comes from the taxpayer) to swap their old car for a new one.

There are lots of reasons to dislike these schemes, but for me the most offensive aspect is the sheer waste. Don’t take my word for it – here’s the view of one reader who emailed me to say he’d bought a new car under the scheme. “It sickens me that a perfectly good, unmarked, P-reg car with just 40,000 miles on the clock should be crushed in the interests of resuscitating the economy. It would have served us well for quite a while longer, not to mention a family in the developing world.” But, he says, the chance to buy a £7,000 new car for £5,000 was “too good to refuse”.

We keep being told – usually by the same politicians behind all these ‘stimulus’ schemes – that the earth’s natural resources are scarce and that we should stop wasting them. Yet the most feted scheme to come out of the financial crisis so far involves bribing people like the reader above into scrapping their perfectly serviceable old cars, and then needlessly using even more of those scarce resources we’re all so worried about to create a new vehicle to replace the one you just scrapped. That’s insane.

The good news is, it can’t go on forever. The British public finances are in such a mess that sooner or later someone must call a halt to careless government spending or the market will pull the plug on us. In the meantime, you can stock up on those scarce natural resources by getting exposure to one country that has plenty of them – Canada: It’s time to inveset in Canada.


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