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Truss’s exit ends revival of Thatcher’s economics

Truss said on Thursday she would resign after the economic chaos she unleashed forced a humiliating reversal of almost all of her free-market agenda…reports Asian Lite News

Daniel Pryor, who lobbies for governments to shrink the state and cut taxes, feels Liz Truss’s brief, disastrous spell as prime minister has killed off his dream of a low-tax, deregulated British economy for at least a generation.

Pryor, who works at the Adam Smith Institute in London, laughs bitterly at the irony that Truss, who said on Thursday she would resign, was forced to abandon her libertarian economic policies by the same free markets she cherishes.

The Adam Smith Institute, and other think tanks which provided much of Truss’s inspiration, had welcomed the plans she and Kwasi Kwarteng, her once finance minister and political soulmate, laid out on Sept. 23.

Just weeks later, they say mistakes were made with the strategy – not just poor communication but also the scale of the proposed tax cuts – and fear the policies they have spent years advocating might now be buried for some time.

Truss had the “right policies at the wrong time”, Pryor said, referring to an economic backdrop marked by fast-rising inflation and weak growth, which make markets more sensitive to deficits and the scale of government borrowing.

“I now expect the language of free markets and libertarianism to be consigned to scrap for quite some time. I am sober and realistic about that,” he said.

“I can briefly chuckle at the irony of what happened, but it is also incredibly frustrating because then I remember that the UK’s growth prospects for the coming decade are pitifully low.”

Truss said on Thursday she would resign after the economic chaos she unleashed forced a humiliating reversal of almost all of her free-market agenda.

In a brief resignation statement, Truss said she had been elected to bring in “low tax, high growth” but conceded she could not deliver that mandate.

A poll this week showed her Conservative Party – which has dominated British politics since World War Two – would not even be the official opposition if a general election was held now.

Truss had spent her summer campaign for the party leadership complaining about Britain’s weak economic growth, productivity and low pay since the 2008 global financial crisis. Recently, it lost its place as the world’s fifth-largest economy to India.

Her solution was to challenge economic “orthodoxy” and demand faster, radical action to shake the economy out of its torpor.

Truss and Kwarteng’s pitch – big tax cuts with the promise of deregulation to grasp what they called the benefits of Brexit – echoed policies of 1980s British and U.S. leaders Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan.

Their thinking can be traced to their connections to Britain’s free-market think tanks, which have advocated similar policies and also urged businesses and government to seize opportunities presented by leaving the European Union.

A remainer-turned-Brexit supporter, Truss founded a group of libertarian Conservative lawmakers called the Free Enterprise Group a year after she was elected to parliament in 2010. Kwarteng was chairman of the right-wing, free-market Bow Group in 2005-6.

Truss’s Downing Street team included former staff from the Institute of Economic Affairs, another free-market think tank which has said its role is to “think the unthinkable”, and the Adam Smith Institute.

The Institute of Economic Affairs said of the economic plan: “This isn’t a trickle-down budget – it’s a boost-up budget.”

The think tanks have since said the government mishandled the policy announcement, including by ignoring the Office for Budget Responsibility, which raised fears that the tax cuts would blow a hole in public finances.

The independent watchdog normally gives a verdict alongside budget statements on how public finances are being managed.

Andy Mayer, chief operating officer of the Institute of Economic Affairs, said the government tried to push through too many policies too quickly without explaining the strategy.

Mayer also said it made a mistake by pledging to abolish the income tax rate of 45% applied to the highest earners, which was unpopular and ended up being a distraction. 

“I think they got caught up in the moment of the historic victory over the establishment candidate,” he said, “and decided that they could gamble on some unpopular measures upfront.”

Mayer said Truss and Kwarteng should have concentrated on supply side reforms such as changing the rules that govern how residential and commercial spaces are built.

John Longworth, a pro-Brexit businessman who was on Thatcher’s “deregulation taskforce” and is now chairman of the Independent Business Network, said Truss might have been able to pass her plans if she had broken the policies into “bitesize” chunks and introduced them over time.

But after the Sept. 23 “mini-Budget” shattered investor confidence, Longworth thinks it will be another decade before these policies can be tried again. He also fears that Brexit might be in jeopardy.

“I don’t think she’s killed off the philosophy, I think what she’s done is kill off any opportunity to deploy it for a very long time,” he said.

“It’s still possible to reap benefits of Brexit even given that situation. But of course what will happen and what is happening is that the rejoiners are using the situation as an excuse to blame it on Brexit, when it actually has nothing to do with Brexit at all.”

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Thatcher’s statue pelted with eggs hours after installation

Her statue in Grantham lies between 19th-century MP Frederick James Tollemache and another of Sir Isaac Newton…reports Asian Lite News

A statue of former prime minister Margaret Thatcher which was erected in her hometown of Grantham was pelted with eggs hours after it was installed.

Moments after it was installed a protester organized an ‘egg-throwing contest’ on Facebook and according to UK-based news outlets, followed through with his threat as he threw several eggs at the statue. Only one egg hit the statue.

The statue designed by sculptor Douglas Jennings shows the former Conservative Party leader wearing a Baronial Gown of Kesteven and wearing the chain of the Order of the Garter, news agency iNews said in a report.

Her statue in Grantham lies between 19th-century MP Frederick James Tollemache and another of Sir Isaac Newton.

Following the news of eggs being pelted on her statue, the Grantham Community Heritage Association (GCHA) said that despite erecting her statue, ‘the full spectrum of views exist in Grantham about the legacy of Margaret Thatcher and an exhibition inside the museum illustrates this’.

Despite being known as a charismatic leader, opinions vary regarding Margaret Thatcher, the UK’s first female prime minister.

Margaret Thatcher was known famously for leading England against Argentina in the Falklands War.

Even though the UK emerged victorious during the Falklands War, the UK youth at that time did not approve of Thatcher’s military action.

Also some in England see Thatcher as a savior of the UK economy as she brought new laws which helped the UK public to navigate through the economic downturn brought forth by the Labor Party who preceded her.

But in some parts of England and Scotland, people dislike Thatcher because she closed down coal mines, broke the miners strikes and put people out of their jobs.

Thatcher introduced a poll tax which was a form of council tax and levied taxes on all people at the same rate regardless of their income.

This was hugely unpopular and is believed to have led the fall of Thatcher.

She is also controversial for allowing the privatization of several state-run companies. Several statues of famous UK politicians, including former prime minister Winston Churchill, were vandalised earlier.

Another statue of Margaret Thatcher was vandalised in 1998 when theatre producer Paul Kelleher decapitated her marble statue intended to be installed in the Member’s Lobby of the House of Commons after her death.

Later in 2007 another statue was installed and during its installation Thatcher was present. “This time I hope the head will stay on,” Thatcher quipped during the unveiling ceremony, news agency The National reported.

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