Richard Carr in Left Foot Forward: Labour should embrace the smarter state, not the bigger state
Author: Richard Carr, Localis |
Labour should take decisions based on how something works, not who delivers it.
Cards on the table: like most people I’ve not yet decided who I’m backing for Labour leader. Other than tuning out from the group think, what I do know is that whoever wins in September faces a mountain of a task. I’m not claiming that the following is anything other than a small nod in the right direction, but what is clear is that Labour needs to re-evaluate its entire political economy from the bottom up.
Let’s start with some first principles. Much as some on the left would like, Britain isn’t Scandinavia. The British public tend to get a bit twitchy when public spending gets too far above 40 per cent of GDP, and positively antsy when it’s above 45 per cent (as in the 1970s or 2008/9). We broadly like our economy tilted slightly away from government.
Similarly, about a sixth of the British workforce is employed in the public sector. This is a significant percentage, but it of course means the vast majority of people work outside such confines. A traditional default to a public sector base (heck, throw in a chunk of the two and half million unionised private sector workers too) isn’t going to get Labour over the line. ‘Public good, private tolerable’ is just the kind of stuff that can’t deliver a 35 per cent strategy.
Labour must always clamp down on rapacious elements of the private sector (including riskier elements of the City), but the tone needs to be right and not so blanket. The much maligned notion of public-private partnership is not just a backdoor to screwing over the taxpayer, but broadly the entire way any mixed economy functions.
And so the next Labour leader needs to give a coherent message that goes from town hall to Whitehall: Labour is open for business. It will take decisions based on how something works and not who delivers it. It recognises that government needs and should help facilitate a buoyant private sector. It will intervene to correct market failures, but not to over-regulate where it is not needed.
And, whilst there will of course be carrots and sticks to all of this, Labour may need to proffer a few more carrots than of late.
Part of this means, as Liz Kendall has rightly said for Progress, the centre being prepared to let power go. At present the Conservatives own the devolution agenda lock, stock and barrel. Labour need to act.
The cuts borne by councils have hardly always been welcome with open arms, but they have led to a spirit of innovation the previously more comfortable environment kept hidden. And the reality is that this new thinking includes significant and multifaceted engagement with the market.
Before the election I authored a report for the think tank Localis which illustrated that without activities such as sharing service provision with other authorities, negotiating innovative deals with the private and third sectors, and running their own trading companies, eight in ten councils would have to cut services and raise council tax. Labour, Tory, Lib Dem and all shades of council in between are already forging such creative paths ? it’s time to acknowledge the reality of what the modern state actually looks like: councils aren’t just about fixing potholes.
And so for example, whilst saying local small business should be further plugged into such supply chains is an entirely reasonable point, claiming any such collaboration inevitably leads to some of the more egregious uses of PFI isn’t.
In any case, this isn’t about outsourcing come what may. Where the private sector can deliver for the public purse it should be invited to do so. But this pragmatic approach can equally include significant insourcing, and the centre should facilitate this too. To get a little specific, creative thinking around the local retention of tax receipts generated by increased council run child care would be welcome; as would tax breaks for municipal enterprise (particularly in areas like energy and payday lending where the free market has clearly underserved consumers).
Broadly, Labour needs to view the smarter state of the future not only as a grudging necessity, but as a way to reinvent itself. The hundreds of millions of local government and police savings identified in the party’s Zero Based Spending Review was a small but positive step in rethinking what the state looks like, but more is needed. Listening to voices like Stella Creasy, Jim McMahon and Steve Reed on the next state would be a good start.
Equally, moving up the governance ladder, Chuka Umunna has been right to champion a reformed version of Local Enterprise Partnerships as central to the Labour vision. In this area, as I’ve set out in detail before, any government should be going beyond the reforms proposed by Michael Heseltine and Andrew Adonis ? and pledging even more budgets be devolved to the sub-regional level.
Local businesses working with councils to identify the skills or transport needs of an area over the next ten or twenty years is entirely consistent with a more responsible capitalism. Tristram Hunt has rightly talked of the need for re-skilling our economy over the long-term, and university technical colleges is an agenda Labour need to be further along on too.
These are all areas any review of Labour’s economic thinking need to look at seriously.
In a sense, then, much of Labour’s reform needs to be about the redistribution of where power lies and who wields the spending pen. But, a redistribution of capital will also remain a historic aim of the Labour Party. I get the need for a symbolic casualty of Milibandism, but if taxing a small fraction of the artificial bubble that has built up on two million plus houses is anti-aspiration, then does Labour really want to be pro-aspiration?
Indeed, there’s a strong argument for using such wealth taxation to reduce levies on forms of income (even ? perhaps especially ? revising views on the top rate, or indeed corporation tax).
An aging population plus the whole Thomas Piketty argument of assets outstripping income means a general shift in this direction may be welcome. Pledging to reverse every Miliband pledge is as knee-jerk as Ed’s own large default to the policy agenda of 2008.
And so this isn’t about a return to the 1997 playbook ? not least because Labour’ll need at least one more ? possibly two ? election cycles to get such a free-ride from the press. But it is about saying that Labour needs to embed a bit more pragmatism into its arsenal.
Opposing everything the government does looks childish. Claiming everything would have been champagne and roses had the Darling Plan of 2010 come into force looks unrealistic. When Labour views the world as it is, not as West Wing fan fiction might have it, it’ll be in with a shot.