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Trussonomics still haunts parties’ economic promises in run-up to UK local elections | Phillip Inman

3 days ago
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As local and regional elections across the UK loom into view, it is clear the spectre of Trussonomics lives on.The Greens, Reform UK, Your Party, Restore Britain, the Conservatives and even the Liberal Democrats cannot help making extravagant spending promises, often paid for by cutting something or borrowing more that, they argue, will have no negative economic consequences.Or if they do, the costs will be borne by people and businesses they do not care about.Only Keir Starmer and his cabinet colleagues seem to be immune to the hysterical demands for the UK government to somehow reconfigure the way the economy operates without any spillovers, unintended consequences or extra costs that nullify the supposed gains derived from the original policy.Liz Truss promised huge tax cuts worth £45bn paid for with extra borrowing and welfare “efficiencies”.

Directed mostly at richer people, the economic argument rested on unleashing an entrepreneurial spirit that would drag Britain out of a long period of low productivity and only incremental gains in average incomes.Heading into May’s local elections, there are many other magic bullet policies on offer.The Conservatives want to spend big after making savage cuts to welfare benefits.Among the headlines at the last Tory conference was the pledge to drive down the welfare bill by £23bn.“The culture of ‘something for nothing’ must end, now,” said the shadow chancellor, Mel Stride.

The Green party leader, Zack Polanski, has toned down some of the more radical elements of his party’s economic plans, although the agenda remains vague,If we examine what his colleagues proposed in the last election we can see free lunches littering every page,They proposed to increase taxes by more than £170bn a year by the end of the next parliament – including a £90bn a year tax on carbon emissions – to fund a similar-sized boost to day-to-day public spending,On the spending side of the ledger, they planned to top up the current £160bn capital spending budget by a whopping £90bn a year,Reform UK has embraced Trussonomics like no other party.

Its main general election pledge was to raise the threshold at which people start paying income tax from £12,570 to £20,000, at a cost to the exchequer of more than £40bn a year,Underlying many of these proposals is a sense that the UK can reverse more than 100 years of decline with a magician’s wand and, more than that, travel alone on this journey without needing to worry about the effect on financial markets or trading partners, and also while the old global order disintegrates,Donald Trump may be an extreme example of the desire among US citizens to maintain their standard of living inside a protective economic and military shield, yet there are plenty more like the current White House resident, both in the US and in other countries,In France, Marine Le Pen’s the National Rally trades blows with Jean-Luc Mélenchon’s France Unbowed (LFI) to gain the attention of those who believe economies and societies can be turned on their head in just a few weeks or months,They both touted dramatic policies that claimed to turn the French economic supertanker as if it were a skiff, targeting the rich, big business or immigrants for big savings and extra revenues.

Thankfully, the French electorate rejected gesture politics in last month’s local elections, preferring more centrist candidates.Not across the board, but in some key cities such as Paris and Marseille, it meant centre-left candidates who distanced themselves from both Mélenchon and Le Pen were victorious.There seemed to be a recognition that the reality of this decade – one characterised by two major wars costing trillions of dollars in lost output, a quantum technological shift and a rapidly changing climate – is that there are no easy answers.Labour’s route to riches, while staying within strict spending confines, was supposed to be extra economic growth.Rachel Reeves bet big that a spending splurge early in the parliament would spur the economy later on and at least in time for the next general election, if not the more imminent midterm verdict that is about to be delivered.

However, the damage done by the last government is still underestimated, leaving Labour with a much bigger hole in the public finances than even the £22bn Reeves publicised in her first months in office.There is still much that Labour could do with the money it has already set aside for investment if only ministers could make some decisions.Procrastination is the disease that infects Whitehall at the moment and Starmer must take a good deal of the blame for that.Once the government can show it achieves things with public money, it can justify taking more from the better off, knowing it won’t be wasted – at the moment there is only HS2 as a guide to how well ministers spend on new infrastructure.Yet the overarching theme must be that in an uncertain world, sensible, rational government is preferable to outlandish initiatives that create many outraged losers.

Truss was a disaster and not only because she believed major industrialised economies such as the UK (as opposed to Ireland or Switzerland) can cut taxes as a route to sustainable growth.It was the idea that an escape hatch, or an ejector seat if you prefer, is available that will, Artemis-like, propel the economy to a higher plane.
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County cricket: Sussex beat Leicestershire, Yorkshire draw against Glamorgan – as it happened

Four lots of last-gasp ditch-digging brought the first round of County Championship games to a tense finish.Northamptonshire’s last pair defied Lancashire for an hour to earn a draw at Wantage Road, strung together by an unbeaten 197-ball 95 from George Bartlett. The game looked done when James Anderson and the new ball reduced Northants to 181 for nine, but Ben Sanderson gave brave support and Bartlett straight-batted the final over from Tom Hartley despite a warren of close fielders.Derbyshire gnashed their teeth at the County Ground, as Matthew Waite and Ethan Brookes masterminded a Worcestershire rearguard action, brushing off an attack including Mohammad Abbas and Shoaib Bashir.Tawanda Muyeye’s unbeaten 109 off just 121 balls for Kent kept out Durham at Chester-le-Street and a rollercoaster match at Sophia Gardens was enlivened by a brave declaration from Glamorgan’s captain, Kiran Carlson

about 14 hours ago
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Chicago Sky trade Angel Reese to Atlanta Dream in first major move of WNBA offseason

The Chicago Sky have traded star forward Angel Reese to the Atlanta Dream, the teams announced Monday.The trade is the first blockbuster move of the WNBA offseason, which is operating on a condensed timeline after months of negotiations between the league and its players over a new collective bargaining agreement finished last month.Reese, 23, was a two-time All-Star with the Sky, who selected her with the No 7 pick in the 2024 draft after a standout college career at Maryland and LSU. Reese’s rivalry with fellow rookie Caitlin Clark became one of the major storylines of that season, which set records in viewership and attendance.“I’m beyond grateful for the opportunity to join the Atlanta Dream organization,” Reese said in a statement Monday

about 16 hours ago
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Horse welfare debate helps highlight Grand National’s unrivalled status

There will never be a year when horse welfare is not an issue in the run-up to the Grand National, and that is, in a sense, a positive for the sport. It is a sign that the National retains its status as the biggest race of the year – in terms of audience, betting turnover, name recognition and pretty much any other measure you care to choose. Nearly two centuries after the first running in 1839, it still has deep roots in British culture as an annual sporting rite of spring.Within the racing bubble too there are few subjects that raise hackles and generate debate quite like the National, not least because for many racegoers and punters it is the race that first stoked their interest in the sport. Significant changes to the fences and other conditions in recent years, with the aim of minimising the risk of serious or fatal injuries, have left some fans, at least, feeling it is no longer the same race that they fell in love with several decades ago

about 16 hours ago
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Sharper Hawks claim thriller over Cats with one mad minute of the utmost drama | Jonathan Horn

The Easter Monday fixture between Hawthorn and Geelong, especially the four years from 2010 to 2013, saw some of the best home and away football of the century. Monday’s game may have surpassed them all. Chris Scott did his best to talk it down. But it was a game of the highest quality, and a finish of the utmost drama. It ran the full gamut between sumptuous skill and high farce

about 17 hours ago
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Courtney Lawes to return to Prem from Brive and would be again eligible for England

The former England captain Courtney Lawes is returning to the Prem at the end of the season after two years at French club Brive.The 37-year-old retired from international rugby after the 2023 Rugby World Cup and made the move to France after winning the 2023-24 Premiership title with Northampton Saints.It has not yet been confirmed which English club he will sign for, but his return would make him eligible again for international duty. Brive have said the club wished the flanker would finish his career with them but “understands Lawes’ desire to seize a new challenge”.Brive’s president, Thierry Blandinières, said: “We are very proud to say that Courtney Lawes will have been a Brive player for two seasons

about 17 hours ago
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Retirement gnome? Masters miniatures rumoured to have short future at Augusta

Everyone says goodbye to the Masters eventually. Sandy Lyle, Ben Crenshaw, Ian Woosnam and Bernhard Langer used recent years to wave goodbye. Will 2026 be the end for a renowned Augusta National element of more recent times … the Masters gnome?Speculation is rising that this Masters will be the final time gnomes will be on sale inside Augusta’s merchandise outlets. On face value, this hardly feels dramatic. The quirk, though, is that the household essential for any golf lover has become a victim of its own success

about 19 hours ago
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Oil rises above $110 as Trump deadline looms for Iran to reopen strait – business live

29 minutes ago
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Universal Music receives takeover offer from Bill Ackman’s Pershing Square

about 1 hour ago
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An AI bot invited me to its party in Manchester. It was a pretty good night

2 days ago
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Kurt Strauss obituary

4 days ago
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The Masters is a welcome oasis in golf’s fractious world, despite its stuffy foibles | Ewan Murray

about 1 hour ago
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Michigan defeats UConn to win NCAA men’s basketball championship – as it happened

about 5 hours ago