The Case For Our State ...
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....more blooming STUFF going down my information super highway making me sad and mad....I do write to my MP about things like this, but these days not a day goes by (fracking, SFO, BBC, Gove, NHS, DWP, Legal Aid, HS2 etc etc)when i do not want write an involved letter about something or other ....which is (a) impossible and (B) just leads to the label: ranting madman....bong ching
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amateur51
Originally posted by eighthobstruction View Post....more blooming STUFF going down my information super highway making me sad and mad....I do write to my MP about things like this, but these days not a day goes by (fracking, SFO, BBC, Gove, NHS, DWP, Legal Aid, HS2 etc etc)when i do not want write an involved letter about something or other ....which is (a) impossible and (B) just leads to the label: ranting madman....
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I have got very detailed and bespoke replies several times....I think the trick is to ask exact questions, rather than general 'feeling' pieces....but I too have had the generic catch all disingenuous blaaaaaaaaaaaaaa type too....esp if writing ref a public campaign where they receive thousands of similar letters....bong ching
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Originally posted by eighthobstruction View Post....more blooming STUFF going down my information super highway making me sad and mad....I do write to my MP about things like this, but these days not a day goes by (fracking, SFO, BBC, Gove, NHS, DWP, Legal Aid, HS2 etc etc)when i do not want write an involved letter about something or other ....which is (a) impossible and (B) just leads to the label: ranting madman....
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Originally posted by eighthobstruction View PostI'd add House Price Inflation....which really needs looking at....
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Originally posted by aka Calum Da Jazbo View Poster support from HMG for home buyers innit? rash of let to buy and inflated prices; perhaps what 8O was on about ....bong ching
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ms Mazzucato refreshes her argument
her criticism of the linguistics of the neo liberal view becoming the standard view are important, as if the whole world or all of us have to use Osborne's Compass ... No TaAccording to the best estimates of astronomers there are at least one hundred billion galaxies in the observable universe.
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amateur51
Originally posted by aka Calum Da Jazbo View Postms Mazzucato refreshes her argument
her criticism of the linguistics of the neo liberal view becoming the standard view are important, as if the whole world or all of us have to use Osborne's Compass ... No Ta
This section reflects on this Board's current preoccupations:
"To foster growth we must not downsize the state but rethink it. That means developing, not axing, competences and dynamism in the public sector. When evaluating its performance, we must rediscover the point of the public sector: to make things happen that would not have happened anyway.
When the BBC is accused of "crowding out" private broadcasters, the difference in quality of the programmes is considered a subjective issue not worthy of economic analysis. Yet it is only by observing and measuring that difference that we can accurately judge its performance. The same is true for the ability of public sector institutions not only to subsidise pharmaceutical companies but actually to transform the technological and market landscape on which they operate."
I'll PM french frank with the second para - she'll be thrilled!
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Mr Mason gets the point
If the proponents of modern laissez-faire economics could point to a single economy where technology and markets had worked, alone, to create a vibrant, confident, high-growth economic model, their arguments would be stronger. But it’s China, Singapore, South Korea and Brazil where the success stories happened. The state was at the centre of every one.According to the best estimates of astronomers there are at least one hundred billion galaxies in the observable universe.
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Originally posted by aka Calum Da Jazbo View Post
Seriously though, the overlooked elephant in the room in that article is in the non-follow up to the comment that:
"If the information revolution creates the possibility of a 'third capitalism' - as different from the industrial era as it was from the age of Sir Francis Drake - then it is, so far, a possibility unrealised".
The above is given glib semi-oversight in the observation from Mr Mason concerning:
"... [T]he evaporation of venture capital funding for technological startups in the UK ..."
But he then goes on to dismiss
"... [P]lanned allocation of goods or state provision"
as no longer pertinent to conditions he has already designated worthy of the kinds of government action that were only possible when such actions were optional even for conservative governments, eg the nationalisation of Rolls-Royce by the Heath government in 1971 as indispensable to national security.
No, the main problems of post-war consensual state interventionalism (which I've been on about enough times on here) was their top-down, non-consultative of the population (let alone non-involving of them) character, coupled with nationalisations of already disadvantaged, non-competitive, inefficiently run industries in private hands, when had it been successful firms with confident efficient workforces that had been nationalised the whole nationalisation model would not have become a target for disparagement, but on the contrary seen as the superior basic model of the modern state. Then maybe - but only then - one could speak of compensation for those who had built up those companies to the point where they were ripe for state ownership.
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