And I'll tell you why...

The allegory constantly used by governments and the media is on of a household, and the recession is like the breadwinners losing their jobs. Obviously anyone sensible would cut back, yeah?

But, countries are nothing like households, and that allegory just doesn't work.

I'm not arguing that they shouldn't cut back at all, but I think a healthy government should be running some degree of deficit during a recession.

Here are my assumptions:

1. There will ALWAYS be boom and bust

We can't stop the cycle of boom and bust, it's been going for hundreds of years and will continue for hundreds more. Maybe one day, but no financial theory to date has come close to a way around them.

With that assumption we should plan for them: busts will happen. Booms will follow the busts, for a while, until it all starts again.

During a recession governments should know that, inevitably, a boom will come again. During a boom governments should know that, inevitably, the bust is coming.

2. Governments benefit from long term stability

Boom and bust is a vicious cycle and an unstable one: governments have to plan for how much money they have to spend, so instability always messes them up. They have to make guesses as to how much to spend on defence, the police, public health, welfare and so on.

All but the most extreme libertarians and neo-cons admit on the need for at least some government spending on things like fire services (you might not want to insure your neighbour's house, but if it's on fire you want it put out regardless).

A governments plans on spending are always guesses - estimates of how much taxpayers will earn and hence how much tax they will pay. A simple fact is that they'll never be 100% accurate, but you want them to be as close as possible. Another simple fact is that boom and bust make those predictions less accurate.

This means that either a deficit or a surplus is inevitable, we should expect and account for one or the the other.

3.Tax & spend are inextricably linked to government revenue

There are lots of theories as to how (and which model is best) but whether you're left or right, and whether you follow Keynes or Hayek, how much is taxed and how much is spent by governments has an effect on how much money people have and how much tax renvue the government takes.

A government cutting taxes obviously has less revenue, but what does that do to relative wealth? A government cutting spending? They have more money, but public sector employees have less money and government contractors lose business. Less tax is collected - left vs right can argue about whether that is more or less than the amount saved by the cuts, but my point is that it's unpredictable.

Nobody (including all the best economists) can actually accurately predict the relationship. However it the effect is not one that damps the boom and bust cycle - government behaviour exaggerates the booms and the busts like a binge dieter.

4. Governments should not have a large surplus

I think most people expect to be paying a fair amount of tax, and that means the government not having loads of cash left over from the tax they've collected.

Economic right wingers tend to cut taxes when there is a surplus, governments on the left tend to spend more.

Something they never seem to do is to try and save that money, partially because elections are coming up and voters want to see something short term, but also because there isn't really anywhere more secure to keep it. You can't really save money in a bank that you underwrite, and if you don't underwrite it you're relying on whoever does.

For instance in the UK many local councils did have a surplus before the current crisis, which they invested with Icelandic banks. When those banks crashed that British taxpayer money was lost, and (unsurprisingly) Icelandic voters decided not to pay additional taxes to repay most of it.

Another reason that governments shouldn't save is that they can't get great rates of interest - that comes from taking high risks and someone looking after tax payers' money just can't do that. They have to go for low risk, low payout investments, like gilt bonds.

5. Governments can borrow more easily than anyone else

Note that I'm not saying that it's always simple - governments can fail to the point where they can't borrow any more, but that's rare compared to that happening to people or companies.

Maybe not if it has come from Greece, but as a general rule government debt is still one of the safest investments. Much as the news goes on about governments going bust, most of countries can borrow money for a lot lest interest than most people pay on their mortgages.

Right now the UK government can borrow (i.e. issue bonds) at 0.5% that will be paid back in 10-15 years, well into the next boom. What's the best mortgage or loan you can get?

Putting it all together

For governments to benefit from long term stability they need a plan that always works. They shouldn't be savagely cutting back or raising taxes in the recession and obnoxiously binging or reducing taxes in the boom. If tax and spend is linked to GDP (as assumed above) then alternating cutting and binging could make it all worse.

You want a tax and spend strategy that uses the boom times constructively and weathers the bust times as well as it can. If that's the case then the tax paid and amount spent should stay fairly constant. If you're left wing then that's high tax and high spend all the time, if you're right then that's low tax and low spend all the time. Either way, it should be fairly constant.

If the tax and spend system is constant then there will be either a boom surplus or a recession deficit. You either have to plan for surplus during the boom, or plan for deficit during the bust.

I don't believe that governments can help themselves during a boom. They will always blow that surplus on something stupid, like Millennium Domes, or weapons programs, or wars, or massive tax cuts, or something even dumber. They have an election to win every 4 years and the financial cycle is 10-15.

Even if they save the cash, there's not really anywhere safe to put it.

So it is my conclusion that they should break even during the boom and pay off the debts that they built up during the bust. During a recession they shouldn't panic and change all the plans, instead they should run into debt while the economy recovers and pay it off when the boom comes.

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Add a comment

And I'll tell you why...

The allegory constantly used by governments and the media is on of a household, and the recession is like the breadwinners losing their jobs. Obviously anyone sensible would cut back, yeah?

But, countries are nothing like households, and that allegory just doesn't work.

I'm not arguing that they shouldn't cut back at all, but I think a healthy government should be running some degree of deficit during a recession.

Here are my assumptions:

1. There will ALWAYS be boom and bust

We can't stop the cycle of boom and bust, it's been going for hundreds of years and will continue for hundreds more. Maybe one day, but no financial theory to date has come close to a way around them.

With that assumption we should plan for them: busts will happen.

The UK will vote on May 5th on whether to switch to the Alternative Vote system (AV) rather than the current First Past The Post (FPTP). I'm a supporter of AV, but FPTP has huge support from both the major parties and from Rupert Murdoch, which means that it both doesn't have a chance and must be the right way on principal.

Fact is anything legal that Murdoch's against I'm for on principal.

There is a problem in UK banking that's stalling our recovery and it goes something like this:

Banks have two main components: high street lending & saving, and investment banking. The investment banking side took far too many risks in dodgy sub prime investments and lost all the money. However if the high street lending & saving side of a big bank fails it does huge damage to the economy, so the government steps in to fill the gap.

British Airways have the best paid flight staff in the world. Their pay is sky high (sorry) – cabin crew can earn up to £56k a year! To put it in context that's more than junior and mid-level doctors – I really don’t see how any cabin crew job can be worth more than even the most junior doctor's role.

BA also run one of the biggest teams per flight – they have 14 on each long-haul plane.

The problem is that flights on BA are expensive.

Recently at TechEd Berlin I attended an optimising Javascript presentation that I described as having "lost focus".

I think this one (from Google) is far more the sort of level and detail that I expected:

This presentation is excellent - in fact I think every developer who ever does any Javascript should view it.

I think the current situation with bankers' bonuses shows a complete failure to understand risk and how markets actually work.

There's a TV show in the UK called Property Ladder. Every week through the property boom it followed someone buying and renovating a house with a view to selling it for profit. They found some proper idiots on that show.

There's a great deal of fuss at the moment about RBS's investment division's planned bonuses. They've made some money (great!) but want to pay over a billion in bonuses, which is over a quarter of the profit.

When .Net originally launched it came with first rate support for Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP) and at the time I was seriously impressed. Creating a SOAP client-server connection was amazingly easy - little more than adding a .asmx file and decorating your methods with the [WebMethod] attribute, and then point your client project at it and Visual Studio does the rest.

What Visual Studio actually does in this case is create a large auto-generated code file from the WSDL.

Sightseeing

By this point we were starting to feel the tech-fatigue. We took the opportunity to see a little of Berlin, before heading back to hit the labs and the convention stalls

DEV301r Microsoft Visual Studio Tips and Tricks

Scott Cate Nice session to finish on - most of these I knew already but a couple were new. They're all on Scott's blog.

Finally all the stands that had prize draws held their raffles.
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