by Michael Roberts
As I write on Friday morning after the 2015 general election,
the incumbent Conservative party is heading for an outright majority in
the new parliament. As I keep saying ad nauseam, this is what I
predicted back in 2009 before the Tories (Conservatives) won the 2010
election and formed a coalition with the Liberal Democrats. The main
reason for the victory , I think, was as I pointed out in a recent post (https://thenextrecession.wordpress.com/2015/04/30/economic-well-being-and-the-uk-election/),
that the economic recovery since the Great Recession has reached a peak
in the last year, with UK real GDP growth picking up from near zero in
2012 to 2.5%-plus in 2014 and with real income per head finally turning
up.
The exit poll immediately after the close of the vote last night
turned up to be very accurate. It predicted that the Conservatives
would be the largest party by some way and there would be a meltdown of
the Liberal Democrat vote, while the Scottish Nationalists (SNP) would
wipe the floor with Labour in Scotland. And so it turned out. It now
seems that the Conservative share of the vote in the UK election will be
around 36% (the same as in 2010) and Labour’s share is just 31% (up
from 29% in 2010). So the Conservative share is a little higher than the
polls reckoned but Labour did much worse than forecast. Labour were
wiped out in Scotland and it appears that the UKIP share was lower than
forecast (with its leader, Nigel Farage failing to win a seat) and those
votes went to the Conservatives. And the Liberal meltdown also helped
the Conservatives.
The voter turnout seems to be about 65.7%, almost exactly the same as
in 2010. But as the turnout was much higher in Scotland, that means
voter turnout in England and Wales fell compared to 2010. Also, the
share of the two major parties has fallen again, a little. So the
fragmentation of politics that we have seen across Europe continues.
But, in many ways, this victory for
the Conservatives may turn out to be a poisoned chalice. They will have
at best a small majority (as the Liberals are unlikely to join a new
coalition). The right-wing of the Conservatives (pressured by UKIP)
will be baying for the promised referendum on leaving the EU. This may
take place within a year or so and not wait until 2017. The City of
London and big business is firmly opposed to leaving the EU and all the
major parties will call for staying in.
The British public has shown in
all polls that it is opposed to leaving. So my third prediction (after
forecasting a no vote on Scottish independence and on the Tories
winning in 2015) remains that the British people will vote to stay in
the EU. By the way, there is no majority in Scotland for another
independence vote (only 36% in favour according the latest poll). No
wonder, the SNP leader, Nicola Sturgeon, called the huge SNP victory in
Scotland as a vote for ‘anti-austerity’, not independence.
Just as the Conservatives won because
of an improving economy, the poison in the cup of victory is the
economy over the next few years. The government is still running a
sizeable budget deficit which is not expected to disappear on the most
optimistic forecasts of economic growth until 2019. Public sector debt
to GDP is still rising. Even more worrying, private sector debt is
still at record highs, with the property bubble. Above all, business
investment is very weak and corporate profitability is still below the
levels of 15 years ago. UK capitalism is running a large external
deficit on trade and depends on an influx of finance capital (‘hot
money’) to pay its way. And a global recession is due probably right in
the middle of this term of parliament. Then the poison will have to be
taken. The Tories won’t win the next election.
No comments:
Post a Comment