the party leaders britain`s economy the public
Transcription
the party leaders britain`s economy the public
B R I TA I N 2 015 THE PARTY LEADERS BRITAIN’S ECONOMY THE PUBLIC FINANCES IMMIGRATION CITIES AND LOCALISM DEFENCE AND FOREIGN POLICY LAW AND ORDER WELFARE HEALTH CARE BUSINESS AND ENTREPRENEURSHIP INFRASTRUCTURE ENERGY AND GREENERY EDUCATION THE FUTURE OF THE UK ELECTORAL ARITHMETIC I ELECT ION BRIEFING INTRODUCTION The 2015 variety show CONTENTS 2 Party leaders 4 The economy 6 Public finances 7 Immigration It is the wackiest, most diverse, least predictable election for many years F IVE years ago the voters of Britain did something improbable. Defying the mathematics of Westminster’s majoritarian, “first past the post” electoral system, which had produced a series of mostly solid Conservative and Labour governments, they cussedly refused to give any party a majority. The Conservatives, who were in first place with 36% of the popular vote, had to cut a deal with the third-place Liberal Democrats, leaving Labour as the main opposition party. Britain had got its first coalition since the second world war. Many said it could not endure—but, oddly, it did. Tories and Lib Dems turned out to share a conviction that the far-reaching state built by the previous, Labour, government needed pruning. Their coalition launched into big reforms to schools, welfare, the National Health Service and the police. Shared ambition bound them together. And so did a constitutional innovation. By law, the date of the next election—something normally in the gift of the prime minister—was set firmly at May 7th. The coalition partners would have to suffer each other until then. Though the date is predictable, little else is. The 2015 general election is the strangest that Britain has seen for many years. An election is normally a boxing match; this one is a variety show. Political conventions that had been thought immutable have been discarded. And, while predictions are even harder than usual this time, the result of the vote could be even less conclusive than in 2010. The most obvious difference is that the field is much more crowded. Though often described as a two-party system, Britain has since the 1980s actually been a two-and-a-half party system, with a few footnotes. The two parties were the Conservatives and Labour, the half was the Liberal Democrats, and the footnotes were the Green Party, the Scottish National Party, Plaid Cymru of Wales and a clutch of Northern Irish parties. Over the past five years the Lib Dems have gone from being half a party to one-quarter of a party: many erstwhile supporters deserted as soon as the leadership had to make compromises in government. Meanwhile some of the footnotes have become rampaging challengers. The Green Party has scooped up left-wing protest votes in England. Despite losing an independence referendum in September 2014, the Scottish National Party has surged: it threatens to take dozens of seats from Labour. Then there is the UK Independence Party, a Eurosceptic, anti-immigration outfit that could pinch votes from all the others. UKIP will not win many seats in the House of Commons—its support is too thinly spread—but it is a terror to the big parties all the same. It has already helped to push David Cameron, the Conservative leader, into promising a referendum on Britain’s membership of the European Union if his party wins in May. Another oddity is the way the two big parties are behaving. From the moment Tony Blair took control of the Labour Party in the mid-1990s, it has been understood that the way to win British elections is to occupy the political centre ground. The opposition party promises not to rock the boat too much, at least when it comes to big things like taxes and spending. Mr Blair won a huge majority in 1997 after promising to stick to the Conservative budget. Having been relegated to the opposition benches, the Tories then repeatedly pledged to match Labour’s splurge on hospitals and schools. That convention has been tossed out. As our briefings explain, Labour and the Conservatives are now miles apart on many issues, including the biggest ones. A Labour government would cut the budget deficit much less deeply than a Conservative one. The Tories would hold a referendum on Britain’s EU membership in the next parliament; Labour would almost certainly not. Labour would scrap elected police overseers, cut university tuition fees and beef up regulations on banks and energy firms. The Tories are having none of it. Labour goes into this election with a leader who seems more comfortable on a protest march than in a boardroom. Ed Miliband thinks equality a prize in its own right and calls some businesses “predators”. He is on the cerebral left of his party. Mr Cameron, meanwhile, has largely given up hectoring the Conservative Party to become more moderate. Opinion polls show that Britons think him well to the right of the political centre, just as they see Mr Miliband as far to the left. And both men are restrained next to the leaders of the smaller parties, with whom they might have to deal in a coalition. UKIP would skip out of the EU. The Green Party proposes to end austerity, renationalise the railways and abolish both carbonemitting and nuclear power. The Scottish National Party would evict Britain’s nuclear arsenal from a Scottish loch (in effect the only place it can be kept). The Lib Dems alone are trying to hold the centre ground, though it is not doing them much good. All are trying to sway an electorate that has become disinclined to believe anything a politician says. Britons are not as gloomy as they were a few years ago—the economic recovery has helped there—but they are still jaded and suspicious. Politicians canvassing for votes over the next few weeks will no doubt be told that they are all the same. That has never been less true. 7 8 Cities 9 Defence and foreign policy 11 Law and order 12 Welfare 13 Health care 14 Business and entrepreneurship 15 Infrastructure 16 Energy and greenery 17 Education 19 The future of the UK 21 Electoral arithmetic UK ELECTION 2015 / The Economist April 11th 2015 1 T H E PA R T Y L E A D E R S In the land of the blind It is not so much a popularity contest as an ugliness competition A FTER a five-year slumber, millions of Britons are reawakening, grouchily, to politics. For the leaders of the mainstream parties— David Cameron, Ed Miliband and Nick Clegg—this heightened exposure, which more presidential government and the TV debates inaugurated in 2010 have reinforced, must be painful. It is hard to think of another election in which the candidates to rule Britain were so unpopular. The proportion of people who approve of Mr Cameron’s leadership is 16 points lower than the share who disapprove of it, according to Ipsos MORI, a pollster. In recent times only Tony Blair, politically ruined by the Iraq War, has made it back to 10 Downing Street with worse ratings. Yet Mr Cameron’s rivals are loathed by comparison. Mr Clegg, who went into the previous election as his party’s great strength, has a rating of minus 36. Mr Miliband’s number, minus 31, makes him easily the most derided politician to have a solid chance of becoming prime minister. The only Labour challenger to have worse ratings in the approach to a general election was Michael Foot, in 1983. This is the context in which the Tories are running a “presidential-style” cam- 2 paign around Mr Cameron, whose ruddy features are prominent in their campaign literature. The Tory leader, whose ratings have been fairly steady over the tough course of his premiership, is his party’s great asset. Even in Scotland, where Tories are about as welcome as cholera, Mr Cameron is preferred to Mr Miliband. This is clearly an advantage for the Tories, but, given Mr Cameron’s own sub-stellar ratings, not necessarily a winning one. Why does he not do better? An easy manner of command and an ability to project empathy, quick wits, vast self-confi- Party leaders Net satisfaction*, % Labour Conservatives DAVID NICK CAMERON CLEGG Lib Dem UKIP ED MILIBAND 40 NIGEL FARAGE 20 † + 0 – 20 40 60 2005 07 Source: Ipsos MORI UK ELECTION 2015 / The Economist April 11th 2015 09 11 13 15 *Satisfied minus dissatisfied †Not polled before 2013 dence, moderate instincts and other equipage for high office radiate from the Tory leader. Whether at the dispatch box or G7, he looks and sounds the part. Asked why he wanted to be prime minister, he once said he thought he’d “be good at it”. It was a dreadful thing to say, but superficially true. So why is his fan club not bigger, and its members so muted in their praise? Mainly because it is not clear what Mr Cameron stands for—which is not to say his views are a mystery. He is a pragmatic, modern conservative: fond of tradition, allergic to dogma, with a dash of the social liberalism he showed in legalising gay marriage. He is neither a stick-in-the-mud shire Tory nor a metropolitan liberal but a bit of both, as one would expect of a man formed by county privilege and London life. Yet this is merely the political canvas on which Mr Cameron paints, and his colour scheme is confusing. After taking over, in 2005, a party made unelectable by feuding over Europe, he sought to sanitise it, by embracing environmentalism and other softer-hued causes. But, as waves ofdisaffection with immigration, bankers and politicians have broken over his cash-strapped government, Mr Cameron’s modernising has largely gone missing. To placate the Tory right, he has dabbled in Euroscepticism, promising a referendum on Britain’s EU membership— along with curbs on immigration that seem incompatible with that membership. Had he stamped his imprimatur more boldly on his few modernising achievements—including a fairly green energy policy—such tactical shifts might seem less important. But stamping is not Mr Cameron’s style. Even when trumpeting the coalition government’s successes, in education reform for example, he can sound 1 2 more congratulatory of his ministers than possessive. Mr Cameron is more chairman than CEO—a communicator, a facilitator, not an agenda setter. “Cameronism” is more an attitude, a confident yet phlegmatic approach to the world, than a creed. This frustrating lack of clarity has probably made Mr Cameron’s battle to keep his job harder than it should be. But if he succeeds, what would he do? Roughly the same again, probably: some steep (though less than promised) cuts to defence, local government and other unprotected budgets; some decent reform—perhaps to the police, who the Tories are itching to squabble with—and stasis elsewhere, including in difficult departments, such as justice, or wherever Mr Cameron lets an underperforming minister settle. Meanwhile the Euroscepticism that the prime minister’s pandering has not satisfied will maraud like a clumsy drunk. Polls suggest Mr Cameron could secure the EU “In” vote he wants, but the experience would divide his party and distract the government more than Britain can afford. Mr Cameron might quit soon after that, leaving it to one of his three likeliest successors—George Osborne, the chancellor of the exchequer, Theresa May, the home secretary, or Boris Johnson, the mayor of London—to reunite his party. He insists he wants a full second term. But by 2018 he would have been Tory leader for 13 years and prime minister for eight, the sort of vintage at which Tony Blair and Margaret Thatcher turned to political vinegar. More than their leader’s strength, the Tories’ main hope lies in Mr Miliband’s weakness. The Labour leader is a liability for his party. When Mr Cameron, playing the bully in Parliament, asked how many Labour MPs were putting his rival’s picture on their campaign leaflets, only three raised their hands. Mr Miliband’s problem is partly presentational, which these days matters. He is gawky, has an adenoidal voice and—as he has rather sweetly acknowledged—looks a bit like Wallace, an Oscar-winning animated character fond of knitted pullovers, cheese and tea, and regularly outsmarted by his dog, Gromit. It should not matter, of course. Mr Miliband is clever, amiable, genuinely motivated to improve Britain and, in his parliamentary jousts with Mr Cameron, anything but hapless. His big idea, that Britain’s surpassing problem is rising inequality, exacerbated by too many unproductive jobs, also has considerable merit. So do some of his suggested fixes, including an increase in apprenticeships and perks for small- and medium-sized firms. Also laudably—and against the advice of some of his advisers—Mr Miliband has refused to match Mr Cameron’s EU referendum pledge, and not only because he believes there would be few votes in it for Labour. In outlook a European-style social democrat, he has no appetite for an exercise that promises to foment more Euroscepticism than it allays. Yet given that this is the view of most big companies, it is striking how few support him. Asked to name a single businessman backing Labour, the shadow chancellor, Ed Balls, muttered: “Erm, err, Bill”. The problem is not only that Mr Miliband appears more interested in reapportioning wealth than making it. It is that he seems to disapprove of those who do— thus his attacks on energy companies, banks and football clubs and, in Labour’s tax proposals, on high earners generally. Again, his criticisms are often justified. But the effect of these serial assaults, unassuaged by praise for enterprise, is to sug- consume much more of his attention than energy markets. Not least, because Mr Miliband has done little to prepare his party for exacerbating the Tory cuts it has spent five years denouncing. That is a promise of dissent within a Labour government—which would be much rowdier if, as looks likely, it were forced to rely on the populist Scottish National Party for support. The SNP has sworn to end austerity. Its putative leader in Westminster, Alex Salmond, a former Scottish first minister, could make mincemeat of Mr Miliband. The Labour leader might be happier in a partnership with the Liberal Democrats, whose leader Nick Clegg has been a constructive deputy to Mr Cameron. Much good has that done him: being a bit-part player in an unpopular government has been disastrous for the Lib Dems—and for their leader especially. It has made Mr Clegg, a decent and, unlike most in his party, truly liberal man, perhaps the most reviled public figure in Britain. Given the party’s gift for local campaigning, the Lib Dems may retain enough of their 56 seats to be kingmaker again. But that would be no thanks to Mr Clegg, who is also well-hidden in his party’s campaign bumf and under pressure from Labour even in his Sheffield constituency. If he wins there, the Tories win the election without a majority and the Lib Dems hold enough seats to put them back in government, he may yet survive as leader and deputy prime minister. In any other scenario, he would likely take the hint and go. In this litany of put-upon politicians there is a big exception. Nigel Farage has been indispensable to UKIP’s surge from the irrelevant fringe of British politics. Without his acumen and blokey charm, it could not now be contemplating winning half a dozen seats—including for Mr Farage in South Thanet—and costing both the To- NEITHER ED MILIBAND NOR NICK CLEGG APPEAR ON MANY OF THEIR PA R T I E S ’ E L E C T I O N L E A F L E T S gest a naive left-winger, careless of business and out-of-touch with the aspiring middle class on whose support British governments are generally founded. Though justified, this impression has led to exaggerated fears about Mr Miliband, whipped up by the right-wing press. The Labour leader may disapprove of British capitalism, but as prime minister he would be able to change it less than he would like. The exigencies of austerity, which Labour has committed to extending, albeit less onerously than the Tories would, mean that public services would ries and Labour as many again. But that is as much a verdict on UKIP’s meagre talents as Mr Farage; and it looks unlikely to play a formal part in Britain’s next government. UKIP would be compelled to ask Mr Cameron, its only plausible coalition partner, for more populist concessions than its weight in seats could command. And he, already under fire from the Tory right, would rather take help from almost any other hand. But the irrepressible Mr Farage is going to carry on enlivening British politics regardless, unless the ciggies get him, or the booze. 7 UK ELECTION 2015 / The Economist April 11th 2015 3 BRITAIN’S ECONOMY A strange recovery What is more important: the state of the economy or people’s wages? The answer might determine who wins the election L ISTEN to a Conservative politician for more than one minute and he or she is sure to utter the words “long-term economic plan”. The slogan is projected behind them when they give speeches and plastered across their campaign literature. It has been shoehorned into any number of policy announcements, no matter how uncomfortably. A scheme to give miscreant drivers10 minutes’ grace before they are slapped with parking tickets, for example, was said to be part of a long-term economic plan. The phrase bores Tories to tears—yet it might win them the election. Just two and a half years elapsed between the run on Northern Rock bank, which marked the start of Britain’s financial crisis, and the formation of the coalition government in May 2010. In the meantime the economy took a huge hit. From the peak in early 2008 to the trough in 2009, GDP per person fell by 6.9%. The new government promptly dedicated itself to fixing the resulting hole in the public finances (see next story). But the big economic problem was weak demand. Fearing for their jobs, consumers were paying down debt rather than splashing out on new cars or televisions. Businesses were not investing. Unemployment rose to 8.5%—lower than in other wealthy countries, but still painfully high. And many of those in work had too little of it: part-time jobs and self-employment had replaced many full-time jobs. Then, just as things began to look up, the euro crisis crushed Britain’s biggest export market. From great to middling GDP per person, 2000=100 160 Germany 150 Britain 140 France 130 120 United States 110 100 90 2000 Source: IMF 4 05 10 14 By 2013 the IMF was complaining that Britain remained “a long way from a strong and sustainable recovery”. Moody’s, a credit-rating agency, downgraded the country’s debt from AAA to AA1, citing “continuing weakness” in growth. And the Labour Party, which had lost economic credibility during the financial crisis, began to close the gap with the Conservatives on economic competence. Then things began to turn round. The economy grew by 1.6% in 2013. The next year, growth accelerated to 2.8%—faster than any other member of the G7 group of rich countries. On the way Britain created a million net new jobs, taking the employment rate to its highest ever level, 73.3%, and unemployment back down to 5.7%. In January Christine Lagarde, head of the IMF, praised Britain’s leadership as “eloquent and convincing”. The recovery would appear to set the Conservatives on course to win the election. Voters often tell pollsters that they are most concerned about things like immigration and health care, but their behaviour suggests economics trumps such worries: Labour won big victories in the 2000s despite dire ratings on immigration, for example. And the public is crediting the Tories. David Cameron and George Osborne, the chancellor of the exchequer, have a 15to 20-point lead on economic competence over Ed Miliband, Labour’s leader, and Ed Balls, his economics spokesman. But it is not as simple as that, because Britain’s recovery has been so joyless. Real wages had already been falling for two years when Mr Osborne entered the Treasury. For most of the 2010-15 parliament they continued to decline. This was all the more painful because Britons had become accustomed to steady rises in living standards. From the turn of the millennium to the eve of the crash, real earnings had grown by an average of 2.6% per year. Since then they have fallen by an average of 1.2% a year, putting Britons through the longest period of real wage falls since records began in 1855, according to the Bank of England’s data. Much of this was caused by imported inflation. The tumble of the pound after the crisis made imports more costly, before energy and food prices soared in 2011-12. In the government’s first two years, inflation UK ELECTION 2015 / The Economist April 11th 2015 was more than a percentage point above its 2% target for 22 of 24 months. Little could be done about this: tighter monetary or fiscal policy would have strangled a weak economy and further pummeled wages. But pay also stagnated because British workers’ productivity did. Output per hour worked—which determines wages in the long run—plunged during the crisis and 1 Happily toiling Unemployment rate, % 10 Change on previous quarter, ’000 Full-time employees Part-time and other* 300 8 200 6 100 4 0 2 100 + – 0 200 2010 Source: ONS 11 12 13 14 *Including self-employed Spending spree Cumulative contribution to GDP growth since trough, percentage points GDP* Consumption Total investment Net trade Other 12 10 8 6 4 2 + 0 – 2 2009 10 11 12 Sources: ONS; The Economist 2 remains 2% lower than in 2008. In the rest of the G7, it is 5% higher. Low wages and a ready supply of low-skilled immigrants have encouraged firms to hire people rather than invest in computers and other things that might make them more efficient. A gummed-up banking system probably prevented the most productive firms from expanding, too. In a sense, the wage squeeze was welcome. It kept unemployment down, thereby spreading the pain of the downturn more widely. Economists usually blame recessions at least partly on the difficulty firms have in cutting wages when demand dries up; that problem was not much on display in Britain. So Labour and the Conservatives go into this election talking across each other. The Conservatives argue that the economy is recovering. Labour says that households are struggling. Both are right. Yet this is something of a puzzle when one considers what has driven Britain’s growth over the past few years. A few years ago it was an article of faith 13 14 *% increase since trough among all the major parties that the economy would have to be sustained by something less gluttonous than consumer spending. There was talk of Britain paying its way in the world through stronger exports, and of a manufacturing revival. That has not happened. Instead, the recovery has been domestic. Since 2013 consumer spending has grown at a healthy annualised rate of 2%. Buoyed by the return of consumer confidence, firms have boosted investment in tandem (see chart above). This seems odd, given how pitifully low wages have been (even if a collapse in the oil price has removed some of the pressure). Despite suffering the stagnant pay that Labour laments, households have driven the recovery that the Tories boast of. Britain’s consumption boom came from two sources. The first was population growth. Thanks to immigration and a baby boom, Britain’s population is 3-4% bigger than in 2010. While GDP is up 8% over the 2010-15 parliament, GDP per person is up only 4.8%. The second was confidence: as workers stopped fearing for their jobs, they started to save less. The household saving ratio fell from 8% in 2012 to 6.4% in 2013 (though it has since picked up a little). Confidence could not have returned ised not to consider raising interest rates until unemployment fell below 7%. Another, classically British, stimulus kicked in at about the same time. House prices went up by 5.5% in 2013 and by another 9.8% in 2014. In crowded London they have risen by 27% in the last two years. This made household finances healthier and may have given consumers the confidence to open their wallets. The sober-headed will not celebrate that trend. Young people—nicknamed “generation rent”—find it ever harder to buy a home. To address this, in 2013 the coalition launched a scheme—named “help to buy”—to top up some mortgages with government loans and guarantee others. That, of course, probably pushed prices even higher. In his final budget, Mr Osborne announced subsidies for those saving for a first home. That would be likely to create still more demand. The fundamental problem is too few houses: in the decade to 2014 only 176,000 were built per year on average, when perhaps 240,000 were needed. Antiquated planning regulations constrain supply, especially in the prosperous south-east. Britons are ever more desperate to get on the housing ladder before it is pulled up out of reach. As a result, the Bank of England worries about a debt-fuelled bubble and in 2014 intervened in the mortgage market to curb excessive lending. Instead of rebalancing, Britain has returned to its old ways: growth has been led by consumers and fuelled by house-price increases. Net trade has in fact made a slightly negative contribution since 2009, as British firms have struggled to export to a Eurozone that is only starting to recover. British consumers, meanwhile, continue to import aplenty. This, together with a drying up of income on Britain’s overseas investments, has pushed the current-account deficit to fully 5.5% of GDP. A consumer-driven recovery is not nec- FAR FROM REBAL ANCING, BRITAIN HAS GONE ON A DEBT-FUELLED BINGE without a prop from policy. Unlike its European neighbour, the Bank of England kept its eyes fixed firmly on the horizon during the imported inflation of 2011-12, recognising that turbulence was temporary and keeping monetary policy loose. The bank also recognised that boosting lending required more than just monetary policy. It clubbed together with the Treasury to provide cheap funding for banks. The salvo of stimulus was completed in 2013, when the bank’s new governor, Mark Carney, prom- essarily a concern. There is nothing inherently good about exports or inherently bad about consumption. But in the long run, more household spending must be funded by wage rises, not declining saving or a boom in house prices. The next government’s main challenge will to boost productivity rather than demand. That will require careful thought, targeted investment, and an acknowledgment that cutting the budget deficit is not the be-all and end-all of economic policy. 7 UK ELECTION 2015 / The Economist April 11th 2015 5 THE PUBLIC FINANCES The national interest The parties’ fiscal plans are miles apart A LL the big political parties agree: Britain badly needs to get its public finances in order. The country probably borrowed about £90 billion, or 5% of GDP, in the 2014-15 fiscal year—more than Italy, France or even Greece. Yet the parties do not agree in the slightest on how much further borrowing ought to fall, or how to bring it down. The Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition came to power in 2010 declaring that deficit reduction was “the most urgent issue facing Britain” and that it should be achieved mostly by cutting spending, not by raising taxes. Barely a month into his new job, the flinty Conservative chancellor, George Osborne, laid out a bold plan to do this. It turned out to be considerably more flexible than he implied. Mr Osborne set out two targets. First and most important, the structural current deficit—that is, the deficit adjusted to reflect the economic cycle, and excluding investment—would be forecast to be in balance five years in the future. Second, national debt would fall as a percentage of GDP by 2015-16. At the time both targets sounded like a plan to finish the job of deficit reduction in one parliament. A euro crisis and sluggish growth quickly messed it up. The Treasury brought in less tax revenue than it had expected and had to spend more on benefits. As a result, borrowing stayed high. Meanwhile ever more of the output lost to the recession was written off as gone forever, making more of the deficit look structural. Mr Osborne could have got back on track by cutting spending more deeply or raising taxes. Instead, he quietly allowed the completion date to slip. As long as the job was still forecast to be completed five years in the future, he had not missed his main goal. Thus a chancellor who had expected to borrow about £50 billion less than he actually did in 2014-15 nonetheless claims to have stuck to his guns. That he gets away with this is partly a tribute to his bendy targets and partly a comment on the ineffectiveness of the opposition Labour Party. But Mr Osborne’s reputation for austerity also endures because of the way he has cut government spending. Beyond the protective “ring-fence” the 6 coalition erected around the NHS, schools and international aid, departmental budgets have been slashed by 21% on average. Local government is getting by on twothirds of its pre-austerity budget. Publicsector employment has fallen from 6.3m to 5.4m. Civil servants’ pay was frozen for three years and then rose by only 1%. The government saved about £25 billion from the welfare budget, mainly by limiting annual increases and means-testing child benefit, a previously universal handout. (Other welfare reforms grabbed headlines without saving much money.) But an ageing population and generous increases in the state pension—which accounts for 40% of the welfare budget—have offset these savings. Overall, welfare spending has barely changed since 2010. If the Tories win, Mr Osborne must do it all again. Provided the recovery is sustained, the chancellor wants a £7 billion overall surplus by the end of the parliament in 2020. Current government plans imply a further cut of 16% to departments outside the ring-fence, according to the Institute for Fiscal Studies, a think-tank. That will be tough, for three reasons. First, the easiest cuts have been made. It is Selective squeeze Departmental budgets, 2010-11 to 2015-16 Forecast, % change Current Capital International Development Energy & environment NHS 80 60 40 20 – 0 + 20 40 60 Transport Education Defence Home Office Business, innovation & skills Ministry of Justice Work and Pensions DCLG: Local DCLG: Communities Total Source: Institute for Fiscal Studies UK ELECTION 2015 / The Economist April 11th 2015 Total hard to see local government repeating the big savings made during this parliament, for example: councils will soon run up against their legal obligations to provide services. Reforms to university funding, which provided the bulk of the business department’s savings, were a one-off. Second, holding down public-sector salaries will become harder as private-sector pay rises. Third, the population is older and needier. The NHS says a freeze in its budget will not do—it wants an £8 billion boost. Mr Osborne says that, unrestrained by coalition, he would cut another £12 billion from the welfare budget. Half of that money would go on tax cuts; the other half would reduce cuts in departments outside the ring-fence to about 9%. If pensions are protected, though, the Tory plan would require savage cuts to working-age welfare. Labour promises only a surplus on the current budget, excluding investment— which on current plans will be £30 billion in today’s money (or 1.4% of GDP) in 2019-20. The party has not specified when exactly it would achieve this. By contrast, both coalition parties want current balance in 2017-18, which would demand deep cuts for two years. From then on, the Lib Dems would borrow about half the investment budget, putting them, as so often, in a middle ground. The SNP does not want to cut at all, and instead suggests a 0.5% annual boost to departments’ budgets. That would leave a small current budget deficit in 2020. The gap between Labour and the Tories is huge—£30 billion amounts to about a quarter of the entire health budget. The IFS reckons Labour could, as a result, make no cuts and instead raise departmental budgets by 2%. The two parties have not been so far apart on fiscal policy for at least five elections. Labour does not emphasise this difference, for fear of looking spendthrift. But the choice facing voters is stark. 7 IMMIGRATION Raise the drawbridge Every big party wants much less immigration C ANDID mea culpas are rare among politicians. Tony Blair continues to insist on the rightness of the Iraq war. An apology from Ed Balls about the role played by Labour’s light-touch banking regulation in the financial crisis was qualified with a hefty nod to others’ faults. When it comes to immigration his party is much more frank: Labour got things wrong. The decision to grant Poles and other Eastern Europeans unfettered access to Britain a decade ago was, according to Jack Straw, a former Labour home secretary, “a spectacular mistake.” All pledge not to repeat it. Immigration, and not just from Eastern Europe, did indeed surge under the last Labour government, which expired in 2010. The recession caused net migration (immigration minus emigration) to tail off towards the end of Labour’s term. But the economic recovery has drawn immigrants back. The latest figures show net migration was 298,000 in the year ending September 2014, higher than when the ConservativeLiberal Democrat coalition came to power. The figure makes a mockery ofDavid Cameron’s promise—to which he insists he will stick—to reduce net migration to the tens of thousands per year. His government tried. It abolished visas that allowed students to stay after completing their degrees. It squeezed the numbers of highly skilled migrants allowed entry and closed schemes allowing unskilled They’re back Long-term gross immigration, ’000 GENERAL ELECTION 700 600 500 Other 400 300 New EU† 200 100 Old European Union* 0 2004 Source: ONS 10 14 *Includes expat British †Joined EU since 2004 workers in from outside the EU. It insisted that Britons wanting to bring foreign spouses into the country earn at least £18,600 a year—more if the couple have children. Yet such measures have had little impact on the headline figure because they do not affect EU migrants. The latest to arrive are Romanians and Bulgarians, to whom Britain fully opened its labour market in January 2014. Britons have long disliked mass immigration. Even in 1995, when net migration was well under 100,000, two-thirds wanted it cut. But they worry more about it these days. Since the beginning of 2014 voters have consistently cited immigration as the first or second most important issue facing the country. As the economic outlook has brightened, the shadow of immigration has grown comparatively darker. If elected, the Conservatives vow they would restrict new immigrants’ access to welfare and clamp down further on abuses of the system. Labour would get rid of the overall net-migration target—though it, too, would make EU migrants wait longer for out-of-work benefits. It is likely that few voters will believe either party. Two-thirds tell pollsters that the government has no real control over immigration. Many Britons do, however, like what they hear from the UK Independence Party (UKIP). Its stridency on the subject is the most important factor in its rise—more important even than its hostility to the EU. UKIP says it will allow employers to discriminate on the basis ofjob applicants’ nationality. It promises to crack down on illegal immigration and boost the border agency. Migrants would only be eligible for unemployment benefits and for Britain’s generous in-work benefits after spending some years in the country. UKIP also wants Britain to leave the EU, which would allow the country to regulate European immigration much more strictly. The best research, by the academics Christian Dustmann and Tommaso Frattini, suggests that immigrants have boosted Britain’s public finances. They are young, healthy and (whatever the politicians imply) less likely than Britons to claim benefits. Immigrants from Eastern Europe are the best of the bunch. Labour and the Tories are thus lamenting, and UKIP is promising to stop, something that has made Britain richer. That might help to explain why Britons’ views are a little more complex than the headline figures suggest. Though voters cite immigration as the most pressing national issue, only one-fifth say it is the most important issue facing them or their families (the economy, health, pensions and tax all beat it). Ipsos MORI, a pollster, finds that although 70% consider immigration to be a problem for the country, fewer than 20% worry about it locally. And, though voters dislike immigration, they are less bothered by actual immigrants. Almost half reckon that Poles, who have been arriving in large numbers for over a decade, make a positive contribution to the country, similar to the figures for Americans, Australians and Germans. (Britons feel much less warmly towards Romanians.) UKIP fares exceptionally well in some places where hardly any immigrants live. In Clacton, the place that gave the party its first elected MP, just 4% of people are non-British, compared with 13% nationally. In such places, and elsewhere, dislike of immigration is driven by nostalgia for a simpler time and fear of too-fast social change. That does not render people’s anxieties invalid, but it does make it awfully hard for politicians to do anything to assuage them. 7 UK ELECTION 2015 / The Economist April 11th 2015 7 DEVOLVING POWER IN ENGL AND Urban uprising Everybody is promising cities more power. For once, they might mean it I F, A few years ago, somebody had suggested that a Conservative chancellor of the exchequer would hand a Labour-dominated English city much greater spending powers, few people would have believed it. But in February of this year George Osborne said he would do just that, by transferring control over a £6 billion local NHS budget to politicians in Manchester. The chancellor’s move was revolutionary. If similar powers were given to other cities it would change the way Britain is run, reversing a decadeslong trend towards the centralisation of power in Westminster. Many attempts have been made to give cities and regions more clout. London got an elected mayor in 2000, who has gradually become more powerful. But there have been big setbacks. In 2004 voters in north-east England voted overwhelmingly against a regional assembly. In 2012 ten large cities that lacked mayors (including Manchester) were asked whether they wanted them. Nine voted no. That defeat might have spelled the end of decentralisation. Instead two things happened. First, urban councils began to fuse into metropolitan governments with some power over transport and services. Manchester led the way: in 2011 ten councils joined to form the Greater Manchester Combined Authority. Second, the coalition government began working on bespoke “city deals”. These involved Whitehall de- cities looked at that and decided they would like some more power, too. One reason to give them what they want is economic. Britain relies far too much on London and the south-east. Something needs to be done to revive provincial cities, and that something might be stronger self-government. But Mr Osborne’s plans (they belonged to him much more than to David Cameron) also had a political rationale. The Conservative Party has been all but wiped out in the urban north. Mr Osborne, whose constituency is near Manchester, is looking to boost Tory fortunes there. And the Labour politicians who run the cities are often willing to work with him. Manchester’s leaders in particular are hard-nosed and keen to attract business. Asked by Labour headquarters in London to badmouth a speech Mr Osborne had given about building a “northern powerhouse”, Sir Richard Leese, leader of Manchester council, is reported to have responded with a fruity expletive. Decentralising control over NHS spending would help with a bigger reform. It would allow cities to co-ordinate their medical care (now run centrally) with their social care (run locally) and thus make savings that are hard to bring about from Whitehall. The Tories cannot trumpet such a plan, for fear of being accused of dismantling the universalist principles of the NHS. But this could prove a useful way to slow the inexorable increase in spending on THE ECONOMY OF GREATER MANCHES TER IS BIGGER THAN THAT OF WALES, YET WALES HAS FAR MORE POWER volving the budget for transport and for skills (including apprenticeships and traineeships) and powers to “earn back” tax from the Treasury, in exchange for responsibility to deliver local growth. Progress was slow at first. But then came the Scottish independence referendum. In a desperate attempt to prevent the country from leaving, the main Westminster-based parties all promised greater powers to the Scottish Parliament in Holyrood. Local officials in England’s better-run 8 health care. And it is hard for Labour politicians to argue, when such powers have already been devolved to the Welsh and the Scots. Greater Manchester, for instance, has a bigger economy than Wales. Labour is conflicted about this. As the party that created the post-war welfare state, it worries about fragmenting the NHS. But some Labourites, like Lord Adonis and Jon Cruddas, are keen on further decentralisation from Whitehall. And the party has a new reason to listen to them. UK ELECTION 2015 / The Economist April 11th 2015 The Scottish referendum has supercharged the “West Lothian Question”—the anomaly, caused by devolution, by which Scottish and Welsh MPs can vote on laws affecting England while English MPs have scant power over Scotland and Wales. The Tories propose to solve this by stripping Welsh and Scottish MPs of voting rights in Parliament—something that would make it hard for Labour to run a government, since it is strong in the Celtic fringe. If Labour handed more power to cities this threat would not go away. But, by creating more anomalies, it would make the West Lothian Question seem less offensive. It might soon be asked, for example, why Manchester MPs are voting on national health bills. There is little public clamour for decentralisation. And Mr Osborne had trouble persuading central departments to cede power to regional cities. But once Manchester gets more powers other cities might well demand them too. If re-elected, the Tories are likely to set a mayoral election for Manchester in 2017 as part of the deal. Sir Richard has said that he wants full devolution of all £22 billion of state spending to the metropolitan authority. And if that occurs, which many believe likely, the ability to raise taxes cannot be too far behind, perhaps in the parliament after next. It will take many years for English cities to gain the kind of power enjoyed by rivals such as New York. That city raises 69% of the money it spends; London raises just 26%. But at least the process has begun. 7 DEFENCE AND FOREIGN POLICY Keeping up appearances No party is promising renewed engagement with the world G ENERAL elections are hardly ever fought on foreign policy. Even the exceptions, such as one in 1935, which pitted Conservative rearmament against Labour pacifism, and 1983, in which Margaret Thatcher soared on the back of the Falklands war, were mainly about domestic issues. Yet the absence of foreign policy debate in the 2015 campaign is nonetheless remarkable. That is chiefly because the world is pressing. The takeover of eastern Syria and northern Iraq by Islamic State has produced a jihadist haven, on the edge of Europe, more threatening than anything Tony Blair or George Bush warned of. British warplanes are again bombing Iraq. And whatever government is formed in May, that campaign will not end soon, not least because it has an urgent counterterrorism purpose. Over 500 Britons—including the London-accented murderer known as Jihadi John—are among thousands of young Europeans with the death cult, and Britain’s domestic spy agency, MI5, claims to have foiled over a dozen terrorist plots inspired by it. It cannot be long before one comes off. Russia’s attacks on Ukraine have mean- while stirred the NATO alliance, of which Britain is, even after recent defence cuts, probably the second-most capable member after America. This has raised questions about not merely the scale of the cuts, but also the purpose of Britain’s armed forces. The shrinkage they are undergoing—which by 2020 will reduce the regular army to 82,000 and cost it most of its heavy armour—is based on a notion that Britain no longer faces a serious conventional threat. Yet that is what Russia represents to NATO’s eastern flank. There is more than this for the next foreign secretary to worry about. Among failing states, Libya, northern Nigeria, Yemen, Afghanistan and Pakistan all represent particular British interests or responsibilities. Meanwhile Iran’s quest for a nuclear weapon, Europe’s to regain competitiveness and America’s for new Asian allies are strategic issues Britain is struggling to understand, let alone respond to. The world has been busy before, of course, and it is not easy managing a power that is fated—despite Mr Blair’s raging against the dying of the light—to decline in relative terms. These crises nonetheless amount to an important test of Britain’s ambition to be an active, collaborative, medium-sized Western power, which its leaders are flunking. The Foreign Office is underfunded and demoralised. The Conservative foreign secretary, Philip Hammond, is a competent manager with little enthusiasm for the wider world (a senior security official describes him as “not exactly a little Englander, but…”) Every other week a retired British general denounces the defence cuts. These were supposed to shrink the defence budget by 8%, but thanks to a historic shortfall of £45.6 billion in the kit budget and a decision to shift responsibility for maintaining Britain’s nuclear weapons to the defence ministry, the squeeze has been closer to 25%. Sir Peter Wall, a former army chief, diagnoses “a lower level ofglobal ambition for UK involvement in global security than ever before.” Neither the Tories nor Labour appear hugely troubled by this diminution. Bruised by economic weakness, the failures of Mr Blair’s hyperactivity and their own unpopularity, both parties seem increasingly resigned to Britain playing a sharply reduced role in the world—which is much less than the coalition government at first promised. Though it had little choice but to cut the defence budget, the government’s strategy review in 2010 promised a security policy with “no less ambition for our country in the decades to come”—and David Cameron at first seemed to mean that. He founded an admired National Security Council, set William Hague, as foreign secretary, to pep up the Foreign Office, showed enthusiasm for Britain’s military intervention in Afghanistan and launched a new one, alongside France, in Libya in 2011. Sparked by fears of a massacre in Benghazi, the Libya campaign was supposed to 1 UK ELECTION 2015 / The Economist April 11th 2015 9 2 define a lighter, more intelligent mode of intervention. Unlike Mr Blair’s campaigns in Afghanistan and Iraq, which involved the deployment of over 50,000 British troops, it was limited to air strikes; it was also blessed by the UN and Parliament. But Libya is now a mini-Iraq, a source of extremism and regional instability, and Mr Cameron’s new model mainly looks like intervention on the cheap, without responsibility. The alacrity with which the prime minister washed his hands of Libya has done yet more damage to Britain’s reputation in the Arab world. If that suggested a prime minister with a sporadic interest in foreign policy, he has reinforced the impression. History must judge whether he was right to advocate bombing Syria’s regime in 2013, after it used chemical weapons against its people. But it is already clear that, having failed to win Parliament’s approval for that campaign, Mr Cameron has lost much of his former appetite for bold action abroad. Having become convinced that the Afghanistan campaign was a profligate stalemate of which voters had tired, the prime minister withdrew almost all Britain’s troops last year, leaving the NATO force they were part of under-manned. Even a memorial to the 453 Britons killed in Afghanistan was dismantled, stone by stone, and removed to an arboretum in Staffordshire, lest it be desecrated in Helmand. Britain’s latest Iraq campaign is tentative—and not only because, to sneak it through Parliament, Mr Cameron had to make an incoherent promise to bomb IS in Iraq but not in Syria. British warplanes have carried out only 6% of the strikes in Iraq and there are almost no British military personnel in Baghdad, which arguably makes Britain a less important participant in the US-led campaign than Australia. Were scepticism about the intervention behind this modest contribution, it might be understandable. But Mr Cameron’s diffidence is more obviously explained by flickering attention and fear of his domestic critics. If the Tories return to power, even with a majority, there is no reason to expect a more ambitious or coherent foreign policy. Mr Cameron would remain ready to go to war, but perhaps only if it didn’t involve difficult rows in Parliament or look too expensive. The rise of IS and Russian marauding has made the threat assessment underpinning the strategic review look sanguine; but they have not persuaded George Osborne, the chancellor, against making further cuts to the defence budget. It is already bound to shrink below 2% of GDP—the level that NATO demands and which Mr Cameron endorsed passionately at the alliance’s summit last year. He can do passion, he can do intervention and, 10 with his presentational gifts, he can look statesmanlike at times. But in foreign policy, as otherwise, Mr Cameron lacks the sustained grip that strong leadership requires. The prime minister’s Europe policy is further evidence of this. Having sworn to stop his party “banging on” about Europe, he was bullied by those same head-bangers into promising a referendum on Britain’s EU membership by 2017. This would be a costly distraction and, in the event of an “out” vote, which Mr Cameron does not want, it would speed Britain’s global decline. (That is even before contemplating the prospect of Europhile Scotland demanding a fresh independence referendum, as it would, and seceding.) An “in” vote looks more likely. Even so, the exercise would cast additional doubt over Britain’s global posture and offend old allies. It already has—as witnessed by Britain’s no-show in a Franco-German effort to make peace in Ukraine. If Britain is feeling increasingly averse to its European friends, the feeling is mutual. Yet if it is not with Europe, where is it? The trans-Atlantic alliance is weakening with Britain’s wilting military punch—America has also warned Mr Cameron against further defence cuts. The Commonwealth, which Eurosceptic Tories dream of refashioning into an Anglophone trading block, is a non-starter: almost none of its members wants that. Meanwhile the government’s effort to im- the armed forces, given its historic reputation for being weak on defence. So the question is whether Miliband would be a stronger ambassador for British values and interests than Mr Cameron has been; and the answer is, maybe not. While instinctively comfortable in Europe, Mr Miliband shows little interest in Britain’s evolving role there, as a big economy outside the euro zone. As Labour leader, he has made only a handful of foreign trips. His critique of British capitalism takes such little note of global trends as to seem naive. Perceived in Washington as the villain of the Syria vote, he faces an uphill road there. “Ed doesn’t really do abroad,” a member of Mr Miliband’s shadow cabinet has quipped. Then there is the effect of the minnows to consider, in the event of a coalition or minority government. Ironically, their biggest impact on foreign policy would be if the strongly Europhile Liberal Democrats, back with the Tories, were to allow Mr Cameron his EU referendum. They probably would. Another likely Tory (and possible Labour) ally, the Democratic Unionist Party, has suggested it would demand a boost to defence spending as the price of support from its eight or nine Northern Irish MPs. The Scottish National Party, whose MPs would probably be required to prop up a Labour-led government, is dedicated to ridding Scotland of Britain’s sole nuclear- L I BYA L O O K S L I K E I N T E R V E N T I O N O N T H E C H E A P, W I T H O U T RESPONSIBILIT Y prove relations with China and India, though good in itself, has seemed more craven than productive. Irked by its decision to join a new Chinese financial institution that might one day rival the World Bank, America snapped at Britain’s habit of “constant accommodation” to China. Labour should not find it too hard to improve on this record. And indeed, Ed Miliband’s refusal to match Mr Cameron’s referendum pledge looks sensible. So does the gist (despite its annoying name) of the “progressive internationalism” outlined by Douglas Alexander, the shadow foreign secretary. This would include more effort to build alliances—by which he mainly meant in Europe—and uphold the UN. Europe aside, in fact, there is not much to separate the two parties. Despite his refusal to support action in Syria, Mr Miliband is not flat against force: he voted to bomb Libya and Iraq. Labour shares Mr Cameron’s slightly quixotic commitment to spending 0.7% of GDP on foreign aid. Perhaps Labour would spend a bit more on UK ELECTION 2015 / The Economist April 11th 2015 weapons base. Given the high cost and several years it would take to move it south, this would probably mean scrapping it altogether. In practice, the SNP would probably settle for a review of the issue—which Labour, having no desire to rekindle its anti-nuclear past, would quietly provide. The potentially damaging effect of the UK Independence Party has been similarly exaggerated. Nigel Farage has suggested he would support a Tory government in return for an EU referendum “before Christmas”. But that is unimaginable, and both parties would balk at such a tie-up. That leaves the Greens, whose hopedfor seat or two would be available to Mr Miliband. Besides pro forma things like slashing the defence budget and scrapping the nukes, they have plans for the Foreign Office: “One of the main purposes of embassies would be to learn about culture and current affairs of their host countries by immersion in a wide variety of local activities.” Funnily enough, that is exactly what Britain’s desk-bound diplomats need. 7 L AW AND ORDER The lesser-spotted worry Law and order is not a big election issue. But it ought to be B RITONS may at last be grasping what has long been true: theirs is an increasingly staid, law-abiding country. The official Crime Survey of England and Wales—which, contrary to what newspapers and opposition politicians say, does not lie—shows that crime has fallen to its lowest rate since 1981. Voters continue to tell pollsters that lawlessness must be going up. But they appear not to believe themselves. In May 2005 crime was top of the list of people’s concerns, as measured by Ipsos MORI, a pollster. It is now tenth on the list. 2010 and 2014, and some Victorian gaols have been shut. Yet the prison population is no lower than it was when the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats came to power. The remaining prisons are overcrowded and understaffed, and becoming more violent. Perhaps more promisingly, the coalition tried to cut costs by outsourcing probation services to private companies, although the extent of any savings—and the impact of the new system on reoffending rates—are unclear. The most radical reform to criminal justice in the past few years has nothing to do with the coalition. In April 2013 Scotland, then as now run by the Scottish National BY FAR THE MOS T RADIC AL REFORM TO POLICING HAS TAKEN PL ACE IN SCOTLAND That may be in part because Britons have other things to worry about, like the economy and immigration. And, strangely, the economic slump that began in 2007 may actually have contributed to the fall in crime. Many assumed that lawlessness would soar after the financial crisis, as unemployment rose and welfare cuts bit. Apart from a brief spasm of rioting in 2011, that did not happen. Violent crime has fallen since the coalition came to power, perhaps because young men have less money to go out boozing. Acquisitive crimes such as burglary and car theft are also down, by 14% and 27% respectively (although shoplifting and pickpocketing have ticked up). Anti-social behaviour, once the country’s great bugbear, continues to drop. Voters’ sanguine attitude might also reflect the way politicians have quietened down on matters of law and order. Whereas New Labour was panicky and frenetic, launching endless criminal-justice reforms, the coalition has mostly just tried to save money. Police forces in England and Wales have faced budget cuts of 20% since 2011. In September 2014 the number of officers stood at 127,075—the lowest since 2001. The coalition is also trying to trim the £2 billion legal-aid bill by about a quarter. In one area the cuts have hurt. Prison officer numbers dropped by 41% between Party, merged its eight local police forces into just one. Some Scots fear that policing is becoming too uniform and that the police will abandon rural areas. But the reform saved £64m in its first year and the transition has been fairly smooth. Police chiefs south of the border look on enviously. England and Wales plod on with 43 forces, many of them far too small to deal with complex crimes such as kidnap and trafficking. Labour has implied it would ditch the current set-up and move to a smaller number of regional forces, although it has not gone into much detail. The Conservatives are unlikely to entertain such a reform, partly because it might offend their rural supporters but also because it would entail abolishing their biggest criminal-justice innovation in government: police and crime commissioners (PCCs). These 41 elected watchdogs—one for each police force in England and Wales outside London—were meant to provide democratic oversight for the police. Yet they have failed to grab the public imagination. Fewer than 15% bothered to vote for them in 2012, the lowest turnout in any election since the second world war. When the PCC for the West Midlands died two years later, just 10% went to the polls to choose his replacement. He had argued his job should be scrapped; Labour has prom- ised to do just that. If it wins an outright majority, the Conservative Party would probably try to repeal the 1998 Human Rights Act, which incorporates the European Convention on Human Rights into English law. A “bill of rights” would replace it. That would cause a political ruckus, not to mention a legal one. Not all Conservatives hate the Human Rights Act; not all Labour MPs like it. But even if the Conservatives managed to ditch the act, the country would still be bound by the EU’s Charter of Fundamental Rights, which itself draws on the convention, along with other international treaties. And after 17 years many convention rights are firmly rooted in English common law. The Liberal Democrats promise radical reform, too. They would review whether to decriminalise cannabis and would remove responsilibity for drugs from the Home Office, handing it to the Department of Health. Such a shift might make decisions such as that in 2014 to ban khat, a mild narcotic, a shade less likely. That particular prohibition was introduced despite advice to the contrary from the government’s advisory council on the misuse of drugs and the House of Commons Home Affairs Committee. The Conservative Party is having none of that. But for much of this parliament it has adopted a strikingly liberal position in the balance between security and liberty. The government got rid of “control orders”, introduced under Labour, which placed draconian restrictions on people suspected of terrorism but not convicted of a crime, and replaced them with rather less stringent “Terrorism Prevention and Investigation Measures”. As more Britons go to join the Islamic State in Syria and Iraq and fears about home-grown radicals swell, though, no politician will want to look soft on terrorists. Labour has called for stricter security measures, including the revival of its control orders. On this issue, at least, the politics of law and order may turn into a fight to be toughest. 7 Bang-up job England and Wales, 2005=100 120 Prison population Police officers 100 80 Violent crime 60 2005 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 Sources: Ministry of Justice; ONS; Crime Survey for England and Wales UK ELECTION 2015 / The Economist April 11th 2015 11 WELFARE Benefits treat Expect even bigger changes in the welfare system A LTHOUGH Conservatives revere the memory of Margaret Thatcher, they have mostly abandoned her style of politics. The conviction that reforms must be driven through even when they are highly unpopular; the vision of politics as a ceaseless struggle against one’s enemies; the stark dividing of society between decent, aspirational folk and the idle of all social classes—such things went out with leg warmers. But they sometimes resurface, no more so than in welfare policy. The last Labour government presided over a boom in welfare. Between 1997-98 and the crisis year of 2007-08, spending on social security rose by 44% in real terms, according to the Institute for Fiscal Studies, a non-partisan think-tank. It jumped even more sharply as the economy slumped and unemployment went up. In 2010 the new coalition government announced it was time for a revolution. That revolution had two parts. The first, and the noisiest, was an attack on workingage welfare. “Where is the fairness”, asked George Osborne, the chancellor, channelling Thatcher in 2012, “for the shift-worker, leaving home in the dark hours of the early morning, who looks up at the closed blinds of their next-door neighbour sleeping off a life on benefits?” He limited increases in working-age benefits, stripped 12 There’s a limit Social security benefits and tax credits 2015-16 prices % of GDP 15 £bn Non-pensioner Pensioner 250 12 200 9 150 6 100 3 50 0 1997 2000 10 15 0 Source: IFS well-to-do families of child benefit and capped the amount of welfare that could be given to any one family. The Tory work and pensions secretary, Iain Duncan Smith, meanwhile went after the roots of dependency by nudging people into work and by merging numerous benefits into a single “universal credit” (UC) that would taper only slowly as people found jobs, thus making work pay. Mr Osborne’s stinginess paid off. Although the household welfare cap hardly saved any money—huge families subsisting on handouts being rarer than politicians think—the overall freeze on workingage welfare has slowed the rate of increase. Between 2013-14 and 2015-16 most benefits UK ELECTION 2015 / The Economist April 11th 2015 will rise by only 1% a year; had Mr Osborne not intervened, the increases would have been 2.2%, 2.7% and 1.2%. Mr Duncan Smith’s morally charged reforms fared less well. Large savings were supposed to come from changes to disability benefits, but the coalition stumbled badly. The process of assessing whether people on sickness benefit were fit for work was contracted out to a firm, Atos, which mismanaged the task, leaving many genuinely disabled people without any income, others stuck in a clogged appeal system and observers concluding the government did not know what it was doing. A welfare-towork project known as the Work Programme proved susceptible to fraud. The universal credit has been dogged by IT problems and is well behind schedule. Meanwhile, more quietly, a second big reform to social security has rolled along. The state pension, which accounts for twofifths of welfare spending, is to be simplified: a complex dual-tier system is being replaced by a single flat-rate pension. In sharp contrast to working-age welfare, pensions are protected by what is known as a “triple-lock”: they rise each year in line with prices, average earnings or 2.5%, whichever is higher. People approaching retirement are therefore in luck—though the young will fare less well, since the retirement age is going up. If Mr Osborne is still chancellor in midMay he promises to squeeze working-age welfare harder, trimming the budget by about £12 billion by 2017-18. He has been vague about how he would do this, though, beyond hinting at a further freeze to benefits. Labour and the Lib Dems would cut working-age welfare much less. The day after Mr Osborne’s final budget on March 18th, his Liberal Democrat counterpart, Danny Alexander, unveiled an alternative budget that contained just £3.5 billion of welfare cuts. The Scottish National Party and the Greens would be milder still. Labour has so far said less, for fear of a return to Thatcher-era unelectability, when the party was painted as being on the side of the workshy. The party would, however, impose a means test on the annual “winter fuel” payment that currently goes to all pensioners. Although that would save little money, it suggests that Labour could be a trifle tougher on the old—a bold gesture, given how frequently the old vote. As for Mr Duncan Smith’s attempt to transform the welfare system, that might be put on hold whichever party wins the election. One of the next government’s first decisions will be whether to carry on with UC, or pause and recalibrate, or scrap it altogether. That would be a disappointment: universal credit is a good idea. But if the coalition demonstrated one thing, it is that reforming welfare is tough. 7 HEALTH C ARE Too big to bail out The National Health Service has been weaponised B RITONS will not hear a bad word said about the National Health Service, but its problems are becoming hard to ignore. A combination of austerity and an increasingly needy population has left it short of money. It also suffers from a kind of developmental disease. The NHS was built in the 1940s, when health care was mostly about treating broken legs and infections in hospital. Its biggest task now is to improve the quality of life of chronically ill old people. The NHS needs to change profoundly while running flat out. Managing that will be a mighty challenge for the next government. In 2010 the Conservative Party put up posters promising the party would “cut the deficit, not the NHS”. The Tory-Liberal Democrat coalition stuck to that promise, yet the health service is feeling the pinch. Although NHS spending has risen by an average of 0.7% a year in real terms, spending per person has been falling in England since 2013. Many hospitals are struggling. Large accident-and-emergency wards often fail to see 95% of patients within four hours, as a government target suggests they should— and they are missing by bigger margins. In 2014 fully 3m people, the highest number in six years, were waiting for treatment. It does not help that money is being frittered away. Unnecessary drugs and X-rays cost £2 billion a year, according to the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges; the Cancer Drugs Fund, which pays over the odds for 2020, the sum NHS executives say is needed, increasing yearly spending after tackling the deficit in 2017/18. If the Tories have a plan to reform the NHS, they will probably keep quiet about it: after all, they spent the second half ofthe 2010-15 parliament rowing back from an immense reorganisation that they had launched in the first half. This reform, which aimed to stimulate competition and enabled groups of local doctors to purchase services, was unpopular with voters, caused much upheaval and delivered few obvious benefits. The Tory health secretary, Andrew Lansley, was replaced by Jeremy Hunt, who has mostly tried to keep the NHS out of the news. Still, many think structural reform is overdue. Healthcare is currently separate from “social care”—a catch-all category encompassing mental-health services, nursing homes and the like, which are often run by local councils. Fusing the two seems sensible. And it would probably save money, if hospital beds could be emptied of people who could manage at home with a bit of extra help. Labour has claimed the idea as its own, dubbing it “Whole Person Care”; the Tories quietly back a similar plan by Simon Stevens, the head of NHS England. But no party will be drawn into discussing specifics. Moving care into the community might mean closing hospitals, which would be desperately unpopular. And it would not be easy to keep the current service ticking along while the new one is built. The Conservatives’ election campaign MUCH OF THE PRIVATE PROVISION IN THE NHS WAS INTRODUCED BY LABOUR new medicines, drained £280m last year. The Conservative Party is again pledging to protect the NHS budget if it returns to power, with up to £2 billion extra a year until 2019-2020. Labour has promised to shell out £2.5 billion more than the Conservatives, spending it on new doctors and nurses, although the cash might not be available until 2017-18. The Liberal Democrats plan to spend £8 billion more a year by will focus on increased transparency and inspection—the most successful part of their record (if the classic last resort of a beleaguered health ministry). Putting outcomes online—especially those of surgeons—has lead to improvements and vigorous patrolling has driven up standards, albeit mostly by increasing staff levels. The Tories made hay out of an inquiry into the awful neglect of patients in Mid Stafford hospital, which had happened on Labour’s watch. Labour will accuse the Tories of plans to shrink and privatise the NHS. In fact, by signing up to Simon Stevens’ plan Labour has committed to stepping up privatisation, and in any case much of the private provision in the system appeared as a result of reforms launched by the last, Labour, government. Under the coalition, on the other hand, competition has not grown much. The Tories retort that Labour’s line is mere “political posturing”. Polls suggest most people do not much care about how NHS services are delivered, as long as they are good and free at the point of access. The Liberal Democrats are likely to talk about their Better Care Fund, which has managed to shift small amounts of money from the NHS to social care. Nick Clegg is also keen to prioritise mental health. Both ideas, ofcourse, could starve other NHS services of money. Conservatives were outraged when it was suggested that Ed Miliband, Labour’s leader, wanted to “weaponise” the NHS as a political issue in the election. But it is already so. Scottish separatists claimed last year that the country must break away to protect its health service from free-market Tories in London. David Cameron has attacked Labour’s management ofthe NHS in Wales. Every party will wield health care as a weapon, regardless of the strength of its arguments. 7 UK ELECTION 2015 / The Economist April 11th 2015 13 BUSINESS AND ENTREPRENEURSHIP (Almost) sealing the deal Were they less Eurosceptic, the Tories would have the business vote in the bag F EBRUARY 19th was “Demo Day” for 16 technology startups in London. A succession of Steve Jobs wannabees bounced onto a stage to deliver three-minute pitches to venture capitalists. English self-deprecation was nowhere in evidence. One team showed how it could compress online videos by 50% more than the competition, another how architects might be persuaded to use a virtual-reality system. In 2013 more businesses were created in Britain than in any year for at least a decade. One lobby group, Enterprise Nation, estimates that last year’s tally was even higher. Many of these will be one-man or one-woman outfits—builders and publicsector workers shaken out of their regular jobs by recession and austerity. Increasingly, though, businesses are being started by the sort of ambitious, well-educated folk who will end up creating jobs. Some reckon London has the most vibrant startup scene in Europe. When the coalition government took office in 2010, it was obvious that the two engines of growth Labour had relied upon—financial services and an expanding public sector—were sputtering. The coalition quickly declared its intention to “rebalance” the economy from the public to the private sector, from services to manufacturing and from London to everywhere else. As Demo Day suggests, it achieved one of those three aims. The Conservative chancellor of the exchequer, George Osborne, cut corporation tax from 28% to 20% and trimmed the top rate of income tax to make Britain seem more business-friendly. To encourage innovators, barriers to entry were lowered in industries such as banking and energy. The coalition government also tried to tackle two big corporate gripes: the reluctance of banks to lend following the financial crisis and a shortage of skilled workers. Vince Cable, the Liberal Democrat minister for business, created a British Business Bank— the equivalent of Germany’s famed Mittelstandsbank—to dole out loans to small- and medium-sized businesses. The Treasury changed tax rules in an attempt to encourage people to invest. About 440,000 people started an apprenticeship in 2013-14, up from 280,000 14 when the coalition came to power. All the main parties agree on the virtues of these schemes and are trying to outbid each other in promising even more. David Cameron says that he wants to fund 3m apprenticeships by 2020, while Labour has pledged to create 80,000 “high-quality” ones a year. The coalition government also tried to give a hand to manufacturing industry. Export financing is now more generous. The ugly-sounding “high-value manufacturing catapult”, set up in 2011, prods business, academia and government to work better together. This is part of a new chain of elite technology and innovation centres trying to bridge the gap between early innovation (a traditional British strength) and industrial-scale manufacturing (a familiar failing). Whether all this has helped manufacturing, however, is not clear. Its share of GDP has stayed at 10% over the past few years. And what little export recovery has occurred has been driven by services, not manufactured goods. Businessmen tend to support the government—whatever its complexion—not the opposition. But the Labour Party has made that seem intuitive. Not since Michael Foot in the early 1980s has a Labour leader had such a poor reputation in corner offices. Whereas his “New Labour” pre- UK ELECTION 2015 / The Economist April 11th 2015 decessors, Gordon Brown and Tony Blair, courted the business vote, Mr Miliband revels in doing the opposite. He has picked rows not just with unpopular firms, such as energy companies, but also with the leaders of trusted companies like Boots. He appears keen on intervening in markets and adding costs to businesses. As for Labour’s proposed “mansion tax” on expensive homes, the party “could not have come up with a tax more calculated to irritate businesspeople,” says one London businessman. The dwindling band of bosses still sympathetic to Labour hope that Ed Balls, the shadow chancellor, and Chuka Umunna, the shadow business secretary, will temper Mr Miliband’s instincts if he becomes prime minister. But then there is Europe. The ever more Eurosceptic Conservative Party promises a referendum on Britain’s membership of the EU if re-elected—a plan that strikes many business folk as unnecessary and dangerous. One poll by the Confederation of British Industry showed that 71% of its members think that the EU has had a “positive impact”; a recent poll from the British Chambers of Commerce reveals that well over half of its members think a withdrawal would “impact negatively” on their businesses. Partly, enthusiasm for Europe reflects concerns over immigration policy. Companies want workers from continental Europe to make up for skills shortages in Britain. Technology firms have lobbied furiously for more software engineers. Business folk are not blindly pro-Europe. They are irritated about the tardiness of completing the single market in services, in particular. But they loathe the uncertainty that a referendum would generate. If there is to be one, they say, get it over with as soon as possible. 7 INFRAS TRUCTURE Creaking foundations The next government will face an infrastructure backlog W HEN the Conservative-Lib Dem coalition came to power in 2010, infrastructure projects were pushed down the agenda. The government had a lot to be getting on with: it had launched big reforms to schools, welfare and the NHS. Balancing the books seemed more urgent than splashing out on roads and sewers that would not even be finished by the end of the parliament. Besides, there was an Olympic Park to be built. Over the past four years, as the construction industry slumped and trains became ever more crammed, the government tried to find a forward gear. George Osborne, the chancellor of the exchequer, donned a hard hat at the slightest opportunity and boasted about returning to a Victorian age of engineering. A few big projects are under way and others were given the go-ahead. Yet the next government will face a huge infrastructure backlog. This will cost political capital as well as money, for railways and airports divide opinion in all the big political parties. Despite Mr Osborne’s enthusiasm, net public-sector investment has fallen from £53 billion in 2009-10 to £25 billion in 2013-14 and is set to remain low in the years to come. Yet building stuff has become even more costly: between 2012 and 2014 the cost of infrastructure increased by 5% in real terms. The shortfall is becoming an electoral issue. Liberal Democrat MPs, in particular, are running hard on the issue of potholes. Between 2010 and 2015 money for flood defences managed by the Environment Agency, a quango, decreased by 15%. This became an embarrassment when parts of south-west England were submerged for several months at the end of 2013. Declaring, uncharacteristically, that money is no object, David Cameron quickly replenished the budget. Having ruled out building more airport runways around London, the coalition government half-relented. In 2012 it appointed a commission led by Sir Howard Davies, an economist, to tell it what to do. He has come up with a short list of three options. Two involve laying more tarmac at Heathrow; the other would entail building another runway at Gatwick. Conveniently for the coalition government, Sir Howard will say which one he prefers a few weeks after the general election. This will, of course, be highly inconvenient for the next lot. The previous, Labour, government approved a new runway at Heathrow Airport. But among the dissenters was the then environment secretary, now Labour leader, Ed Miliband. Airports divide the Tories, too. Many Conservatives in the south-east loathe the prospect of more low-flying jets over their constituencies. Among them is the ambitious mayor of London, Boris Johnson, who will run for Parliament in a west London seat. Mr Johnson wanted an entirely new airport east of London. Sir Howard ruled this out, but Boris might find a way to rule it back in. After much wrangling in Parliament, the government pushed through legislation for HS2, a controversial £50 billion high-speed railway between London and Manchester. The railway is opposed by mostly Conservative MPs whose constituents live along the route in the Chilterns, and who have added to the costs by insisting on extra tunnelling. Some in the Labour Party, such as Ed Balls, the shadow chancellor, have been sceptical of the railway; but if he decided to postpone it he would have to answer to Labour leaders in Manchester, who are keen supporters. The Greens and UKIP both oppose it. Despite low borrowing costs, the government expected private investors to fund around 64% of its wishlist of nationally significant projects. Yet uncertainty over whether or not schemes will go ahead has made many cautious. And the government only belatedly started to cut red tape. On February 12th Parliament approved an infrastructure act which will cut delays on projects that have received planning permission. It will also make the Highways Agency, which manages Britain’s trunk roads, into a government-owned body with guaranteed funding. Part ofthe challenge for the next government is working out how to pay for big projects such as HS2 without neglecting the sort of basic repairs to roads and railways which do not entail ribbon-cutting but which, if not done, infuriate voters. Boosting private investment would help, but so would ring-fencing infrastructure investment from cuts and giving priority to less glamorous schemes. Labour and the Liberal Democrats would probably have more money to splash around. Whereas the Conservatives propose to bring the entire budget into balance, the other two parties would borrow to invest in infrastructure. Even if the cash can be found, getting things moving will be tricky. Part of Labour’s plans include setting up an Infrastructure Commission to advise on important bits of railways and roads and to try and make the planning process a bit smoother. The Tories counter that this could just add more bureaucracy to the whole system. Giving local authorities more power may be more helpful. This has worked in Manchester: since 2012 the combined authority there has been able to keep some tax revenues after investing in the transport network. But the main task will be to persuade politicians—who work within a five yearly cycle—to start planning for future generations. If they do not, Britain’s roads and airports will continue to moulder. 7 UK ELECTION 2015 / The Economist April 11th 2015 15 ENERGY AND GREENERY Power play Greens to the left of them, angry consumers to the right of them A MONG the large problems inherited by the coalition was a monster in energy. Around a fifth of Britain’s electricity generation capacity, including a lot of condemned coal-fired and nuclear facilities, faced closure—and, after decades of under-investment, it was not clear what would replace them. The industry regulator, Ofgem, warned of power cuts by 2015. Under European Union rules, moreover, much of the new capacity had to use renewable energy sources, which are expensive, and Britain was broke. For extra complication, the energy portfolio was taken by the Liberal Democrats, whose energy secretaries, Chris Huhne, then Ed Davey, became hate figures for the many Tory backbenchers who disdain renewable energy, the EU and Lib Dems similarly. That Britain had helped design the EU strictures—which should mean around 30% of Britain’s electricity coming from renewables by 2020—impressed them not a bit; nor did it that their leader David Cameron, who had installed a tiny wind turbine on his roof, was supposedly a serious green. That just made them angrier. A row over the spread of onshore wind turbines— one of the cheapest sources of renewable energy on a blustery island, but disliked by many country-dwelling Tories—raged throughout the parliament. It was tough; but Mr Huhne, angrily, and Mr Davey, in his more conciliatory way, got a lot done. A new energy law passed in 2013 rebuilt the market around subsidies to renewable energy producers, most ofwhich are covered in increments to household bills. Even before this the coalition was raining money on green energy. Between 2010 and 2015, £37 billion went on thousands of solar panels, shimmering on suburban rooftops, two of the world’s biggest offshore wind-farms and other climate-friendly paraphernalia. With bigger wind-farms planned—including a 400-turbine behemoth off Yorkshire—the cost of Britain’s renewable roll-out is set to triple, raising energy bills by over £50 a year by 2020. If Germany, which gets over 30% of its electricity from renewables, is a guide, this will also cause major grid management problems, further hiking the cost. With its commitment to the market, ex- 16 The cost of hot air Domestic energy prices and inflation January 2000=100 350 Gas 300 250 Electricity 200 150 Consumer prices 100 50 2000 05 10 15 Source: Lazarus Partnership cellent universities and (by European standards) dislike of throwing taxpayer money at greenery, Britain should be leading the effort to restore economic sanity to a European energy policy that looks, if not clearly unsustainable, then appallingly ill-timed. The coalition government tried to do that: by bringing forward a reverse auction of green energy contracts in February it claimed to have driven down wholesale prices, saving over £100m a year. Yet this was a marginal saving; and falling coal and gas prices have made Mr Davey’s insistence that the renewables splurge will one day appear good value seem wishful. Britain’s next government will need to think much harder about how to mitigate the cost and glitches of the energy policy the current one has been forced to implement. No party promises that. Lib Dems love renewables. And though Mr Cameron is UK ELECTION 2015 / The Economist April 11th 2015 said to now deride EU energy policy as a load of “green crap”, his EU reform agenda is devoted to less complicated, mostly less important, changes, like curbing migration. Meanwhile Ed Miliband mainly wants to tackle, in the wrong way, a smaller part of Britain’s energy quandary—an energy retail market dominated by six big suppliers. One of the Labour leader’s few moments of real popularity came in 2013, when he promised that a Labour government would freeze household energy bills for 20 months. He has not dropped that promise. Labour would also give Ofgem new powers to enforce additional cuts in fuel bills, which Mr Miliband says could be worth a further £100 a year to households. Little wonder voters liked that: average energy bills rose between 2004 and 2013 by 75%, to £1,140, when overall inflation amounted to just 23%. This was not all the fault of the “big six”. The rise has recently been driven largely by green subsidies and by the costs the firms incurred in closing down dirty power-stations—both of which, as a former energy secretary, Mr Miliband helped initiate. No matter. The big six were accused of profiteering and became the focus of a Labour attack on corporate greed. The Tories and Lib Dems say Mr Miliband’s promised price freeze is irrelevant, or ridiculous. Together with a steep fall in the oil price, competition has started to push prices down a little. Indeed, the Tories argue that Labour’s threat has kept prices artificially high: they suspect the energy firms are holding them up to avoid having them frozen at a low rate. Still, unnerved by Labour’s attack, the coalition transferred some green levies from household bills to general taxation, which has encouraged the party’s backbenchers to demand they be scrapped altogether. Led by Owen Paterson, an aggrieved former environment minister and climate-change sceptic, they want an alternative splurge, on shale gas, which Britain has plenty of. But it may be hard to get at, in a crowded country, and urging the government to pick a different sort of winner—not windmills but fracking rigs—is hardly enlightened. The row provides an opening for the UK Independence Party, which wrongly attributes the high energy prices simply to green subsidies. It scoffs at mainstream climate science, so logically considers that there is no need for “ugly, disgusting” wind turbines, as UKIP’s leader Nigel Farage calls them. On the left, the Greens, unimpressed by the coalition’s historic splurge, meanwhile advocate a “major programme” of investment in green energy to achieve a zero-carbon economy pronto. This is what happens when mainstream parties shirk their responsibility to hold a serious and necessary debate: fanatics take it over. 7 EDUC ATION Repeat after me The coalition has reformed schools more than anything else I N THE coalition government’s darkest days—when deficit reduction stalled, the economy seemed to slip back into recession, health and welfare reform went awry and continental Europeans vexingly refused to do what the British wanted them to—there was always one point of light. At least school reform was chugging along. It was, indeed, the coalition’s most obvious accomplishment. Every government is determined to transform schools, and almost every government fails. In 1976 the Labour prime minister James Callaghan declared that schools must do more than give workingclass children “just enough learning to earn their living in a factory”. Margaret Thatcher and John Major brought in a national curriculum and tougher inspectors. Tony Blair fought to ensure that every primary-school child was at least literate and numerate. Still, there remained far too many of what one Labour Party spin-doctor called “bog-standard comprehensives”. In office between 1997 and 2010, Labour tried to change that, but its efforts were constrained by the teachers’ unions and by the local education authorities that oversaw almost all schools. PISA tests conducted by the OECD, a rich-world think-tank, reveal the truth: although Britain spends more than most on schooling, English 15-yearolds fare no better than average. And their test results have hardly improved over the years, while countries such as Poland and South Korea have zoomed ahead. To revivify England’s schools, the coalition embarked on a colossal structural reform. Soon after coming to power it changed the law to allow many schools to become “academies”, giving them much greater say over how they spend their budgets and deploy staff. Academies had existed before, but under the coalition their numbers exploded from just over 200 to more than 4,000. The government also oversaw the birth of hundreds of “free” schools, which have the same freedoms as academies but were set up by parents, churches or community groups and are thus, as it were, untainted by a history of local-government control. Most attention was paid to poor pupils. Schools that educate lots of children from poor families or broken homes were given extra money to spend on them. Some used this “pupil premium” to pay for extra teachers; others presented children with clothes or bicycles to encourage them to get to lessons on time. Teach First, a clone of Teach for America, sends some of the most promising trainee teachers into the poorest neighbourhoods. Michael Gove, the Conservative secre- tary of state for education from 2010 to 2014, also pushed through what seemed like endless tweaks to curricula and exams. He toughened GCSEs, which had been prone to grade inflation. Courses have been made more rigorous, though also more parochial and inward-looking (rather like Britain itself in the past few years). There is more British history in the history curriculum, more British geography in the geography curriculum and more emphasis on practical skills in science. Marks are increasingly based on written tests rather than on coursework. All this earned Mr Gove the hatred of teachers, for whom curriculum changes mean holidays spent preparing new lessons. He returned their contempt, sniping at the teachers’ unions and referring to the education establishment as “the blob”. Though he was the government’s most effective minister, he was removed from his1 UK ELECTION 2015 / The Economist April 11th 2015 17 2 job by David Cameron in 2014. He had sim- ply attracted too much opposition. Still, early evidence suggests that Mr Gove’s reforms are working. A study by two academics at the London School of Economics found a rapid—if small—improvement in test results at secondary schools that became academies. The most startling improvement can be seen at the schools belonging to well-managed chains such as ARK and Harris in London and Perry Beeches in the Midlands. One report for the Sutton Trust, a charity that promotes social mobility, found that the proportion of poor pupils achieving five good GCSEs in the five top academy chains is at least 15 percentage points higher than the average for similar pupils in non-academy schools. Yet these are encouraging signs, not the proof of overall improvement that would silence doubters. And sceptics can point to some embarrassing failures. Some academies and free schools proved so dire that they were shut down or handed to other sponsors to manage. A handful of Muslim and Christian free schools also turned out to be reinforcing narrow-mindedness among pupils. Since these schools are in effect under the auspices of central government, the coalition got the blame when they went wrong. There was a hint, too, of metropolitan bias in the coalition’s reforms. Free schools appear to attract the children of middleclass parents disproportionately. Teach First started in London and has only recently spread to the south and east coasts of England. Yet London and the big cities are not the places that need the most attention. The three local authorities with the worst results in England are Knowsley (a poor, mostly white Merseyside suburb), Blackpool and the Isle of Wight. Such places have few aspirational immigrants and struggle to attract good teachers. Scotland and Wales, which run their own education systems, have stood apart from all this. But their schools could do with a shake-up, too. Scotland marginally outperformed England in maths and reading on the last PISA tests, but fell behind on science. Welsh education has slumped in all three areas. A shortage of effective, recently trained teachers looks like the main reason for that. Scotland, which prides itself on a more egalitarian outlook than its southern neighbour and offers free university tuition, nonetheless does badly by its poorest children. A mere 2% of the poorest fifth of Scottish 18-year-olds had grades sufficient for entry to top-tier universities, a percentage point behind England. Whatever the complexion of the government, schools will feel the pinch in the next parliament. The Conservatives have promised to protect per-pupil spending only in cash terms—that is, not accounting 18 No sticker shock here University entry rate for 18-year-olds from poorest quintile, % 20 England Northern Ireland 15 Wales 10 Scotland 5 0 2004 06 08 10 12 14 Source: UCAS for inflation. Labour and the Liberal Democrats propose to be only a shade more generous. That will make change tougher, since money helps to lubricate reform. If they stay in power, the Conservatives nonetheless promise to plough ahead with their structural reforms. David Cameron has promised 500 more free schools. The other parties would not reverse course, exactly, but would proceed much more slowly. The Liberal Democrats have argued that money should be spent on repairing dilapidated schools rather than on setting up new ones. Tristram Hunt, Labour’s education spokesman, has criticised free schools for hiring unqualified teachers and for adding capacity where it is not needed. He wants stronger oversight of free schools and academies. Ofthe Westminster-based parties, UKIP has the most radical education policy. It wants more selective grammar schools— which would return England to a school system it mostly abandoned in the 1970s. Grammar schools are also at issue in view into university funding by John Browne, an oil man. That review suggested removing the cap on annual fees. The Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition did not take that radical step, but it raised the maximum considerably, to £9,000 a year—to the rage of many Liberal Democrat-voting students, who promptly abandoned the party. In opposition, Labour has turned against its old policy. It now promises to lower the maximum that universities can charge from £9,000 to £6,000 a year. Ed Miliband, the party’s leader, argues that students are graduating with crushing quantities of debt and points out (correctly) that high tuition fees are not cheap for the taxpayer: student-loan repayment terms are so generous that a large share is in effect forgiven by the state. Labour’s proposals worry university leaders, who reckon that student fees are much more reliable than government funding—which can always be nibbled away in future spending rounds. To add to the uncertainty, many in Labour think the proposal may end up shifting towards a graduate tax if the party wins power. And Labour’s plan is one of its most regressive. The Institute for Fiscal Studies, a politically neutral think-tank, says that, perversely, the move would benefit high-earning graduates more than moderate earners. Those who go into, say, banking tend to repay their debts quickly and in full, so a cut to tuition fees helps them a lot. Others are more likely to have their debts written off. British higher education, always fairly strong, is bigger and more varied than it was before tuition fees. The “graduate premium” (the value of a degree in terms of lifetime earnings) has held up through a TUITION FEES HAVE MADE HIGHER EDUC ATION BIGGER AND MORE VARIED, WITHOUT DETERRING POOR STUDENTS Northern Ireland, where many excellent ones have clung on. Sinn Fein, the dominant nationalist party, is against them. So is the Catholic Church—strangely, since many grammar schools are Catholic. UKIP aside, no national party has what politicians call a “retail offer” on schools. Promises to set up more free schools and arguments over oversight, though important, are hard to sell to voters. But when it comes to higher education the dividing lines are sharp. Labour introduced university tuition fees in 1998 at an extremely low level and gradually permitted colleges to charge more and more. Just before it was turfed out of office in 2010 it commissioned a re- UK ELECTION 2015 / The Economist April 11th 2015 long economic slump. And higher fees have not dissuaded youngsters from less cosseted homes from applying to university, as many feared they would. Quite the reverse is true—though the poor are still far less likely to get into a top university than are pupils from privileged backgrounds. Britain is the second most popular destination for international students, after America. It would probably draw even more had the coalition government not tightened visa rules in an attempt to hit a target of restraining net migration to below 100,000 a year. The country’s universities are popular, growing and often prospering. The main task for their political guardians is not to mess up a good thing. 7 THE FUTURE OF THE UK Pulling at the seams The United Kingdom is far less united now than it was in 2010. It could unravel in the next parliament P OLITICAL rivals had to admit it: he was perhaps the canniest statesman of his age. He led a powerful, disciplined group of MPs, who, by offering and then withdrawing support from the big political parties, caused havoc in Westminster. He loathed England, seeing it as snobby and imperialistic, and was determined to loosen its grip over his homeland. And in the end his country broke free of the United Kingdom. He was Charles Stewart Parnell, the grandfather of Irish independence. But is it any wonder that Alex Salmond reportedly sees parallels between Parnell’s career and his own? The charismatic former leader of the Scottish National Party (SNP) will almost certainly return to Parliament as an MP in May, at the head of a band of separatists. There, like Parnell, he will try to win more powers for his country while steering it towards self-government. Unlike in Parnell’s case, separation might well occur in his lifetime. Indeed, it could happen in the next parliament. When a Labour government began to devolve power to Scotland—and, to a lesser extent, Wales—in 1998, many believed that nationalism would fade away. And for a few years that seemed to happen. But the Scots have come to feel more and more Urban rebels Scottish referendum results, 2014 Orkney Islands Shetland Islands YES, >50% by*: 5-10 0-5 NO, >50% by*: 15-20 10-15 5-10 0-5 Dundee OVERALL RESULT 45% 55% Glasgow YES NO Sources: Electoral Commission office; ©OS. Media 028/15 *Percentage points separate from the rest of Britain. Elections to the Scottish Parliament have gradually turned into referendums on the government in Westminster, chiefly benefiting Mr Salmond’s SNP. The party formed a minority government in Scotland in 2007 and swept to outright victory in 2011. The unionist parties in Westminster tried to stop the nationalist engine, promising Scotland more powers over tax and home affairs—and then actually delivering them in the Scotland Act of 2012. But it was too late. Conservative politicians have long been toxic in Scotland, where they are blamed for the decline of heavy industry in the 1980s. But Labour is a spent force, too. The party has neglected Scottish politics, regarding the country as a kind of Westminster farm team. Brilliant left-wing Scots such as Gordon Brown, the last Labour prime minister, and Alistair Darling, the last chancellor, are spirited out to play big roles in London. In October 2012 David Cameron agreed to hold a referendum on Scottish independence. For many months unionists were complacent: in January 2014 one senior figure in Better Together, the pro-union campaign, told The Economist that the only question was how large the margin of victory would be. But the nationalists ran a shrewd campaign. Scots were assured they could keep everything they liked about Britain, such as the pound, while getting rid of everything they loathed, such as Tory governments and austerity. When a YouGov poll put the nationalists narrowly ahead just two weeks before the vote, unionist leaders panicked. They published a “vow” assuring Scots that they would receive extensive new powers over taxation and welfare if they voted No. Championed in a barnstorming eve-ofpoll speech by Mr Brown, this pledge seemed to work. On September 18th Scots voted by 55% to 45% to stay, though the working-class Labour strongholds of Glasgow and Dundee both voted Yes (see map). Mr Salmond resigned. The unionists kept their word. The day after the vote, Mr Cameron announced that a commission led by Lord Smith, a Scottish peer, would draw up plans for further devolution. The Conservative, Labour and Liberal Democrat parties all go into May’s election committed to his rec- ommendations. All would give Edinburgh control of at least 60% of its spending, including full power over income tax. Nationalists say this does not go far enough. And the nationalists are on a roll. Membership of the SNP has risen from 25,000 on referendum day to some 100,000 (with the whole of the United Kingdom to draw from, the Conservative Party has about 150,000 members). Under Nicola Sturgeon, Mr Salmond’s leftish successor, the SNP has surged to almost 50% in polls of voting intention in Scotland. One poll published on March 4th by Lord Ashcroft, a rich Tory peer, suggested that the SNP might take 56 of Scotland’s 59 seats in Westminster, up from just six in 2010. Even if support for his party falls back somewhat before the election in May, Mr Salmond will probably lead the third-largest Westminster party and play a pivotal 1 Och aye the yes Voting intention, %, for: SNP Scottish independence SCOTTISH PARLIAMENT ELECTION REFERENDUM CAMPAIGN START SCOTLAND ACT VOTE 50 40 30 20 2010 11 12 13 14 15 Source: YouGov UK ELECTION 2015 / The Economist April 11th 2015 19 2 role in the next parliament. He could dis- rupt the unionist consensus as flamboyantly and effectively as did Parnell. It is hard to imagine a scenario in which the election result does not help the SNP and the broader cause of Scottish nationalism. Another Tory-led government would reinforce the party’s central myth (and it is a myth): that Scotland is starkly more leftwing than England and thus should break free from its right-wing neighbours. A Toryled government would also hold a referendum on Britain’s EU membership. That would give Ms Sturgeon and Mr Salmond a fine excuse to go into the 2016 Scottish elections asking for a mandate for a second independence referendum. Why, they will ask, should Scotland be yanked out of the EU by English voters? A Labour government might be even more dangerous for the union. If the party does not obtain a majority, it might try to govern with the support of Scottish nationalist MPs. Although the two parties probably would not form a coalition, the SNP has declared itself open to an arrangement where it would support a Labour government in budgets and votes of confidence in return for concessions such as further devolution to Scotland. The prospect ofa government dependent on a party that is determined to break the union—and under Mr Salmond’s canny leadership determined to use that leverage to secure more spending for Scotland—would almost certainly fuel anti-Scottish feeling in England. The English are increasingly hacked off about Scotland’s privileges. Under the 20 much-criticised Barnett Formula, which allocates cash to Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales, the British state spends about £1,300 ($1,900) more per head north of the border than it does nationally. Moreover, Scottish MPs in Westminster get to vote on devolved subjects like health care that affect the English but not their constituents. Since the referendum, this so-called “West Lothian Question” has burst out of university common rooms and onto the pages of the tabloids. For most of the last decade the share of English voters thinking that Scottish MPs should not vote on English laws hovered around 20%. A poll by ComRes in October put the figure at 66%. change would weaken Parliament by creating two classes of MP. So if the Tories win power, Labour and the SNP will complain that Scots are being sidelined. If Labour wins, the Tories will tell the English that they are being held to ransom by Scots. Both scenarios threaten to plunge the country into a vicious cycle as each attempt to placate one side alienates the other, eroding the assumption of shared interests underpinning Britain’s unitary state. To satisfy resentful voters on both sides, London might have to make the country’s constituent parts self-governing in domestic matters. But even federalism might not hold the union together: support for independence has exceeded 50% in some recent Scottish polls. Scotland is not the only place where nationalism has rumbled. The Welsh may not fancy independence (support for it there hit a record low of 3% after Scotland’s referendum) but they do want to loosen London’s grip. Like the Scots, they got a devolved legislature and government in 1998, but theirs are comparatively weedy. In February Mr Cameron and Mr Clegg offered to devolve income tax-raising powers to Wales to move it to the “reserved” model of devolution that Scotland uses (whereby powers are assumed to sit at the devolved level unless specifically withheld for Westminster). Carwyn Jones, the Labour first minister, called this proposal insufficient, huffing that Wales was not being treated with as much respect as Scotland. The prime minister was more cautious about offering the Northern Irish more autonomy. That spoke of doubts over the province’s ability to handle new powers. Profound disagreements over cultural matters like flags, marches and history have paralysed the Northern Ireland Assembly, blocking progress even on humdrum matters like welfare reform. It has fallen to the IT IS HARD TO IMAGINE A SCENARIO IN WHICH SCOTTISH NATIONALIS T S DO NO T WIN These controversies could explode under either a Conservative or a Labour government—but in different ways. The Tories go into the election pledging to give English MPs the right to debate independently on legislation only affecting their constituents, known as “English votes on English laws”, and to reject income-tax changes imposed by Scottish MPs. The Liberal Democrats and the right-wing UK Independence Party support such a reform in principle. But Labour, whose governments tend to rely at least partly on Scottish MPs, has shuffled its feet, warning that this UK ELECTION 2015 / The Economist April 11th 2015 London and Dublin governments to lead efforts to break it. Even so, most think that Belfast should at least get control over corporation tax by 2017. In January the government published a bill to that effect. It seems unlikely that the next parliament will see the end of the United Kingdom. Yet before the 2010 election it looked improbable that Britain would be as far down the road to fragmentation as it is now. The past five years have shown that momentum can overcome tradition. If the next five are even halfas dramatic, the kingdom will be in serious trouble. 7 ELECTORAL ARITHMETIC Ain’t got that swing Why this election is exceptionally hard to predict N O BRITISH election is complete without a swingometer. The classic version looks a bit like the bottom half of a clock, with the hour hand showing the “national swing” from one of the main parties to the other—and indicating how many seats will change hands as a result. It first appeared in the BBC’s report on the 1959 general election, as a hand-operated dial on a blackand-white map of Britain. These days it is snazzier, with digital animations. But in May it will be almost completely irrelevant. Though the fundamental mathematics of the election are unchanged—to win an outright majority, a party needs about 320 seats—the notion of a national swing has been thrown out. As a result, predicting the outcome of the election is even harder than usual. The rise of the smaller parties is the most important explanation. In 2010 the Conservative, Labour and Liberal Democrat parties carved up most of Britain (though not Northern Ireland) between them. UKIP, the Scottish National Party and the Green Party won just 6% of votes together. But some recent polls have suggested that those three could scoop as much as a quarter of the popular vote this time. Although only the SNP’s voters are concentrated enough to carry many parliamentary seats, the Greens and UKIP could skew the results in dozens of constituencies. In some places they will split the Labour vote, in others the Tory one; in still others they could help to bring down a Liberal Democrat. So the old assumption that elections are decided by the direct exchange of votes between the two main parties no longer holds. A second change is the regionalisation of British politics. In the post-war decades the country swayed fairly uniformly, like a pendulum, between the two main parties. Now different regions have different political dynamics. Labour emerged from the 2010 election as the party of the north and the big cities, the Conservatives as that of the south and rural areas (see map). The north-south economic divide reinforces this; for example, in this election Lib Dem MPs will probably fare worse in leftish parts of the north, where the coalition’s public spending cuts were deepest, than in the more prosperous south. Another big shift is that MPs are becoming more independent. The internet makes it easier for them to develop personal brands, and the public’s disillusionment with politics encourages them to behave like outsiders. Many in Westminster mention Gisela Stuart, a Labour MP, as the example to follow. Her Birmingham Edgbaston seat should have gone Tory in 2010, but she held it by campaigning energetically on local issues and by being conspicuously independent-minded. If more MPs are acting like her (and it seems they are: the outgoing parliament was the most rebellious since at least 1945) the national swing will be even less relevant. All this explains why it is fiendishly hard to tell which way the election will go. With so many cross-cutting questions— “will UKIP gift Tory seats to Labour?”, “how will the Lib Dems hold up in the south?”,“will more local-champion MPs hang on to seats they would otherwise lose?”—it might be past breakfast time on May 8th before the result is clear. But that is chiefly a problem for psephologists. The problem for politicians is that forming a government after the election might prove complicated. Geographically polarised, hemmed in by insurgents and only partly in control of their MPs, neither Labour nor the Conservatives have a commanding lead. If that does not change in the next few weeks, Britain might end up with another hung parliament. The question then becomes: what combination of parties’ MPs would add up to more than 320? At first glance, Labour has the most reasons to be chipper. Its votes are more efficiently distributed than those of the Conservatives, so under Britain’s “first past the post” electoral system it gets more seats for less support. Fully 36% of the vote put the Tories 20 seats short of a majority in 2010; 35% gave Labour a majority of 64 in 2005. And Labour might be able to team up with two hefty partners—the Lib Dems and the Scottish National Party. The Tories have only the Lib Dems. Yet the Tories have the momentum. Since last summer David Cameron’s party has erased a ten-point Labour lead. As this briefing went to press, Elections Etc and Electoral Forecast, two websites run by political scientists, respectively projected that it will emerge with 296 and 283 seats, with Labour on 261 and 280. Anything much above that should put another Tory-Lib Dem government (possibly with the support of Northern Irish unionists) within reach. Nick Clegg, the Lib Dem leader, would probably prefer to deal with David Cameron than with Ed Miliband. It is also possible that the next government will not have a majority at all, particularly if the Lib Dems are too small to prop up either of the main parties. Thus a weak minority government would emerge, probably getting little done but possibly wobbling on for a surprisingly long time. The Fixed-Term Parliaments Act, introduced in 2011, means an election could only be called before 2020 if two-thirds of MPs agreed to it (or one government is voted out and another is not in place after two weeks). And MPs will only support an early dissolution of parliament if they have a good sense of any election result—which, to judge by how unpredictable British politics is these days, they will not. 7 Tangled up in blue UK constituencies as of March 2015 Conservative Lib Dem Labour UKIP Green SNP Plaid Cymru Sinn Fein Respect Party Democratic Unionist Party Social Democratic & Labour Party Other SCOTLAND Constituencies depicted at true size WALES LONDON Source: The Economist UK ELECTION 2015 / The Economist April 11th 2015 21