Acropolis now

Way back when the enormity of the banking meltdown began to dawn on us, I fell to asking myself: can a country go bankrupt? I meant a normal country — not some basket case like Zimbabwe or Somalia: a country like, well, any member of the EU? It seemed such a naive question, but nobody was asking it. And then, one morning on the Today programme, John Humphreys or one of his colleagues asked it of a very superior academic economist, whose name I forget. He pooh-poohed the idea as absurd; countries don’t go bankrupt, dear boy.

Spool forward to the present. Greece is bankrupt in the technical sense that the government cannot meet its obligations without borrowing from the bond markets and the markets either won’t lend it any more, or will only lend at credit-card rates. The hope is that a loan from Germany (with the implied promise of more to come) will reassure the market to the extent that they will recommence buying Greek government bonds.

Meanwhile, the spotlight has already moved to other EU countries — Portugal and Spain particularly — which the bond market suspects may be heading into the Greek predicament. They, too, will have to be seen to be taking measures to rein in their public debt, otherwise they will find themselves unable to borrow. These measures will probably have to be dramatic, involving chopping some limbs off the welfare state (which is the hallmark of social democracy), and raising taxes.

Now cut to the UK, which is also heavily in debt. Most of us non-economists think that government borrowing is a distant, abstract affair. But actually it’s frighteningly real. The government is ultimately like any business: its revenues have to match its outgoings; if they don’t then it has either to dip into its savings (currently non-existent) or get an overdraft. And last January, a month in which the government is normally awash with cash (because people pay their taxes before on on January 31), the UK Treasury had to borrow money just to get through the month. Scary, ne c’est pas?

Now we’re facing a general election in which all three main parties have put forward plans for reducing the country’s public debt. They agree broadly on what needs to be done: the deficit has to be halved over the life of the next Parliament. The Tories plan to cut £59.2 billion, Labour £47 billion and the Lib Dems £42.7 billion by 2014-15. So far, so good. Each party has set out measures for achieving this goal. The problem is — as the independent Institute for Fiscal Studies pointed out — is that the measures they have spelled out come nowhere near achieving their stated goals.

You think I jest? Well, look at this chart from the IFS analysis.

The ‘unspecified’ cuts for each party are the grey areas in this bar chart. The inescapable implication is that none of the parties has specified how the lion’s share of the cuts are to be made. We’re not talking stuff at the margins here: the vast majority of the cuts that the parties say are needed are completely unspecified.

Now spool forward to the day after the election. The new government — of whatever stripe — will have to embark on a programme of implementing the swingeing cuts implied by the grey areas in the chart. Otherwise the bond markets will start getting restive. But the new government will have no mandate for doing this, because they won’t have told the electorate beforehand exactly how the axe will be wielded. When people realise what’s going on they’ll be first stunned and then very, very angry. Rather like the folks currently thronging the streets of Athens, perhaps.

It gets worse. Remember that each party is two of the parties are promising to ‘ring fence’ some cherished public services, like the NHS and schools. That implies that the cuts imposed on ‘unprotected’ services have to be correspondingly more severe — between 18 and 24 percent of annual spending, according to the IFS. Writing in the London Review of Books, John Lanchester meditated on what this might mean.

“At the transport ministry, an 18 per cent reduction would take out more than a third of the department’s grant to Network Rail; a 24 per cent reduction is about equivalent to ending all current and capital expenditure on roads. At the Ministry of Justice an 18 per cent reduction broadly equates to closing all the courts, a 24 per cent cut to shutting two-thirds of all prisons.”

Cuts on this scale are unthinkable. Or are they? My hunch is that they are, because they will endanger social cohesion. So here’s what will happen. There will be a fierce emergency Budget (which is already being prepared by the Treasury) shortly after the election. It will involve savage cuts in all kinds of public services. But because the kinds of cuts that would be required if we were just to rely on them are unthinkable, there will have to be tax rises. Big ones — in income tax, Council Tax and VAT at the very least. Only then will the bond markets be satisfied. No wonder James Carvill (Bill Clinton’s electoral guru) once said that if he were to be re-incarnated he’d like to come back as the bond market, because then he could do exactly as he chose. As Marx might have said: man is born free but is everywhere in hock to the bond markets.

In the meantime, here’s a thought: if I were a political strategist (or David Miliband), I would tell my boss that this would be a great election to lose. Because, as the Governor of the Bank of England is reported to have said, the measures needed to satisfy the bond markets could keep whoever wins the next election “out of power for a whole generation”.

In the Beginning was the WELL…

The WELL (Whole Earth ‘Lectronic Link) is the world’s oldest virtual community. Howard Rheingold has found some BBC archive footage of one of the monthly parties that the community used to hold at the WELL offices. It’s a charming evocation of a vanished age. One of the nicest things about it is that Howard and Stewart Brand (one of the co-founders) are still going strong.

Steve Jobs: Thoughts on Flash

Wow! Who would have expected this essay? Thoughtful and well-argued too.

Apple has a long relationship with Adobe. In fact, we met Adobe’s founders when they were in their proverbial garage. Apple was their first big customer, adopting their Postscript language for our new Laserwriter printer. Apple invested in Adobe and owned around 20% of the company for many years. The two companies worked closely together to pioneer desktop publishing and there were many good times. Since that golden era, the companies have grown apart. Apple went through its near death experience, and Adobe was drawn to the corporate market with their Acrobat products. Today the two companies still work together to serve their joint creative customers – Mac users buy around half of Adobe’s Creative Suite products – but beyond that there are few joint interests.

I wanted to jot down some of our thoughts on Adobe’s Flash products so that customers and critics may better understand why we do not allow Flash on iPhones, iPods and iPads. Adobe has characterized our decision as being primarily business driven – they say we want to protect our App Store – but in reality it is based on technology issues. Adobe claims that we are a closed system, and that Flash is open, but in fact the opposite is true. Let me explain.

Worth reading in full. If yo’re busy, here’s his concludion:

Flash was created during the PC era – for PCs and mice. Flash is a successful business for Adobe, and we can understand why they want to push it beyond PCs. But the mobile era is about low power devices, touch interfaces and open web standards – all areas where Flash falls short.

The avalanche of media outlets offering their content for Apple’s mobile devices demonstrates that Flash is no longer necessary to watch video or consume any kind of web content. And the 200,000 apps on Apple’s App Store proves that Flash isn’t necessary for tens of thousands of developers to create graphically rich applications, including games.

New open standards created in the mobile era, such as HTML5, will win on mobile devices (and PCs too). Perhaps Adobe should focus more on creating great HTML5 tools for the future, and less on criticizing Apple for leaving the past behind.

Facebook group ‘praying’ for Obama’s death passes 1m members

Really, you couldn’t make this up.

A Facebook group accused of “praying” for the death of President Barack Obama has raised controversy online, with many calling for Facebook to remove the group as “offensive speech.”

The group, which lists its location as “Marysville, OH, 43040,” currently has over 1 million members–Facebook users who say they “like” the group.

Hmmm… That might be protected in the US under the First Amendment. Wonder how it squares with UK law.

There’s a Facebook group campaigning to remove the ‘praying’ group. It now has over 650,000 members. Human nature isn’t all bad. There’s also a comment which says that “if you go to this hate group’s FB page, most of the comments are trashing the group, which means many of the members joined just to voice their dissent. The real number must be far below 1M+.”

The Sun is looking for disappointed NHS staff. I wonder why.

A copy of an intriguing email just popped into my inbox:

From: [redacted]
Sent: 27 April 2010 11:15
To: [redacted]
Subject: request from Jenna Sloan, The Sun

If you have relevant information for the media professional concerned
please click this link to reply:
jenna.sloan@the-sun.co.uk

Request deadline: Thursday 29 April, 2010, 4:00 pm

Contact me by e-mail at jenna.sloan@the-sun.co.uk

My request: I’m looking for a teacher and a nurse to be case studies in The Sun next week.
This is for a political, election feature and both must be willing to say why they feel let down by the Labour Government, and why they are thinking about voting Conservative.

We’ll need to picture them, and also have a chat about their political opinions.
We can pay the case studies £100 for their time.

Please do let me know if you think you can help.

Is this genuine, I wonder? If so, interesting, ne c’est pas? First of all in terms of the implicit journalistic ‘standards’, but also in terms of chequebook journalism. It just shows you what they think of teachers and NHS Staff — assuming that they’d be willing to pimp themselves for £100. Max Clifford’s clients wouldn’t blow their noses for that.

DMCA abuse extends to Twitter posts

Well, well. Looks as though nothing is beyond the reach of the DMCA.

Twitter can be a decent communications medium for some things, but let’s face it: there’s only so much one can say in 140 characters. It’s hard to believe that a user could infringe on someone’s copyright within such tight constraints, but someone apparently thinks it can. Twitter has removed an update posted by the music writer who runs JP’s blog, citing a DMCA takedown request from an unnamed sender. The situation once again highlights the potential for abuse through the DMCA’s takedown system, and raises questions about how much service providers should push back against abuses.

Quote of the Day

“David Cameron will protect the BBC, he sees it as a very important part of his brand of modern conservatism. He loves the BBC programmes. He’s a huge fan of Top Gear.”

Tory Arts & Culture spokesman to David Hare, as
reported in the Guardian.

Roll on that hung Parliament

Lovely, thoughtful piece by Alan Massie in the Spectator in which he dissects the Tory ‘arguments’ against a balanced Parliament.

Tory warnings of the dire consequences of a hung parliament are understandable but, I suspect, unfortunate. There is little evidence that the electorate believes that a hung parliament will be a disaster, far less than they can be cajoled into thinking that they’re letting Britain down if they don’t vote Conservative.

And that, my friends, is the underlying message sent by the Tories’ blitz against a hung parliament.

A hung election might not be ideal but it might also be a fitting end to this exhausted, depressing parliament. But it need not be the disaster the Tories claim. The PDF they released today – and the advert – is thin gruel. Essentially they argue that 1974 was a disaster and this proves that hung parliaments are and always must be a terrible thing. Secondly, they say that many city types worry about financial uncertainty if no party wins overall control. Thirdly, the Tories warn that anything that moves Britain down the road to proportional representation is a bad thing because it's a bad thing that always ends badly.

I particularly like the argument that we shouldn’t have a balanced Parliament because it might upset those nice chaps in the City.