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11 THE UNEVEN IMPACT OF THE GLOBAL ECONOMIC RECESSION ON PLACES AND PEOPLE: THE ROLE OF POLITICS AND POLICY ‘40 Years of Policy and Politics: Critical Reflections and strategies for the future’ Bristol, UK, 18–19 September 2012 Richard Meegan, Patricia Kennett, Gerwyn Jones and Jacqui Croft ESRC Grant Number: RES-062-23-2963 1 INTRODUCTION • Research project: ‘The Uneven impact of the Economic Crisis on Cities and Households: Bristol and Liverpool compared’ • Research team (SPS, University of Bristol and EIUA, LJMU) • Focus here on policies and politics • Argument: – recessions ‘pressure points’ exposing and testing political positions – politics and policies - and their underlying economic theories – local responses conditioned by nationallocal state relationships – local context conditions national policy 40 YEARS – 4 RECESSIONS 1. Mid-1970s: ‘last gasp Keynesianism’ 2. Early 1980s: Neoliberalism - monetarist experiment tried and failed 3. Early 1990s: Neoliberalism ‘post-Lawson boom’ 4. Late 2000s Great (‘double dip’) Recession – Keynesianism revisited or ‘strange nondeath of neoliberalism’ (Crouch, 2010)? 40 years - four recessions in the UK GDP annual % change, and Unemployed Persons, Aged 16 and Over, 1971 – 2011 GDP annual % change Conservative Unemployed Persons Conservative – Liberal Democrat Coalition Labour 8.0 3,500,000 6.0 3,000,000 4.0 2,000,000 0.0 1,500,000 -2.0 1,000,000 -4.0 500,000 -6.0 2011 2011Q3-2012Q2 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981 1980 1979 1978 Great Recession: Keynesianism re-visited or ‘strange non-death of neo-liberalism’? Neo-liberalism/ post-‘Lawson Boom’ recession Neo-liberalism/ monetarist experiment 1977 1976 1975 1974 1973 -8.0 1972 Last gasp Keynesianism 1971 GDP % change 2.0 0 Unemployed persons 2,500,000 The four post-war recessions in the UK: GDP annual % change, and UK public spending as a % of GDP, 1971–2011 GDP annual % change UK Public Spending as % of GDP Conservative UK Public Spending Forecast Conservative – Liberal Democrat Coalition Labour 8.0 60.0 6.0 50.0 40.0 0.0 30.0 -2.0 20.0 -4.0 10.0 -6.0 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2011Q3-2012Q2 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981 1980 1979 1978 1977 1976 1975 1974 1973 1972 -8.0 Great Recession: Keynesianism re-visited or ‘strange non-death of neo-liberalism’? Neo-liberalism/ post-‘Lawson Boom’ recession Neo-liberalism/ monetarist experiment Last gasp Keynesianism 1971 GDP % change 2.0 0.0 UK Public Spending as % of GDP 4.0 Net Borrowing £m (excl. financial interventions) 0 20,000 40,000 60,000 80,000 100,000 120,000 140,000 160,000 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 Labour 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 Conservative 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981 1980 1979 1978 1977 1976 1975 1974 1973 1972 1971 UK Net Borrowing £m (excl. financial interventions) 1971-2011 Conservative – Liberal Democrat Coalition -40,000 -20,000 DIFFERENT POLITICAL & ECONOMIC INTERPRETATIONS OF CURRENT CRISIS • 5 groups (Gamble, 2009) – ‘Market Fundamentalists’ – ‘National Protectionists’ – ‘Regulatory Liberals’ – ‘Cosmopolitan Liberals’ – ‘Anti-Capitalists’ • Contested theories – ‘Freshwater’ versus ‘saltwater’ economists – Orthodox vs. political economists (Marxist and Green) DIFFERENT POLITICAL & ECONOMIC INTERPRETATIONS OF CURRENT CRISIS/2 • Neoliberal politics/policies tested to destruction - with Great Recession administering coup de grace? YET • ‘Strange non-death’ (Crouch, 2012) POLICY RESPONSES - EU • ‘Regulatory liberal’ • Combination of: – financial stability measures – fiscal consolidation programmes – structural reforms “to boost smart, sustainable and inclusive growth” (Europe 2020); and, increasingly – reinforcing economic governance • overriding imperative to tackle sovereign debt issues in Eurozone (UK ‘outside looking in’) • concerted inter-state political response different to 1930s’ national protectionism POLICY RESPONSES – EU/2 Within EU (Davies et al, 2011): • 3 main categories of national government responses – support for the financial sector and system – monetary policy – discretionary fiscal policy • in some cases fiscal and monetary policy interventions combined with cuts in public sector expenditure and social welfare POLICY RESPONSES – UK UNDER LABOUR (Third term - 2005-2010) Interventionist and regulatory (with some Keynesian overtones): • nationalising banks/ regulating financial system (e.g. one-off levy on bank bonuses) • bringing forward capital investment projects • jobs initiative for young people (‘Future Jobs Fund’) • vehicle scrappage scheme • monetary policy - ‘quantitative easing’ and support for Bank of England’s decision to lower interest rates (to lowest level for over 300 years) • fiscal policy - including temporary reduction in VAT and new top rate for income tax POLICY RESPONSES – UK UNDER COALITION (2010 -) Market fundamentalist, neo-liberal: • policy focused on reduction of government borrowing deficit (from recession peak in 2009 of just under 48% to 39% by 2016) • public spending cuts • monetary policy: continued quantitative easing and support for low interest rates • fiscal policy: increased VAT and personal allowances for income tax, reduced Corporation Tax, with top rate for income tax to be reduced next year • austerity versus growth SUB-NATIONAL RESPONSES – EUROPEAN CITIES URBACT SURVEY (Guidorn et al, 2010) - 130 cities/ 24 European countries • 70% had implemented measures of some sort • 4 key factors influencing response: – national context – degree of decentralisation and financial autonomy – legal power of cities to act – national and local political expectations of cities’ role SUB-NATIONAL RESPONSES – UK CITIES Degree of decentralisation and financial autonomy/power of cities to act been important • 1980s recession: combined with uneven spatial impact produced polarised local government responses (Gordon et al, 2009) • e.g. Liverpool - laid ground for ‘Militant’ opposition to Thatcher government/ public spending cuts • coincided with reductions in local government power reflected in urban policy • e.g. Liverpool got Development Corporation SUB-NATIONAL RESPONSES – UK CITIES (2) 1990s recession • interventions limited by local tax reform and rate capping • lobbying of central government for partnership role and ‘challenge’ regeneration funding programmes • e.g. City Challenge: Liverpool got it, Bristol tried and failed SUB-NATIONAL RESPONSES – UK CITIES (3) Current recession • Mix of measures using central government funding and more locally designed ones implemented and financed by City Councils, RDAs (RIP), URCs/EDCs • Currently: balancing act mitigating impact of public spending cuts and exploiting ‘localism’ growth agenda in context of dismantling of regional economic development architecture SUB-NATIONAL RESPONSES – UK CITIES: BRISTOL & LIVERPOOL Bristol • spending cuts - some cuts passed on to voluntary sector but less than Liverpool • West of England LEP & Bristol City Deal • elected Mayor (following referendum) Liverpool • massive cuts in spending – exacerbated by loss of area-based grants/ protecting core services – but reductions in others • some cuts passed on to voluntary sector impacting ‘Big Society’/ pulls out of ‘Big Society Vanguard Areas’ • job cuts (voluntary to date) • Liverpool City Region LEP and City Deal • elected Mayor (without referendum) SPENDING CUTS - LIVERPOOL “... we’ve been hit the worst of all the core cities, or, indeed, the worst in the country, for two consecutive years. The principle reason for that... is that they’ve taken most of the funding cuts from lines of funding that were allocated towards deprivation. So, I mean, putting it simply, the Tories regarded it as funny money... so that meant that the cuts are spread very unevenly and, effectively speaking, the more deprived you are as a local authority, the harder you’ve been hit” (Local councillor, Liverpool, February 2012) Cuts in Spending Power vs. Indices of Deprivation ‘BIG SOCIETY’? - LIVERPOOL “In 2009 we laid off about half a dozen people and at the beginning of this financial year [April 2011] we laid off 60% of our staff... 34 people out the door.... If the City doesn’t have the money and we’re not saving babies, then we’re not going to be a priority. And lots and lots of organisations found themselves taking cuts. And some are being told ‘Well we want a 7% plus reduction year on year over the next four years’. Well that means 7% over four years, that’s surely getting on for a 30% cut in your prices. Who can cut their prices by that when the service is 80 to 90% human labour?” (Chief Executive, local voluntary sector organisation, September 2011) CONCLUDING COMMENTS • Recessions test political positions and their underpinning economic theories • Neoliberalism been tested in the UK and failed but ‘strange non-death’? Current government’s economic programme and in the debates it has provoked over ‘austerity versus growth’ testify to this Local responses conditioned by central-local government relationships CONCLUDING COMMENTS (2) • Bristol and Liverpool as examples of local policy response: from ameliorative measures for businesses and households to coping with public spending cuts and ‘localism’ growth agenda: o cuts hitting Liverpool particularly hard o VCS also being hit in both cities – undermining ‘Big Society’? o ‘City deals’ – and Elected Mayors - in both