Monday, August 29, 2011

Thatcher's Plan - the Ridley report - and the co-operative socialist alternative - the Well-being Society

At the TUC's Touchstone blog, http://touchstoneblog.org.uk/2011/08/how-successful-was-us-welfare-reform/ I've just posted the following offer.

Here, after it, I post the Ridley Plan article from 'The Economist' - the plan on which the Thatcher, etc 'Counter-Attlee/Beveridge/Keynes revolution' was based - and which continues to create Persistent Poverty - a violence world-wide.

There is also a Wikepdia page for the Ridley Plan, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ridley_Plan

So:

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From: At the TUC's Touchstone blog,
http://touchstoneblog.org.uk/2011/08/how-successful-was-us-welfare-reform/


The creation of Persistent Poverty was the objective of the Ridley Plan (as contained in the Ridley report) - the actions upon which the 1979-onwards Conservative governments - initially fronted by Margaret Thatcher - acted (Googling the Ridley Plan and Ridley Report gives more, the full report was/is on the Margaret Thatcher website).


By contrast, there are two progressive policy action sets available (and any number of intermediate mixed policy options - of which both the Scandinavian and minimalist, say Canadian and US workfare'/'welfare state' models can be examined.

Of the progressive options, the one (variously named 'Hierarchical, Authoritarian or Bully, Leftism' when described at its worst) that resulted in the counter revolution of Thatcher/Cameron/Clegg (UK), Reagan/Bushes (US), Brian Mulroney/Stephen Harper (in Canada), etc., and the other progressive option – a 'British Socialism' (which pre-dates Marx): which I label, 'Co-operative Socialism'.

(This latter term is not to be confused with any of the forms of Anarchism.)

For any who are interested, I can share a PDF of a set of articles published as a CCPA Readings on Co-operative Socialism' commissioned by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (the 'CCPA': see www.policyalternatives.ca) in May 2010 (Jason Moores, at the CCPA, can supply paper copies - jason-at-policyalternatives-dot-ca).

Alternatively, I offer a seminar on this possibility of co-operative socialism - one which aims to help us move from 'the Politics of Austerity' (ie reactionary, bullying, fearful selfishness) to one of 'the Well-being Society' ie, the Co-operative Socialist possibility.

Please ask!

Best - for all!

john

John Courtneidge


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The Economist May 27, 1978 Pages 21-23

Appomattox or civil war?

A copy of the final report of the Conservative party’s policy group on the nationalised industries has reached The Economist. It has been drafted by the radical right-wing MP Nicholas Ridley, and. is likely to cause a humdinger pf a row. Its main points:

(1) The Conservatives intend to demand that each nationalised industry achieve a. set rate of return on (variously defined) “capital employed”. This rate of return, once laid down, would be “totally inflexible”. If managers did not achieve it they would be replaced. They would, however be supported in whatever action they had to take to achieve it even if this “might mean that men would be laid off, or uneconomic plants would be closed down, or whole businesses sold off or liquidated”. The report sees no other way to restore financial responsibility. “Nevertheless”, it adds, “there is no point in undertaking it if we are not prepared to go through with it.”

(2) After issuing this call to battle, the document then prepares the way for what could be constant, surrenders at Appomattox. Uneconomic activities would be costed and separately paid for by subsidy on the vote of the minister who felt they had to continue.

(3) Investment control by government would continue through five-year rolling corporate plans with a government commitment to a decreasing proportion of the investment, as fo1lows: year one, 100%; year two, 90%; year three, 75%; and year four, 50%. The industries should be required to borrow from the exchequer at market rates of interest. Investment control should be used to restrict industries to their mainline activity. The report believes the corporations should not compete with private industry, but also that it is not worth fighting a major political battle to oblige them to divest themselves of current “extra-mural activities” (eg, electricity and gas showrooms).

(4) No direct government control of prices or wages in nationalised industries. The only control would be by insisting on the rate of return on capital being met, even if this involved the industry concerned raising prices, or selling off surplus land or assets or closing uneconomic activities. The concept of wage comparability is rejected: the criteria for wage payments should the manpower situation in the industry and the vulnerability of the nation to a strike.

(5) In choosing which strikes to fight, the team has classified industries into three categories of vulnerability with: (a) sewerage, water, electricity, gas and the health service in the most vulnerable group; (b) railways, docks, coal and dust men in an intermediate group; and (c) other public transport, education, ports and telephones, air transport and steel in the least vulnerable group. It rejects the proposal to make strikes illegal in industries where they are not illegal, and also any idea of having a strikebreaking corps of volunteers to run mines, trains or power stations. Where industries “have the nation by the jugular vein the only feasible option is to pay up”.

(6) Managers should be much better paid than at present, and ministers should no longer usurp the day-to-day responsibility of management by replying to parliamentary questions on such matters.

(7) The present boards of nationalised industries would be made supervisory boards with most members part-time. The full-time management should be devolved into smaller subsidiary companies into which the industries should be split. The holding boards would have power to hire and fire management and to fix pay. There could be worker directors on nationalized industry boards, provided these were an insignificant minority. Pay of successful top managers would be supplemented by public honours.

(8) The only legislation that the Ridley report proposes (and itself refers to as “a nasty little bill”) would be an end to statutory monopolies in the public sector. This bill would: (a) transfer licensing of private mines from the National Coal Board to the minister and restrict conditions of licence to safety considerations only. Coal royalties would be transferred from the NCB to the state; (b) give private generators of e1ectricity the right to sell to the grid; (c) split letter-post from telecommunications and end the telephone monopoly at the subscribers “front door”; (d) remove ministers power to stop private-sector investment in steel plant.

(9) The group considered the scope for denationalisation. It believed that it would be easier, and more permanent, to fragment the industries rather than try to sell off whole corporations. It concluded that there was least opportunity for this in the “true utilities” (gas, electricity, railways, water, ports and telephones). The greatest opportunities are in coal, shipbuilding, docks, airports, motor car manufacturing, buses and freight. Specific proposals: (a) form worker co-operatives at coal pits wherever possible; (b) separate ports, and either sell them off or make them into worker co-ops; (c) make each airport independent and either sell it or hand it over to local authorities; (d) the assets of the British National Oil Corporation should be sold, preferab1y to the public at a 50% discount on value with a maximum holding prescribed for any individual.

So, far this report has not been to the shadow cabinet. But it has been discussed by the powerful economic reconstruction group under Sir Geoffrey. Howe and is now before a group under Sir Keith Joseph, the Tory industry spokesman and general policy overlord. Its general thinking seems to be accepted, but its detailed proposals are likely to be modified. They will be reflected in the Tory manifesto only in the most general terms.

In an annex to this report, Mr Ridley and some of his co-authors have been pondering how to counter any “political threat” from those they regard as “the enemies of the next Tory government”. They believe that in the first or second year after the Tories’ election, there might be a major challenge from a trade union either over a wage claim or over redundancies. They fear it may occur in a “vulnerable industry” such as coa1, electricity or the docks and have the support of “the full, force of communist disrupters”. Behind the scenes, they wou1d like a five-part strategy for countering this threat:

• Return on capta1 figures should be rigged so that an above-average wage claim can be paid to the “vulnerable” industries.

• The eventual battle should be on ground chosen by the Tories, in a field they think could be won (railways, British Leyland, the civil service or steel).

• Every precaution should be taken against a challenge in electricity or gas. Anyway, redundancies in those industries are unlikely to be required. The group believes that the most likely battleground will be the coal industry. They would like a Thatcher government to: (a) build up maximum coa1 stocks, particularly at the power stations; (b) make contingency plans for the import of coal; (c) encourage the recruitment of non-union lorry drivers by haulage companies to help move coal where necessary; (d) introduce dual coal/oil firing in all power stations as quickly as possible.

• The group believes that the greatest deterrent to any strike would be “to cut off the money supply to the strikers, and make the union finance them”. But strikers in nationalized industries should not be treated differently from strikers in other industries.

• There should be a 1arge, mobile squad of police equipped and prepared to uphold the law against violent picketing. “Good non-union drivers” should be recruited to cross picket lines with police protection.

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

suatainabilitynotcapitalism is now - Feb 2011 - back in public view

This blog - Sustainability Not Capitalism -  www.sustainablitynotcapitalism.blogspot.com - and related to the Fair World Project - for economic and income equality - sustainably! and by Tuesday! - is now (1st Feb 2011) back in public view.

News from the hiatus:

There is a paper (web-search wholsophy) at the Network Project www.thenetworkproject.org.uk that contains material produced in the hiatus and Jason Moores at the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives www.policyalternatives.ca <jason-at-policyalternatives-dot-ca> can send you a free CCPA Monitor Readings on Co-operative Socialism - that contains dieas for action (locally, regionally, nationally and globally).

I encourage readers to visit the Equality Trust web-site www.equalitytrust.org.uk for materials related to the excellent book, 'The Spirit Level'- where the evidence that economic/income equality is good for everybody and everything can be found.

Two actions specific actions (from the seven point Fair World Action plan) seem particularly fruitful:

- action to create nationally paid guaranteed income schemes (for which I prefer the term Citizen's Income since this enables us to develop an inclusive, sustainable, evolving definition of what 'citizenship') can be found, for example via www.citizensincome.ca and other places (see Interfaith Sandy Hill work in Ottawa in 2011 for example)

- and, secondly, to work to produce interest-free money and interest-free banking (see www.interestfreemoney.org and links there) since interest-bearing money and interest-based banking are both unnecessary and *actively* harmful - personally, socially, family-wise, economically, ecologically, spiritually and religiously.

Finally: each of us has agency to act both nonviolently and *for* nonviolent economics..Becoming a member and, so a living part, of the global co-operative movement is a good place to start - see the International Co-operative Alliance web at www.ica.coop for details, for example of the 2012 'UN year of Co-operatives' - wow!