Thursday 16 February 2012

Unemployment heads for 3 million.

It's not exactly a surprise that things have got this bad. In fact, it's completely predictable. From the start the coalition has talked strongly about public sector cuts and the mantra of austerity. (Interesting to note, though, that austerity doesn't extend to their own public spending with £400,000 wasted on renting fig trees for Portcullis House.) But the public sector cuts were to be offset by private sector growth. The trouble has always been that there has never been a strategy for creating those jobs. What kinds of jobs? In what sectors? In what locations? How supported? If the public sector redundancies really are about cutting out waste, then those jobs won't be replaced in the private sector. And there are many functions carried out at present by the public sector that just couldn't generate a profit. at least not without dropping down wages and conditions, or increasing public purchasing budgets. Probably both.


The absence of any kind of growth strategy is really disturbing. It's fantasy economics and fantasy politics. I wrote in this blog back in October 2010 that government 'will also have to deal with the unfinished business from the 1980's of how to restore exporting industry, and what to do about  all those communities that have lost the reason for their existence'. In contrast, their policy seems to be to cross their fingers and hope for the best.


This is a little PS. This morning I saw three young men emerge from the building that houses the local probation service and NHS addiction service. I don't know which they had been visiting, possibly both. All three were pasty, emaciated  figures stumbling along in their matching Burberry baseball caps. (How Burberry must hate that : its a sort of anti-marketing to have your stuff adopted by your least welcome demographic.) One had crutches. Quite a common site around this building. It's because they damage their ability to walk by injecting in their groin. 


Anyway, it got me thinking on what it would take to get that three into work. They have probably never worked. They are drug users. They probably have a criminal record. Who will ever employ them? The most worrying thing is that, if not already then soon they will have kids. Kids they will ignore but kids who will, in 20 years time, also look like these three : permanently unemployable. And what is the strategy for breaking that cycle? I suspect that, once again, it's cross your fingers and hope for the best.

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