The razor is a useful tool for carefully removing unwanted hair without causing (excess) damage to one's features, but something substantially more robust is needed for major cosmetic surgery - something to cut through bone for that nose-job and a good thick blade to remove that double-chin! And while we normally shave ourselves, DIY cosmetic surgery is not to be recommended - we just wouldn't have the courage to cut deep enough and it hurts too much! So, can we always rely on spending agencies to do their own surgery within top-down ceilings or is a helping hand needed from finance ministry surgeons?
Yesterday the Treasury attempted what looks, at first sight, like some major surgery. 217 projects and programmes approved between 1 January and the election have been reviewed. Out of a total value of £34 billion, £2 billion has been cut and £8.5 billion suspended for deeper review. Sounds impressive! But look more closely. Of the £2 billion, only £370 million represented savings not already identified. Of the £8.5 billion, £7 billion represents replacements for the RAF's ageing search-and-rescue helicopters (some of which have been in service since 1978) and £1 billion for the upgrading of the A14 (a very busy road, which is one of Britains's main links to the Continent via Felixstowe): at best this is only delayed expenditure in areas where there is a genuine public sector role. In reality, it's perhaps surprising how little pre-election 'pork barrel' spending there was - thanks to Alisdair Darling keeping the lid on things according to some of last weekend's newspapers. The £34 billion figure was also somewhat misleading as it was for the lifetime of the project/programmes - so just how many years does this spending spread over?
No, I'm afraid the whole exercise is going to be a lot more difficult than trawling through a list of projects and picking out the dodgy ones or squeezing out 'efficiency savings' (which more often than not will mean delayed maintenance on the capital stock). If the deficit reduction targets are to be met, we're talking about radically curtailing some entitlements and cutting cutting back or dropping some services. And as I've said before, the whole exercise has been made all the more difficult by promises to protect certain services and some badly targeted entitlements. In these circumstances, can spending ministries be expected to do the honourable thing without some forceful 'assistance' from the finance ministry? Yesterday, for example, the Minister of Defence, after having said there would be no 'sacred cows' went on to say that radical cuts would be made while preserving all his programmes intact. Neat trick! All to be done by renegotiating procurement contracts with the defence industry, apparently.
Ceilings, yes: but in these situations, finance ministries also need to be active and, at the risk of over-using the metaphor, up to their arms in blood. And Governments have to make some fundamental choices about what the public sector does: this can't be left to spending ministries alone.
This is all about the 'how': for more on the 'why', or rather 'why now?', read Samuel Brittan in today's FT:
'In an agenda-setting speech on June 7, Mr Cameron gave three arguments for wanting to cut the Budget deficit quickly...The most populist argument was to translate the official projection of a near £70bn annual interest payment on the national debt by 2015 into “schools ‘n hospitals” forgone, as every demagogic politician does to bully people into accepting his policies. Never mind that these payments already amount to £40bn and even the most draconian budget will not be able to freeze it at that level. More fundamentally, how many “schools ‘n hospitals” will we lose if government policies prolong recessionary conditions unnecessarily? His second argument is that investors “do not have to put their money into Britain”. This ignores the fact that, in contrast to Greece, at least two-thirds of government borrowing is financed internally. An expanding economy itself generates most of the savings required to finance Budget deficits, and much else.'