May 19, 2008
laughter lines
I read David Cameron’s “live within our means” speech on the Train down from Crewe.
Here’s the digested summary.
1. We will fund everything good. No ifs or buts or maybes. All good things are defintely IN.
“We will give public services the proper funding they need so that everyone in the country can have access to the services they need. As I’ve said before: no ifs, no buts, no opt-outs”
2. We will root out everything bad and wasteful. We’ll be relentless in rooting out all bad things. Make no mistake - bad things are OUT.
“It is taxpayers’ money, not government money. We will be careful with it, not casual. We will expect to be judged on a clear basis: if you’re taking people’s hard-earned money away from them you’d better be able to show that you’re spending it on what people want and that you can get better value for that money than they could.”
3. I’m not going to tell you which things are good and therefore IN and which things are bad and therefore OUT.
“We all know that the easiest thing in the world is for an opposition party to stand up at an event like this and blithely talk about all the efficiency savings we will make in government how we will streamline public spending, how we can close tax loopholes, how we can move towards a bright future of less spending and less tax with a few well-chosen cuts that miraculously deliver substantial savings without harming public service delivery at all.”
4. I’m not going to tell you what cuts I’m going to make to the bad things. Hey, they might not be any savings at all. Who knows? Not me.
““It cannot and must not simply be about “efficiency savings.” And it must especially not be about the kind of short-term savings that in the end add to demands on the state because they undermine social value in the name of delivering economic value. Spending cuts that look efficient on a powerpoint chart but end up costing more money are just a false economy.”
5. However, we will pay for good things - and cut taxes too - and I’ll tell you how!!!!!!!
6. First, We’ll save money by doing really expensive things.”
The first way in which we will control public spending is to reduce the long-term demands on the state. We need to tackle the causes of the social problems that give rise to public spending in areas like welfare and crime.”
Sorry, don’t know what came over me. What I meant to say was that changing the lives of the most vulnerable in society is always really cheap and saves you loads of money.
In fact, fixing social problems is so cheap and easy that you’re left with an enormous pile of money when you’re done.
Fixing broken homes and that? Doesn’t cost a penny. Never has, never will.
7. Then we’ll save even more money by building new “free schools” and spending more money on deadweight costs in other public services
“The second way in which we will control public spending is by carrying out the work that was the great missed opportunity of the Blair and Brown years - Proper public service reform. Unlike the Labour Party, there is no internal feud or ideological war preventing us from carrying out the reforms that everyone knows are needed.”
We’ll make savings by breaking up Public service monopolies.
Of course, every proposal we’ve made in the area costs more money, not less, but that’s a minor detail and I’m sure it’s utterly unimportant.
On Welfare Reform, I promised a “Wisconsin style” approach. Yet Wisconsin’s Welfare scheme, W2, actually costs more than the scheme it replaced. Oh, and it’s left more people in poverty.
As for Free Schools, We say setting them up will involve a £4.5 billion investment from the state, money which we’ll find by raiding the fund for new school buildings in existing schools.
As for the NHS, I’ve promised never to cut it’s funding and not to reform it at all.
So clearly, we’ll make a lot of savings here.
Look. A bird!
8. Finally, we’ll save money by cutting things that are BAD, but I won’t tell you what they are because waste reduction measures are pointless and never work, so you wouldn’t believe me if I told you what I’d cut. So I won’t tell you. That way you’ll believe me. See?
“The third component of our strategy is cut out waste and make government more efficient. That is one of the principal responsibilities of Francis Maude and his implementation team. This is a really significant commitment for us…
Francis Maude knows what we’ll cut. Or will know. Good old Francis. But I hope he keeps his list of things he’ll cut quiet because…
“…I do not believe in simplistic lists of cuts. In naïve over-estimations of potential savings. Or in cobbling together a big number in order to get a good headline. Making government more efficient and cutting out waste is absolutely part of our strategy for controlling public spending. But it is only a part.”
I’m not going to tell you what waste I’m going to cut.
No point. You won’t believe me anyway because “cutting waste” is such nonsense there was even an episode of Yes Minister about it.
So there’s no point me telling you what crazy stuff Francis is planning. That’s because If I don’t tell you what we’re planning, you might believe it’ll work.
There’ll be lots and lots though. It’s just there’s no point telling you what it is. So just trust me, mmmkay?
I mean, it’s not as if vague promises of waste reduction have ever come a cropper before.
CHECK AGAINST DELIVERY.

