Thursday 31 January 2013

Gaming the Work Programme

A Mark Hoban "meme" that has been doing the rounds on Facebook
The Tory employment Minister Mark Hoban has already taken a lot of criticism.  Before I get to mine I'll just run through a few highlighted by other people first.

There's the contrast between his obvious gaming of the Parliamentary expenses system to stuff the taxpayer with the cost of his home improvements and his berating of the unemployed for supposedly "gaming the system" to claim benefits that in reality provide a fortnightly living allowance of less than the cost of the chrome shower rack and silk cushions he expected the taxpayer to pay for.

There's the fact that he told Parliament that only 15% of appeals against Atos Work Capacity Assessments were successful, when the real figure is actually closer to 40%, and above 70% if the appellant is represented by someone with legal expertise. He also failed to acknowledge that the cost to the taxpayer of hearing all of these appeals now stands at £50 million, with no financial penalties against Atos for having miscategorised so many people as "fit for work" in the first place. In the same Parliamentary session he also failed to answer numerous questions and gave evasive or misleading answers to most of the rest. Mike Sivier did a pretty good demolition job on that particular performance, you can read that here.

Then there's the fact that many people have come across his policy of "delete and block" when it comes to people writing anything vaguely critical on his Facebook page. No matter how polite and carefully worded your criticism, Hoban wont reply, he'll simply delete your comment and block you from ever posting anything again. I must admit that this kind of blanket censorship winds me up more than it should. This is because I've tried as best I can to maintain a no-censorship policy on the Another Angry Voice Facebook page, which means I've left all kinds of vile personal abuse and outright lies about me undeleted, in order to allow the abusiveness and obvious inaccuracy of reactionary right-wing ranters' leavings to speak for itself.

Now onto my criticism, which relates to something that he said in an interview on the BBC documentary about the spectacularly expensive failure of the Tory flagship Work Programme. Here's what he said in defence of the 18 private sector providers that are signed up to administer the Work Programme:
"They know they are only going to make money if they get people into work"
Essentially he is saying that there is no need to worry because this is a "payments by result" business model, however the government's own figures show this to be a grotesque misrepresentation.

In the first full year of the Work Programme 877,880 people ("clients") were enrolled on it, yet only 31,240 (3.56%) of them were helped into full, or part time work. In fact not a single one of the 18 Work Programme contractors managed to meet the minimum target of finding work for 5.5% of them. Not only did all 18 of the contractors fail to meet the minimum target, the figure of 3.56% is significantly below the 5% figure expected if the unemployed were left to go through the old fortnightly routine of demonstrating to how they had been seeking work to staff at the Jobcentre. The government's own figures show that to date, the Work Programme has been worse than doing nothing at all!

The question of how much this dismal performance is going to cost is a difficult one because payments depend on how long the 31,240 clients that found work actually keep their jobs, the payment by results element. If they keep their job for 6 months, the Work Programme contractor gets a payment of between £1,200 and £3,500. If they keep their job for two years, they get a further payment of between £5,000 and £9,600.

Given that we know these payments, it is possible to calculate that the cost of these "success" payments for the 31,240 clients will range between £40 million and £213 million, with the upper figure only possible in the extreme case where every single person stays in their job for two full years. A reasonable estimate that has been adopted by the mainstream press is about £75 million.

What is known is the cost of "attachment fees" that are paid every time a person is enrolled on the Work Programme. These fees range between £400 and £600. The total amount spent on attachment fees in the first year was £326 million. (£10,400 spent on attachment fees for every person that actually went on to get a job).

It is easy to see that Hoban's statement is grotesquely misleading. These companies have ended up being paid far more in "attachment fees" than they will ever manage to get in results payments, even if everyone they have placed manages to keep their job for two full years.

These figures, and the shocking under-performance of every single Work Programme provider demonstrate that in fact it is possible for these companies to make millions at the taxpayers' expense, even if they hardly get anyone into work at all. In fact, the attachment fees represent a "payment before results" system that looks astonishingly easy to manipulate.

In fact, the only way that the Work Programme contractors have over-performed is that they have managed to sign up 9% more clients than expected. They have signed up more clients than expected and they have found work for significantly fewer clients than expected.

What this tells me is that the Work Programme contractors have figured out a way of "gaming the system". They expend as much effort as possible in signing people up to their schemes to collect the unearned £400 - £600 they get for simply submitting the paperwork and they expend as little effort as possible on finding work for hard-to-place clients such as the disabled, the uneducated or unskilled and those that are approaching retirement age. These suspicions are supported by the accusations that one contractor called Triage actually referred to the policy of neglecting difficult clients as "parking".


The statistics also back up this interpretation that "hard-to-place" clients are simply being parked. Of the 68,000 disabled clients put into the Work Programme, only 1,000 ended up in work, a success rate of just 1.47%.

Given that the majority of Work Programme contractors are profit driven private companies, it makes clear economic sense for them to sign up as many clients as possible in order to collect the easy money "attachment fees", rather than spending a great deal of time and effort finding work for people, in what, thanks to George Osborne's failing ideological austerity experiment, is a very difficult employment market. The reason for this is that even if the contractor pulls off a miracle and finds a job for one of their "hard-to-place" clients, there is significant risk that they will quit  (for deteriorating health reasons perhaps) or be fired in the first six month period, leaving the company with absolutely no profit to show for all of their efforts.

Returning to the "gaming the system" accusations from the collection of criticisms aimed at Mark Hoban I highlighted in the introduction: It turns out that the Work Programme that Hoban tries desperately to defend is a classic example of a poorly designed government contract which actually encourages contractors to "game the system" in order to minimise risks and maximise profits.

It is quite simply stunning to see Mark Hoban, a man who has a track record of making accusations of "gaming the system", make utterly misleading statements to the BBC to cover up the fact that there seems to be an awful lot of contractor "gaming the system" going on in the flagship Tory party Work Programme scheme that he has ministerial responsibility for.

The performance and financial figures used in this article can be found here and the payments regime is explained in more detail on the Panorama documentary.


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Wednesday 30 January 2013

MoneyWeek and their "End of Britain" fearmongering campaign

In January 2013 I was pointed in the direction of an astonishing article which took pride of place on the website of the economics magazine MoneyWeek entitled "The end of Britain". The article is a huge read, totaling over 10,000 words (including the constant appeals to subscribe to the magazine with which it is festooned). I certainly don't have the time to critique the whole damn thing so I'll just stick to some of the most fallacious and misleading elements.

Firstly I'll note that I actually agree with the basic premise that the UK economy as a whole is in far too much debt (public, personal and financial sector) and that things are almost certain to get significantly worse before they get better. Having said that, the article is remarkably bad given that in the opening salvo they claim that they've "spent a significant amount of time and money in the past few months preparing this letter". If this kind of revisionist doom-mongering rant is the best they can come up with after an investment of "significant time and money", it doesn't reflect at all well on their abilities or their publishing standards.


During the opening argument the letter alludes to "an unsolvable problem at the heart of our financial system. One that dates back over a hundred years". After wading through acres of text it becomes clear that this "problem" they are referring to is "state spending". The premise is a particularly doom-laden reworking of the Great Neoliberal Lie; that the 2007-08 global financial crisis and the resulting credit crunch were caused by excessive state spending, rather than the altogether more plausible theory that the current economic chaos came about because of reckless gambling and outright corruption in the financial markets, enabled by wave after wave of ideologically driven deregulations since 1979.


The article utilises one particular trick over and again, it contains graph after graph showing alarming growth spikes in the UK national debt, however these graphs are produced by counting the debt in £billions, rather than by the established practice of counting debt as a % of GDP (which is done in order to provide a sense of perspective). Of course there were more £billions in public debt in 1998 than there were in 1948 because there is such a thing as inflation, which makes a 1948 £billion an absolutely enormous sum (in terms of purchasing power) compared to a 1998 £billion. 

Failing to adjust for inflation or relate the numbers to the actual size of the economy in order to create scary graphics is a very dodgy technique indeed. Take a look at the two graphs to the left. Theirs (above) measures the debt in £billions, mine (below) measures the debt as a % of GDP, notice the difference. 

The difference is all important and is something that they are absolutely desperate to conceal from the reader, using deceptive graphics and outright omission to hide it. The thing they are trying to eradicate from history is a period of sustained economic growth and massive debt repayment that occurred between 1948 and 1979 (the green area on my graph) which became known as "The Golden Age of Capitalism". The reason they work so hard to conceal it, is that it blasts a massive irreparable hole in the central narrative of their article; the fallacious argument that state spending, especially welfare, is essentially evil.

What they work so hard to conceal is that this period of sustained economic growth and the most comprehensive national debt reduction in UK history occurred during the period that the UK state introduced and expanded funding for countless welfare programmes (the NHS, improved pensions, maternity pay, disability benefits, public education, unemployment benefits, social housing...) and took many vital strategic industries under state control. If state spending is so evil, and creates so much debt, how on earth did the most ambitious rise in state spending in British history coincide with the biggest national debt reduction in British history? During the post-war consensus mixed economy period the UK national debt declined from 237% in 1948 all the way down to just 43% of GDP in 1979 when the post-war consensus was torn up by a bunch of ideologically driven neoliberals led by Margaret Thatcher.

Another equally interesting question that they clearly don't want the reader to ask, is why the national debt has soared back up again after 33 continuous years of neoliberalism based economic policy? They don't provide the necessary information for the reader to ask these questions because the answer is one that they don't want their reader to even consider; that their beloved free-market ideology goes hand-in-hand with massive and unsustainable debt accumulation in both the public and the private sector.
 

The next point to make is that they use some very dodgy techniques and comparisons to hype up the size of the UK debt above 900% of GDP, by including all future pension liabilities and the like, then they compare this 900% figure to numbers from other economies that don't include these future liabilities. I'm not saying there isn't a debt problem, there is certainly a huge one, but the misleading use of statistics to make the UK debt situation seem analogous to the historic situation in Wiemar Germany or worse than the current situation in Greece is a classic example of right-wing debt fearmongering. I'm not a great big fan of the former Bank of England economist David Blanchflower, but he is certainly right about one thing, this kind of fearmongering has the potential to badly undermine "market confidence", especially if it is endlessly repeated by the government and the right-wing press. If millions of people (and investors) are led to believe that the UK is on the verge of financial armageddon, why on earth would they spend or invest their cash in the speculative manner that is necessary in order to create capitalist growth?

Here's another thing to consider about MoneyWeek's wildly inflated 900% debt figure and associated claims that it is impossible to escape from such a debt burden. The thing to consider is Iceland.

In 2002 Iceland privatised and deregulated their major banks, just five years after they were privatised and engaged in a frenzy of reckless speculation and outright corruption, the Icelandic banks collapsed into insolvency, leaving behind debts that added up to 1,000% of Iceland's GDP! Add onto that borrowing by the Icelandic government, personal debts such as mortgages and credit cards, any unfunded future liabilities and we have a figure far in excess of MoneyWeek's scary 900% claims. The Icelandic economy is actually doing pretty well right now, with higher growth, lower borrowing and higher levels of employment than the Eurozone, the UK or the US. Given that they were in what MoneyWeek would call an "insolvable debt crisis" just half a decade ago, how can that be?

The answer is that when the Icelandic politicians attempted to subsume these staggering private sector debts into the national debt, a move that would have condemned the Icelandic population to poverty and debt repayment for generations, the Icelandic people revolted, threw out their government and replaced them with a new government that would disown the debts and begin hunting down the bankers that created them in order to bring them to justice, since they did that their economy has begun to recover and their debt levels are now falling.


The UK government subsumed the enormous debts of their private banks into the public debt and have diligently avoided bringing those responsible for creating them to justice. The UK economy is stagnating and their national debt is now soaring out of control.

MoneyWeek don't want the reader to think about Iceland, because what Iceland did sends shivers down their spines. Instead of bailing out the banks with taxpayers' cash and allowing the bankers that created the debts to keep their jobs, Iceland disowned the debts and and began hunting down the bankers and economists that created the crisis in order to bring them to justice. Nothing drives more fear into the heart of right-wing banker, "financial player" or economic wonks than the ideas of financial sector workers being brought to justice and governments disowning unpayable debts that don't even belong to them.

Here's another thing: Note MoneyWeek's grotesque misuse of the word "fact" in this quote: "The fact is, when you look at our finances as a whole, the Coalition isn’t cutting anything." Anyone that has been paying the slightest bit of attention over the last three years knows that the coalition have been cutting and cutting and cutting. They've cut £20 billion from the NHS budget (despite pre-election promises to "cut the deficit, not the NHS") they've cut over 10,000 frontline police, they've shut down 34 Remploy factories and plan to lay off 875 people at the remaining 18, they've slashed military spending and laid off 9,500 personnel, they've emaciated capital spending (infrastructure investment) causing immeasurable economic damage, they've ruthlessly slashed benefits several times, they've even slashed £860 million from the UK flood defence budget, resulting in the extensive flooding of several towns that had had their flood defence schemes cancelled during the numerous bouts of high rainfall in 2012.
 

Pretending that because the cuts have proved counterproductive and have failed to cut the deficit, actually means that there simply haven't been any cuts at all is a grotesque and economically illiterate distortion, which ignores the altogether more plausible theory is that the sheer scale of the cuts have led to economic contraction, which consequentially reduced government revenue, which then more than wiped out any savings made through the cuts.

Given that the cuts are absolutely undeniable, it should be clear that they the Tory led coalition government have been creating false economies. Cutting £1 now at the cost of £2 or more a bit further down the line. A classic example of this type of Tory false economy can be seen in the slashing of £860 million from the flood defence budget. The experts claim that for every £1 spent on erecting or maintaining flood defences, the economy saves £8 in avoided economic damage. Thus cuts to save less than £1 billion now, could end up costing £7.88 billion in flood related damage further down the line!

The problem with the Tory ideological austerity agenda is that George Osborne and his economic wonks at the OBR have been working under the assumption that all state spending, no matter what type, department or geographical location is essentially 50% waste. Thus across the board cuts make sense to them. 


Of course the problem with this approach is that state spending is nowhere near uniform, some of it is terribly wasteful, but other areas create very strong economic returns. Thus if you engage in across-the-board austerity, you are likely to wipe out much that is actually beneficial, chucking the baby out with the bathwater so to speak. I'm not speculating about this issue, I'm telling you how it is. The notoriously right-wing IMF have even admitted that returns on government investment are significantly higher than the 50% figure the Tories have been using, and they say that in the current economic climate the normal range is now between 90% and 170%.

In fact George Osborne's brainchild publicly funded economic thinktank the OBR (the ones that do all of Gideon's spectacularly inaccurate calculations) accidentally admitted that in order for Osborne's ideologically driven austerity experiment to be entirely responsible for the economic stagnation and the spiralling public debt, returns on investment would have to be 130%, a figure that just so happens to be slap-bang in the middle of the IMF range!

The fact that the economy is flatlining and the debt is continuing to soar is not proof
of MoneyWeek's couterfactual assertion that the coalition government are not cutting anything, it is proof of the old saying that "you can't cut your way to growth".


One of the most chillingly misleading sections is a spectacularly revisionist interpretation of the Argentine economic collapse of 1999-2002. MoneyWeek creates the scenario that the Argentine economy collapsed because they were borrowing too much, in order to blast it on welfare during the 1990s. What they fail to tell the reader is that during the 1990s Argentina was hailed as the "golden child" of the neoliberal movement, because at the behest of the IMF they rushed to slash state spending, especially on welfare, to privatise almost everything, to recklessly deregulate their financial sector and to cut taxes for corporations and the rich, whilst increasing regressive taxation on the poor. Their economy collapsed after they engaged in one of the most ambitious spending reduction programmes in economic history!

Another thing MoneyWeek utterly fail to mention is that Argentina pegged their currency to the US dollar and removed capital controls, meaning that they were essentially stuck in the same situation as Spain, Greece, Italy, Ireland and Portugal find themselves in now: They abandoned control over the value of their own currency (their monetary autonomy) and abandoned control over how much of that currency could flow in and out of the country. These are the real factors that caused the Argentine economic meltdown.

What is even more revisionist than creating the fiction that excessive welfare spending caused the Argentine crash, is the claim that since the crash ended in 2002 "Argentina has barely recovered". Between 2002 and 2011 the Argentine economy has grown by 91.3%, this is despite being locked out of the international money markets and despite the fact that most of the rest of the world struggled with a global financial sector meltdown in 2007-08. To put this 91.3% figure into perspective, the entire global economy only grew by 40.6% in the same period (2002-2011) and the UK economy grew by just 11.8%. 


If a 91.3% growth in GDP (more than double the global rate), is considered "barely recovered", how on earth should they be descibing the UK economy after the 2007-2008 economic crash, since when the UK economy has actually shrunk by 3.1%.
  
For further perspective: In the four year period after the Argentine economic crash, their economy grew by an average of 8.675% per year as compared to the global trend of 4.4% growth. In the four years after the UK financial crash the UK economy shrank by 3.1%, against a global trend of 2.85% growth. If after their neoliberal economic crash, Argentina managed to achieve growth a 4.3% above the global trend over a four year period and after the UK suffered their neoliberal economic crash, the growth rate fell 6% below the global trend over a 4 year period, we are left with a question that MoneyWeek would never, ever, dream of asking: What did Argentina and the UK do differently?
The Argentine government defaulted on the un-payable debts built up by vile and hopelessly corrupt predecessor regimes, the UK subsumed the un-payable debts of the UK financial sector into the public debt by gifting vast bailouts (over £1 trillion, more than 90% of UK GDP) to the reckless bankers that caused the crisis.
Argentina clamped down on tax-dodging in order to try to prevent capital flight, the UK have been actively opening up even more tax-loopholes, allowing ever greater sums to flow out of the UK economy into tax havens and refusing to prosecute industrial scale tax-dodging (which is understandable given that London is the global capital of the corporate tax avoidance sector).
Argentina invested heavily in infrastructure projects, jobs, education, house building and welfare (stimulus), the coalition government have ruthlessly slashed spending on all of these things (austerity).

Argentina tore up the right wing neoliberal textbook that drove them into crisis and began re-nationalising vital industries and supporting workers co-operatives, the UK have stuck firmly with the tenets of neoliberal pseudo-economic orthodoxy, selling off or simply giving away vital sectors of the public sector (public health, the education system, police services, local government services, even more of the military...).

Virtually the only thing the two nations did the same was to devalue their currency. Argentina broke their peg to the US Dollar, but at a time where only a few countries like Japan were actively suppressing the value of their own currency via quantitative easing. The UK have been attempting to devalue the pound in a completely different economic atmosphere of consolidated depreciation, rendering the results negligible as the major central banks of the world all try the same quantitative easing currency suppression trick simultaneously.
MoneyWeek doesn't want the reader to think about any of these themes, because it utterly destroys the central narrative of their letter (that state investment is evil), so they simply revise history to omit it all entirely. They want the reader to believe that Argentina got into trouble for excessive "socialist spending" when they absolutely didn't (the right-wing economic drivel that MW are so fond of was the actual cause) and they want the reader to believe that Argentina never recovered from this crisis, which they absolutely did!

You can read my explanation of the Argentine crisis and recovery here.
 

Next MoneyWeek return to the theme that socialist welfare spending wrecked Britain, quoting James Calaghan saying "We used to think you could spend your way out of recession and increase employment by boosting government spending… I tell you that option no longer exists." which is fair enough. It is essentially the other side of the point I've been making. Mindlessly chucking money around without careful analysis of returns on investment on the services and infrastructure projects you are paying for is as daft as mindlessly cutting expenditure without careful analysis of the value of the services and infrastructure projects you are cancelling.

What is missing from both of these warped ideologies is the "careful analysis" part. There is absolutely nothing wrong with borrowing money, as long as you have a realistic plan about how to invest it and make sure the returns are good enough to repay the loan. Still, the startlingly obvious argument for evidence based economic policy in the UK has yet to be won.

The problem is that MoneyWeek use this James Callaghan quote as justification for cutting all spending; as some kind of ringing endorsement for their wet dream minarchist fantasy of a state that only exists to protect the property rights of the wealthy and nothing else. The reverse extreme to totalitarian communism in effect, where the state controls everything. 


The MoneyWeek crew are clearly sold on the idea of a state that controls virtually nothing. It is obvious that they are aware that a compromise, somewhere between the two extremes of free-market capitalism and totalitarian communism is the most efficient system yet tried: That social democracy produced the longest period of economic growth and debt repayment in UK history. It is obvious that they know it because they were so meticulous in revising it out of their story altogether. They needed to revise it away because the mixed economy period contradicts their narrative that the state is evil and must be eradicated. So for them, the Golden Age of Capitalism simply never even happened.

As I mentioned before, the whole article is rammed full of enticements to subscribe to their magazine, so when it comes to the conclusion, the advice that the reader has to trawl through over 9,000 words of text to find, it is absolutely no surprise to find that all three of their big tips for mitigating the effects of the economic crisis they have been doom-mongering about happen to involve accepting financial advice from them.

The first two are almost the same thing, "
we’ll help you make a handful of key investments..." and "we’ve uncovered several key income-producing investments you can make today...". The second one is altogether more sinister sounding than the first. It sounds like nothing more than an enticement to invest in complex high-yield something-for-nothing type financial products. 

If the reader knows anything about the real cause of the neoliberal economic meltdown (2007-08) then this will sound awfully familiar to them. It was exactly this kind of opaque high-yield financial product that resulted in the US financial sector meltdown. Opaque, high yield financial products called Collateralised Debt Obligations, which were hawked to customers as AAA rated, dead-cert, get-rich-quick investments were the main cause of the neoliberal economic meltdown.

The traders that actually packaged up these CDOs knew full well that they were nothing more than collections of toxic sub-prime mortgages which were almost certain to default eventually. Investments so bad that the traders secretly referred to the products they were selling to banks & pension funds (including Bradford & Bingley and Northern Rock...) as "shitbreathers"!

Are you absolutely sure that MoneyWeek are not just trying to entice you to blast your savings on Shitbreather 2.0? This time aimed at gullible members of the public rather than large financial institutions. 

I mean more of these toxic financial products must be out there, why wouldn't they be? People across the financial sector made personal fortunes of £millions and sometimes even £billions on the sub-prime lending bubble. They didn't go to jail, they didn't have their ill gotten gains confiscated, in fact, most of them still work in the financial sector! If they didn't get punished first time around and they are still in the position to make fortunes doing it again, why on earth wouldn't they?

The third piece of advice MoneyWeek offer absolutely takes the piss. Here's what they say:


"Thirdly, and in many ways most importantly, we’ve found several “bolt holes” outside the UK you can move a part of your wealth into right away. Not only will these investments help you escape Britain’s looming economic collapse... they could also turn you a handy profit in the coming years."

Just in case you are incapable of reading between the lines, this is a clear incitement to engage in tax-dodging.

I have written extensively about the economic damage being done to the UK economy by tax-dodging (here's a previous article on the subject) so I'll limit my objection to the practice to this: Tax-dodging costs the UK economy an estimated £120 billion a year, sufficient to wipe out the entire budget deficit that MoneyWeek spent their entire 10,000 word article fearmongering about. If UK people and businesses didn't (or couldn't) follow the kind of advice MoneyWeek are offering here, the probability of systemic economic collapse would be massively reduced.

Assuming that you do follow the MoneyWeek advice and invest your savings in a tax-haven based scheme, consider this: In the article MW described in lurid detail the economic collapse that they are certain of. They said the banks would go bust, the cash machines would stop working, the government would nationalise private pension schemes and savings accounts, wealth would be confiscated if people attempted to bring it in or out of the country and industry would grind to a halt. How do you propose to get your wealth back from your tax-haven bolt-hole? A bank transfer? Nope. Travel there and collect it personally? What with most of the airlines in receivership, your bank account frozen,ticket costs unaffordably expensive due to hyperinflation and the government confiscating cash at the airports?

MoneyWeek are trying to scare their readers into investing in dodgy tax-haven based schemes, yet the scenario they draw to scare people into making such unethical investments, should they come true, would render such investments worthless. Do you really think that if the UK economy collapses into armageddon, that the private, virtually unregulated tax-haven based "bolt holes" would be entirely unaffected and simply cough up all of your wealth upon request? If so I have two words for you: "Cuckoo, Cuckoo" (I was doing a finger winding motion next to my temple as I typed that too!).

All in all the MoneyWeek article was stuffed full of misleading statistics, blatant revisionism, deliberate omissions, obvious fearmongering, adverts for their own magazine and services and outright lies all built on a foundation of exactly the kind of hard-right ideologically driven neoliberal pseudo-economic gibberish that actually caused the neoliberal economic crisis that they spend the whole article lying and fearmongering about.

In conclusion, remember that MoneyWeek admitted that they had "spent a significant amount of time and money in the past few months preparing this letter". Well all it cost me to produce this critique was no cash at all, five hours of typing, research and image design, and a  stiff neck. If it really took them "a significant amount of money" and several months to produce this their grotesquely revisionist and absurd piece of fearmongering gibberish, this reflects extremely badly on the journalistic standards and levels of economic literacy at MoneyWeek. Furthermore, it must surely act as a very strong disincentive (to anyone with a grain of economic sense at least) to buy their publication or take seriously anything they publish. If this kind of foaming, economically illiterate rot takes pride of place on their website, it's absolutely clear that they'll publish any kind of bonkers right-wing drivel without a second thought. 


Please bear in mind that the MoneyWeek article I've critiqued here is absolutely blathered in incitements to give them money. I'll only ask you once...


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