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The five squanderings of the UK's assets - the real losses behind the election everyone lost

The UK election may have disappointed all the party leaders but over the past 40 years the country has recklessly thrown away its advantages. Can they get together for the fresh start that is needed?

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And who lost…well, Mr Brown clearly lost, but at least succeeded not  to be slaughtered at the polls, a win of sorts compared to what might  have happened. Mr Clegg lost in failing to capitalize on the ‘TV Wow’  that he experienced, and Mr Cameron lost, whatever is his next job, in  failing to get a strong mandate from the UK electorate. His will be a  disabled government at best.

Actually there were more losers than these three gentlemen and their  tribal followers. Anthony Barnett must be feeling down that his  optimistic ‘call to revolution’ in Our Kingdom as he wrongly predicted a  three party race. And advocates of electoral democracy must be cringing  at the news that hundreds if not thousands of citizens were not able to  vote, which will no doubt amuse Mr Chavez and other masters of  disenfranchisement.

But most of all, anyone interested in the future of the UK must be  wondering how these electoral games relate to the real challenges facing an over-indebted island. Since entering the  European Union in the early 1970s, the UK’s political process has  opportunistically squandered the nation’s assets in five, well-grooved  steps.

First come the North Sea Oil, which paid for tax cuts and consumer  imports, and accelerated the demise of our manufacturing base through  neglect and painfully high exchange rates (that made imported  consumables a bit cheaper).

Second came the sale of our public-owned assets, privatization,  alongside the fire-sale of public housing at cut price (in fact  happening around the same time). It certainly powered-up the private  sector, and crucially allowed Margaret Thatcher to distribute yet another round  of largesse to her loyal voters, who helpfully spent it out quickly on  yet more imported products, witnessed by the rapid collapse of savings  rates at around the same time.

The third round of asset use was somewhat different in quality, the  ballooning world of public-private partnerships. This allowed the public  sector to develop a huge and largely undisclosed off-balance sheet  contingent liability to the private sector, which had the effect of  placing UK Inc in hock to the private sector indefinitely for the supply  of its most basic services, and the politically attractive spin off of  making the government’s capital account looking a whole lot better.

Fourthly of course was the use of our own homes to mobilize assets  and, once again, spent it on all things glitzy and, given that we by  that time had no manufacturing base to speak of, imported from other  shores. Thanks to our sturdy Chancellor of the time, the relaxation of  consumer and mortgage credit made all that possible and so apparently  painless at a time of endlessly rising property prices.

And that brings us to the grand finale (to date), the implosion of  the financial services sector, bloated by risk, driven by greed, and  enabled by our voter-conscious, democratically elected government. With  this, unintended, second Big Bang, the underlying weakness of the entire  economy has been revealed, hidden by the preceding four magical moments  that had moved our national assets from what was a well-stocked balance  sheet to the country’s one off profit and loss account.

Now what, you may well ask, has all this to do with the elections.  Well in one sense nothing, of course, because it has not been in any  party’s interest to reveal what has happened to our underlying asset  base in the last 30 years (and that is before we even get into what we  have done to our human capital). Our  horrendous public sector deficit and rapidly re-growing balance of  payments problems would not be so scary if we had not squandered our  inherited assets that might have formed the basis for tomorrow’s wealth  creation and sustainable economic growth. The fact is, or at least a  reasonably melodramatic view would be, that our balance sheet is shot,  and our underlying capacities seriously damaged if not permanently  destroyed.

So for our leader-to-be, I suggest the following: (a) come clean,  quickly, on the real nature of the problem and the dream we have lived  across Labour and Tory administrations for three decades, (b) establish a  ‘true north’ accounting framework that allows for our assets and debts,  natural, human, financial and social, to be tracked and reported on,  (c) renounce the fashionable demand for every minister to be visibly  innovative, since it only adds to the problem of short-term populism at  the cost of long-term change, (d) take advantage of our ‘hung’ situation  by creating a government-by-consensus approach that draws in the best  from all parties in a ground-level review of what can be done for the  UK’ citizens to live healthily in this century, thereby bringing to an  end the era of obsession, addiction and denial that have become  symptomatic of our post-colonial period.

Simon Zadek

<p>Simon Zadek is an independent advisor and author. He blogs at <a href="http://www.zadek.net/blog">www.zadek.net/blog</a>.</p>

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