Just three little things here

Three little stories that appear in front of us:

Rishi Sunak’s Future Fund scheme mostly backed “zombie businesses”, according to a director who helped to oversee the pandemic venture capital scheme.

The £1.1 billion programme is likely to leave “a significant tail of dormant companies”, with the majority of those backed having a “limited chance of growth to a sufficient scale for success”, according to a non-executive director at the British Business Bank, which runs Covid-19 finance schemes.

To put this as mildly as possible, government appears not to have a great talent for picking winners.

Nicola Sturgeon has been accused of abandoning Scotland’s islanders "on a catastrophic scale" after disruption at a state-owned ferry company led to rationing.

Willie Rennie, the former leader of the Scottish Liberal Democrats, said confidence in the government had been "shattered" by ferry disruption affecting residents of the Western Isles.

Some shops were forced to ration essential items such as milk and bread over the weekend after a ferry operated by Edinburgh-owned CalMac was taken out of service for a third time in a matter of weeks, The Herald on Sunday reported.

Government appears not to have a grand talent for running things.

Liz Truss or Rishi Sunak should cancel the £1,400 energy price cap increase in October in a new “energy furlough scheme” and government should absorb the £36bn cost of the hike, the leader of the Liberal Democrats has said.

Ed Davey said neither candidate appeared to have any policies that grasped the magnitude of what could happen this autumn. “We are facing a catastrophe this winter, a drop in living standards unlike anything we have seen in my lifetime,” he said.

Government does have that talent for making money printer go brr and thereby devaluing every other piece of it in existence.

Incompetent at selection, incapable at management and harming everyone to pay for it. Perhaps this idea that we need more government intervention in the economy, more planning, isn’t quite - again to put it as mildly as we can - the most sensible of ideas? Despite the fact that it appears to constitute at least 90% of all ideas about politics and governance.

As we might have remarked before the argument against government is simply to look at what governments do.

Well, let's have a trial first shall we?

From that ever popular series, newspaper headline questions we can answer:

Should those who sent the sub-postmasters to prison now face court themselves?

Yes.

Of course, this is a violation of Betteridge’s Law but then it is those exceptions that make such observations interesting.

We would in fact go further. There needs to be the sight of a significant number of - and senior too - people staring out from between prison bars. We are willing to go with the trial first approach but that’s only on the good days. For this statement is correct:

The mother of two was one of more than 700 people wrongly prosecuted in the biggest miscarriage of justice in British legal history.

Strip away all of the he said, she said, stuff and the base mistake is incredibly simple. The new accounting system connecting the subpost offices with HQ contained an appalling - we’d say criminal ourselves but that trial thing - error. A design error, one that should never have been allowed to pass muster at all. If a transaction was dropped, was incomplete and then repeated - something that does happen over internet connections - then the incomplete was counted as a valid transaction. Instead of what should happen which is that the incomplete is disregarded and only complete transactions are added to the balance sheet.

That’s it. Everything else is organisations stoutly denying that they could ever have done something so stupid. But they did. The cover up perhaps being the difficulty in law but that initial mistake really was that simple.

We want to see jobs lost, pensions confiscated, gongs rescinded and jail time served. We are willing to wait until after the trial, even as we think that government should already be scything through those organizations like Atilla the Hun having a bad day.

We’re even willing to agree to it being a fair trial - for we think the result would be as we wish even with that process.

John Vidal's still not got the point

Not that we accept his analysis of the damages of course - a richer world will suffer more damage from any particular event simply because a richer world has more to damage. However, leave that aside and accept that contention, Vidal is still missing the point:

It shows that a future of spiralling human disasters is all but certain. This year’s record-breaking heatwaves, the wildfires hitting the northern hemisphere, and the floods sweeping Australia, Bangladesh, Uganda and elsewhere will almost certainly be attributed to global heating. Astonishingly, it suggests that one in three deaths caused by summer heat over the last 30 years were the direct result of human-caused global heating, implying a death toll of millions – potentially more than Covid and HIV/Aids. Without rapid action to slash carbon emissions – by 50% by 2030 – far worse extreme weather will ensue.

With these new studies, the most important argument of deniers, oil companies and reluctant governments not to act has been removed. With an immediate and growing global energy crisis gathering pace, and extreme weather affecting most people on Earth, governments must surely come together at the next UN climate summit in November to pledge immediate action.

That means the UK government must urgently invest billions of pounds to insulate buildings, oil companies must drop all plans to extract more oil, and renewable energy must be prioritised over all fossil fuel burning.

This is not true. At least, it has not been shown to be true as yet. Even as we accept the claims of damage we still need something else to inform any decision. Which is how much will these changes cost?

For our aim is to maximise human utility over time. Therefore we desire to do those things which have benefits greater than their costs, not to do those things where the costs are greater than the benefits. Pointing just to the benefits doesn’t do it - we need to also know the costs of achieving those benefits. Exactly the thing which isn’t being done here.

Of course, it has been done, in the Stern Review among other places. The result being that no, we shouldn’t in fact do all of these things immediately and at whatever cost. Further, we certainly shouldn’t do them via government planning. But then perhaps that’s why Vidal doesn’t bother to mention those costs. You know, given that the science says they’re greater than the benefits?

But, what is the Adam Smith Institute for?

This is also rather what we do. Madsen Pirie has described our job here as to be the voices howling nonsense out in the wilderness. Give it a decade and it’s the received wisdom and it all gets enacted.

A little example.

Taxpayer gifts to the Treasury have plummeted in the last five years as the general public has become disillusioned with high taxes and excessive Government spending.

A Freedom of Information request submitted by The Telegraph revealed the Treasury received £16,122 in donations from members of the public between January and December 2021. A single taxpayer contribution of £10,100 accounted for over 60pc of the funds received.

Taxpayer donations, which are classed as “patriotic gifts” by the Treasury, have fallen significantly in the last five years. In 2017 a total of £180,393 was donated.

We started this analysis of such gifts back in 2006 - applying for the numbers for the 2005 fiscal year.

LAST YEAR there were five people in Britain who thought that their taxes were too low. No, this isn’t the number of people who have called for higher taxes. Rather, it is those who were so convinced of the righteousness of state spending that they voluntarily sent extra money to the Treasury.

A number of people have repeated the analysis over the years and we’re fine with that. It’s actually become something of an easy win for a newspaper to follow it up each year and we’re just fine with having created that story template. No royalties are charged and you’re welcome, folks.

Which does give us one of the answers to that headline question. We’re for making the little societal earworms that advance those causes of freedom and liberty. Here just the absolute proof of how many people really believe that taxes are currently too low in this country. It’s a very, very, marginal belief. Certainly a very much smaller portion of the populace than the number who do what they can to reduce their tax bills - so we must conclude therefore that taxation is too high, right?

Not a good argument in favour of the magic money tree

Frances Ryan talks of how Labour should embrace that magic money tree economics. How the use of it as a sneer by the Tories should be turned. Then she bemoans current economic difficulties and:

The public’s concern about debt and borrowing was always era-specific to the aftermath of the 2008 financial crash, and the pandemic has well and truly eradicated it. From the furlough scheme to the vaccination programme, coronavirus killed the myth that large-scale government spending was not necessary, responsible or possible. The cost of living crisis, on top of crumbling NHS services, only shows that smart government investment is not something to be feared – it is to be welcomed.

But it is all that spending which is the very cause of the current travails. The magic money tree is what has led to our current pretty pass.

Whether the fiscal toot should have been undertaken is another argument entirely but the hangover is what is happening now. As the old saw goes, hair of the dog that bit you is the route to full blown alcoholism. So too money tree spending to cope with the effects of magic money spending.

That we’ve an inflation driven cost of living crisis is one thing, arguing that we should be printing more money to solve it is ludicrous.

The classically liberal contention: Different strokes for different folks

We think this is most encouraging from the CLASS think tank:

The “white working class” is such a peculiar phrase, so widely deployed and so misleading. Of course there are white people who are working class, but the class as a whole is the most diverse of any group. This is a point made by a report from Class, the union-funded thinktank, on new attitudes to race and class in Britain. You cannot predefine the beliefs and values of a class, it says, and then filter for people whose whose views correspond to them. Instead, the researchers built their sample on a points system, taking into consideration class identity, housing tenure, education level, occupation, household income, and if and how one might pay a £500 emergency bill. Perhaps that sounds obvious, but it is also quite a novel approach.

….

What hasn’t changed is that the working class is diverse. Indeed, this is a core definition; monoculturalism is a phenomenon mainly of upper-class groups. The values and attitudes associated with the “white working class” or its sibling phrase, so-called “red wall” voters – patriotism, xenophobia, racism, nativism, traditionalism, nostalgia – are simply not discernible themes in any prolonged discussion with working-class people.

This is encouraging because it’s an agreement that the base class analysis of Marxism - which feeds through into socialism - is simply wrong. There is no monolithic block of the “working class” who can be energised into taking that power which is rightfully theirs. This analysis coming not from weird folk like us, but from the very heart - calling it still beating is going too far such is the age of the philosophical mistakes - of that socialist movement. They’re saying it, not us - there is no the people, there’re just folks in all their diverse glory.

Which is, of course, the classically liberal contention. We are indeed all individuals, with our own interests, foibles, beliefs and desires. Therefore politics and the economy have to work on that basis, not on slabs of the faceless who are to be relied upon to act in uniformity.

It’s clearly too much to expect CLASS to recognise the import of their own finding but hope springs eternal. So, to cast this in the simpler form that they might understand. That great social observer, Rose Stone:

Different strokes for different folks

And so on and so on, and scooby-dooby-doo

The oddity of economic othodoxy being what absolutely no one is doing

The IMF gives us the entirely standard economic orthodoxy here:

Ministers should allow heating bills to soar to encourage energy conservation and accelerate the push to net-zero carbon emissions, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has claimed.

The global lender of last resort urged governments not to subsidise household energy costs, as it insisted that usage must come down amid fears that Vladimir Putin will cut off gas supplies this winter.

It said that artificially reducing energy bills would only make the looming crisis worse by increasing the risk of shortages, as well as encouraging reliance on fossil fuels.

Oya Celasun, the IMF’s Europe assistant director, said: “Governments should let retail prices rise to promote energy conservation while protecting poorer households."

European countries have rushed to prop up households facing a huge shock to incomes from the surge in energy bills.

However, cushioning the blow to family budgets means many are less likely to cut back on energy usage. That would stop demand falling back in line with supply, keeping prices higher for longer and helping to fund Mr Putin’s war machine.

Ms Celasun added: “They should allow the full increase in fuel costs to pass to end-users to encourage energy saving and switching out of fossil fuels.

“Policy should shift from broad-based support such as price controls to targeted relief such as transfers to lower-income households who suffer the most from higher energy bills.”

She said that mitigating the hit to households “keeps global energy demand and prices higher than they would otherwise be”.

Subsidising demand in a time of dearth is stupid. Taxing supply in a time of dearth is equally ludicrous. But of course the political demands are all let’s tax the suppliers and then push down energy prices. But, dummkopf, we’re in a time of dearth, which is exactly when we do not wish to be reducing supply and increasing demand.

We not just desire but positively lust after people being exposed to the changes in prices. Because those prices are the very things which change behaviour which will aid in dealing with the dearth.

Now of course this does then lead to an outbreak of Bob Cratchits and really, we could all do without an epidemic of Tiny Tim mawkishness at this time of year. So, the answer is to subsidise - if any subsidy is necessary - incomes. People exposed to the higher prices will still economise upon energy consumption, the thing we need, but it is possible to limit the knock on effects on other forms of consumption like food and branded sneakers.

Or, as we’ve been known to point out, never, ever, subsidise things, subsidise people instead.

That this isn’t what government (s) is (are) doing is just further proof that allowing governments anywhere near economic policy is a mistake. But then we knew that.

But why does anyone want the oil companies to build renewables?

We do rather think that people need to grasp the basics of this free market idea. Which is that people may - that’s the free part, d’ye see? - enter the market with whatever their idea is. From pet rocks to geothermal power systems, have at it, see if it works. The corollary of this is that old companies get to continue to do whatever it is - free, recall? - and the competition is between the different ideas. Which do we, the consumer, end up buying from and thus the idea that whoever we, the consumer, desires most wins.

Oil firms seem more interested in shareholders than net zero

Analysis: Is the energy industry willing to invest in renewables rather than dividends and buybacks?

So why this insistence that oil companies must build windmills? There’re technical reasons why not of course. Being able to stick a straw in a reservoir is a different skill set from managing a grid load and there’s no reason to think both will exist inside the same organisation. We might even assume that given the differences in skill sets we’d do better having different organisations undertaking the tasks.

As far as we can tell it’s that some substantial number of people think there’s something special about “a company”. Which is, in fact, just a legal wrapper around a certain set of economic assets. If we require different assets then a new company, why not? If we desire to repurpose assets, then a new company, why not? If we want to do something different then a new…..and so on.

Another way to put this is that the oil companies are optimised to perform one task. We desire to do a different one - there’s no reason at all to think that the oil companies are optimised to do that new task. No more than we’d expect BMW’s car factories to be good at running an airline - which are, note, both forms of transport.

If it’s true that we no longer require or desire - no, “if” - oil companies then let them go into run off and eventually cease to exist. The new energy methods could and should be produced by the new organisations optimised to do exactly that. Oh, and the profits from the old and declining industrial method be paid out to shareholders so that they can redeploy into those new.

We do think this insistence that the old organisations must do the new thing is based upon not understanding the free part of free markets. If new thing must be done then let’s have new market entrants doing them. The old can go bust in their time.

It's not that we're hopelessly cynical

We prefer to think of it as being appropriately worldly wise:

“There are plenty of reasons to believe climate change could become catastrophic, even at modest levels of warming,” said Dr Luke Kemp at the University of Cambridge’s Centre for the Study of Existential Risk, who led the analysis. “Climate change has played a role in every mass extinction event. It has helped fell empires and shaped history.

If people are employed to study existential risk then existential risk to study will be found.

“Facing a future of accelerating climate change while blind to worst-case scenarios is naive risk management at best and fatally foolish at worst,” the scientists said, adding that there were “ample reasons” to suspect global heating could result in an apocalyptic disaster.

The international team of experts argue the world needs to start preparing for the possibility of the climate endgame. “Analysing the mechanisms for these extreme consequences could help galvanise action, improve resilience, and inform policy,” they said.

Analysis. Yes, and we’re sure that those who study existential risk have some extant group who should be funded to study this existential risk. Further research, as they say, is required.

We would just like to point out one little thing. All those climate change models, all of them - even the RCP 8.5 disaster that we know isn’t going to happen already - already include feedbacks. The predictions are of the end state after the interactions, not before those tipping points that lead to runaway (cont pg 94).

But then as we say we’re appropriately worldly wise, not cynical at all.

As we've been saying about Tata, Port Talbot and subsidies - No!

There is no good reason to be giving them any money:

Britain’s steel industry – the country’s manufacturing backbone – faces a reckoning as it attempts to play its role in tackling climate change.

Some £6bn is needed to slash carbon emissions in the steel industry and switch to electricity or hydrogen. Large players are turning to the government for help to avoid being pushed to the brink.

Earlier this month, Tata Steel UK, the owner of Port Talbot in South Wales, raised the prospect of closing the sprawling steel works if help from Whitehall doesn’t materialise.

The company, owned by India’s Tata Group, wants £1.5bn – about half the estimated budget to make the site green. Port Talbot, and British Steel’s Scunthorpe Steelworks, both use carbon-intensive blast furnaces.

We have indeed mentioned this before. But there is no - none, zip, nada - excuse for giving money to Tata at Port Talbot. A technical analysis for those who like such things:

Therefore, to decarbonize UK’s steel industry and reduce its reliance on coking coal, scrap-based Electric Arc Furnace (scarp-EAF) process, which is around three times more energy efficient than producing steel from iron ore, will likely be required to replace the role of integrated BF-BOF. In this process, ferrous scraps are recycled by melting them in an arc furnace using progressively cleaner electricity to produce secondary steel. This secondary method abates the requirement of mining new iron ore and using unsustainable coking coal, thereby reducing the carbon intensity of the steel making process.

However, despite the high steel recycling rate of 85% in the UK, scrap-EAF only accounts for 21.2% of UK steel production. In fact, only 1.7 million tonnes of the UK’s domestic ferrous scrap is used to produce steel via this process, thereby leaving the UK to net export 8.3 million tonnes of ferrous scrap annually. This means that the UK has a good growth opportunity for this form of coking coal-free production as it is well endowed with scrap resources.

To pull that out of the technicalspeak. There are three basic steel making technologies. Blast furnace - basic oxygen furnace (BF-BOF), direct reduction iron (DRI) and electric arc furnace (EAF).

Tata at Port Talbot uses the first. To be less carbon intensive it should - perhaps - more to one of the other two. If it were to go to DRI fed by green hydrogen then that would solve the carbon problem. This is also a technology not quite ready for prime time - the lack of green hydrogen is the limiting factor at present.

But Tata is not suggesting they move to that. Instead, they want to be subsidised to move to the third. EAF. This uses scrap as the input, it doesn’t actually make primary, or virgin, steel from iron ore at all. There is therefore no - none, zip, nada - argument in favour of subsidy. EAF is hugely less capital intensive. It costs less as well. There’s plenty of feed for it already in the UK and will be for decade upon decade.

Finally, there are some steels that you can’t make in an EAF furnace. Which means there might - possibly and just about you understand - be a possible argument for subsidy to maintain that domestic capacity. But if the subsidy is to move to EAF anyway then that argument doesn’t exist either.

Tata is trying it on. The correct answer to someone trying that on the taxpayers’ bill is a ripe volley of Anglo Saxonisms.

No. Other than that Tata would rather like to gain a subsidy there is no coherent argument for Tata to gain a subsidy for Port Talbot. They can and should pay for their own electric arc furnaces.