In the current online edition of Foreign Policy magazine @
http://www.foreignpolicy.com/issue_janfeb_2003/gns2.html
(bottom half of the page) - KWC
A Rustproof Iron Lady
By Timothy Congdon
-- Journal of the History of Economic Thought, , Vol. 24, No. 3, September
2002, London
How will history judge former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's changes to
British public policy in the 1980s? It is already clear that 21st-century
commentators will be kinder than her contemporaries were. When the
Conservative Party lost the general election to the Labour Party in 1997,
The Independent newspaper carried the banner headline, "Everything has
changed." In fact, surprisingly little changed. Labour did not reverse
Thatcher's most distinctive reforms: privatization, reduction of trade
unions' power, and elimination of subsidies to inefficient industries.
Neither did it reintroduce exchange-rate controls or the price and incomes
policies her government scrapped in 1979.
Rather, the Labour government maintained existing income tax rates and
endorsed Thatcher's macroeconomic framework, wherein both monetary policy
and a prudent fiscal policy were aimed at combating inflation.
Astonishingly, newspaper columnists now refer to Labour Prime Minister Tony
Blair as "Thatcher's heir," and he does not seem embarrassed by this
description.
The September 2002 issue of the Journal of the History of Economic Thought
carries a set of articles on "the political economy of Margaret Thatcher."
Given the extent of acceptance by former Thatcher opponents, the papers seem
curiously dated and negative in tone. Roger Backhouse, a Birmingham
University economist, provides the least hostile assessment. Many British
economists in the early 1980s thought both Thatcher and her monetary
approach to inflation were mad, and 364 of them wrote a letter to The Times
in 1981 saying as much. Backhouse is more balanced. He sees the radical
post-1979 changes as an intelligible response to the policy failures and
macroeconomic instability of the 1970s. He also welcomes the increasing
productivity of Britain's manufacturing sector during the 1980s.
But his discussion of monetary policy-supposedly such a crucial area of what
Thatcher wrought-is too close to the conventional wisdom. It is therefore
uninteresting and largely wrong. Backhouse argues that the government
abandoned money supply targets because of the difficulty in hitting them.
This comment is reasonable, but he is quite wrong to say that "monetary
aggregates lost their significance." As Geoffrey Howe, Thatcher's first
chancellor of the exchequer, noted in his own memoirs, the money targets
were met in his last year as chancellor (1983), and inflation rates had come
down as planned. Unfortunately, when Nigel Lawson (Thatcher's second
chancellor) dropped the broad money target in late 1985, money supply growth
in the following year accelerated sharply. Thatcher famously insisted that
she was "not for turning." But the sad fact is that Thatcher-or, at any
rate, her ministers-did make a U-turn, allowing rapid money supply growth
and therefore stimulating a silly boom and causing inflation to rise to 10
percent in 1990.
The tragedy of monetary mismanagement in the late 1980s can be seen as a
sequence of squabbles between Thatcher and Lawson. But it is better
interpreted as the revenge of the 364-that is, a complete lack of
understanding among British economists of how money supply and the economy
interact. Backhouse also misses this connection.
In another article, Joel Krieger, a Wellesley College political scientist,
looks at Thatcherism from a sociological standpoint. Krieger seems nostalgic
for the representation of trade union and senior business people in the
high-level corporatist bargaining seen in Britain in the 1970s. Perhaps he
thinks that the centralized determination of prices and incomes is the best
way to bring down inflation. Someone needs to tell him that no one of any
political significance in Britain today-including Blair-shares this
nostalgia. For all the problems of the 1980s, those years proved Thatcher
was right on one point. Monetary policy, not incomes policy, is the right
way to control inflation.
Timothy Congdon is chief economist of Lombard Street Research and is
currently writing a monetary history of the United Kingdom from 1945 to
2001.
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