Yesterday was bad. It was, in fact, very, very bad. If Johnson was a disaster, Truss has set out to be worse. I very much doubt that any prime minister has set out to create so many conflicts from the outset of their premiership in the way that Truss has. A thread….
The portent of things to come came when Truss’s senior adviser team was announced. Her economics advisers come from the Taxpayer’s Alliance and the Institute of Economic Affairs. Both are secretive far-right think tanks.
They hate government. They assume that whatever government does can be better done by markets. They don’t believe in the NHS. They think pension and care provision should be provided privately. They hate taxes. And now they are at the heart of government.
Another adviser also comes from the IEA. Truss has made clear her course. She will use her time in office to seek to dismantle the state. As a result she sets herself on a collision course with the civil service and the people of this country.
This, I am sure is not by accident. Truss is clearly intent on collision courses. Her first commitment as PM in her speech outside Number 10 was to build more roads. As a rebuke to the green lobby that took some beating.
She managed to beat it, however, by appointing Jacob Rees Mogg to be Business Secretary, with responsibility for the environment. The man is a climate change denier. It is almost impossible to imagine a worse appointment.
Except for Suella Braverman as Home Secretary, who hates migrants.

Or Therese Coffey to Health, despite her dubious track record on adoration issues.
Her sackings were also significant. She has reduced her support base to Johnson loyalists who sided with her against Sunak. It is an incredibly narrow base inside a Tory party that is already deeply divided, and more than able to sack those Prime Ministers they do not like.
She has also set herself on a collision course outside Westminster. Her boosterism, matched with significant spending pledges and promises of tax cuts means that she is on collision course with the Bank of England.
The Bank will read this as inflationary. They will be increasing interest rates as a result. An increase to 3% is now forecast by Christmas. The knock-on effect will be a bigger household budget crisis for some than that caused by energy. Mortgage costs will skyrocket.
That will impact rents too, unless of course this government follows Nicola Sturgeon in announcing a rent freeze, which is incredibly unlikely given its ethos.
Outside parliament, it is hard to see how any of this is going to sell well. An energy price cap at £2,500 will not look like a lot of help for many struggling households.
A fight on civil service pay - which the economic advisers Truss has appointed will want - will crush already underfunded public services and compound many problems in society.
The green agenda is in tatters and matters enormously to young people, unsurprisingly.
Mortgage rate increases will lead to a debt crisis. A banking crisis could follow.
And in all this there is no hint of support for any businesses, except banks and energy companies who are exploiting the current situation for all it is worth. The supposed march of the entrepreneurs that Truss and her cohort believe in is not going to happen.
Instead, the sound of closing doors on businesses heading for bankruptcy is what to expect. I wish I did not think millions will be unemployed. But I do. Truss clearly aims to match Thatcher on this issue.
And this will not be by chance. The IEA is a particular exponent of the idea of the zombie company, as they describe them, which they say only survives because of low interest rates and the implicit state aid that provides.
They have long wanted the economy rid of what they think to be the deadweight that these companies represent within the economy, believing they are holding back creative new opportunities for emergent enterprises.
They call the process they are set upon ‘creative destruction’. By creating conflict and collision courses it seems that Truss is intent on this destruction. But there will be nothing creative about it. That was never possible, anyway. There will just be victims.
Truss has brought the most right-wing government to office in the UK in the modern era. But it’s important to note that its right-wing thinking focuses only on what it dislikes. There is no policy agenda within that thinking. Their belief is that need will be met by business.
They believe that out there in the economy are new businesses who have only been waiting for the destruction of government for them to emerge into the marketplace so that they can replace the services the government supplies now.
Some such scavengers will no doubt exist. The health care scammers will abound. Dodgy insurance schemes will be peddled. But this is not the environment in which innovation, risk, the needs of society and the constraints of the planet can be reconciled by the commercial sector.
Truss is, therefore, setting out to fail. Her appointments and priorities prove it. The collision course she is set upon is dangerous. The cost to us all of her choices will be enormous.
In this case we have to ask the question, what comes after Truss? A Labour Party beholden to the neoliberal agenda is not the place to find those ideas. Nor are the simple demands of Enough is Enough a cogent response, even if they are superficially appealing to some.
The time to create the agenda for a post-neoliberal world, where economic and social justice and a belief in the virtues of accountable democracy has arrived. That’s where I will be going with my thinking now. We can do better than this. To survive, we have to.

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More from @RichardJMurphy

Sep 8
Truss apparently has an energy plan. What is more we are to hear about it today. It sounds expensive, because it will subsidise those who do not need support. But it will also, apparently, be funded by borrowing, and that is bizarre (to be polite). A thread….
I will discuss the strengths and weaknesses of whatever plan Truss announces today when we know more details of who it will support. The one thing we do apparently know for sure is that the £130 billion (or more) cost will be paid for with borrowing. That’s not necessary.
When it comes to funding its spending there are three choices available to any government. It can tax. It can seek to persuade savers to deposit their money with it, which is usually and incorrectly called borrowing. And it can create new money to pay for the spending.
Read 36 tweets
Sep 6
The Truss energy plan is dire. A short thread..
The plan’s aim is to guarantee the massive profits energy companies are making.
On top of that, it delivers a whole new pile of profit to the banks.
Read 10 tweets
Sep 5
I took the weekend off writing. I deliberately wanted a break from commenting on the crisis that I think is coming. Having done so, and having done some other things as well as watching a little politics, I come back even more worried. A thread….
Like everyone else I could be wrong in assuming Liz Truss will be prime minister (PM), but I will take that risk. So what are the risks in that forthcoming premiership? They are numerous. They’re all deeply troubling.
At its core the most troubling issue that we face is that Truss is simply not a credible politician. She says nothing, commits to nothing, has never delivered an identifiable policy of consequence, and is clearly driven by dogma. Her indifference to redistribution proves that.
Read 32 tweets
Aug 30
It is often said that if the government borrows we, as a generation, will leave debt for our grandchildren to repay. This, however, is wrong. The belief is based on a number of falsehoods, which are compounded to create a myth that both facts and history contradict. A thread….
The first falsehood is that governments and households are like each other when it comes to economics, or much else. They are not.
Households use government-created money to record their income, spending, borrowing and repayment. That’s good news: the economy depends on us having a single currency.
Read 51 tweets
Aug 29
There is much talk happening on how to solve the so-called cost-of-living crisis. Most of it fails to recognise that the problem is much bigger than that: the whole economy is in meltdown. None seems to address the cost of energy itself. A thread on the last, vital, point….
No one now doubts that the UK has an economic crisis on an unprecedented scale. My estimates suggest 60% of households are going to struggle to pay their energy and other bills this winter whilst public services and hundreds of thousands of companies might fail.
The focus of most comment so far has been in households. Don’t get me wrong. Their inability to pay matters, enormously. But hospitals, schools, care homes and businesses are also facing impossible bills.
Read 42 tweets
Aug 25
The FT noted this morning that "Financial markets are betting the Bank of England will more than double interest rates by May next year." That means rates of 4% are being pencilled in. This is another catastrophe in the making...a thread
Bank of England base rates matter. They establish the basis for all other interest rates in the UK - with mortgage rates being part of this - but many other loans also have their rates changed when this one does.
So what would the impact of an increase in Bank of England base rate to 4% be on top of all the other crises that we face? I am just going to look at the resulting mortgage issues for now.
Read 29 tweets

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