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Why I don’t want Gordon Brown to cut my taxes

Tax, schmax. Nobody likes paying taxes: from the richest to the poorest, we all think we’re getting a poor return, even if we believe in theory, as me and Warren Buffet do, that taxes are a necessary evil for the good of society.

Given that I’d rather write a dinner invitation to my mistress’s mother-in-law than a bigger cheque to the Inland Revenue, I must be thrilled then at Gordon Brown’s plans to alleviate the imminent recession by cutting taxes, right?

Well, it’s hard for me to type these words, but… on balance… no.

Tax cuts would be good for me, but I don’t think they’re the best thing for this country. And as a long-term investor in (and citizen of) the UK, I’d rather see Brown spending to help the nation rather than my bank balance.

Cutting taxes helps us individually, but it might not help Great Britain PLC

It would take a very long post to discuss whether tax cuts stimulate the economy in normal times (so read that link from Investopedia, then pop back, if you like). But these aren’t normal times – house prices are plunging, we’re still in the grip of a credit crunch, and a recession is on the way.

Advocates argue cutting taxes will get more money moving through the economy, provided they’re not paid for by a corresponding cut in public spending. (The latter is something David Cameron doesn’t seem to grasp in his own proposals, incidentally).

But while reducing taxes and running up Government debt isn’t the worst way to respond to a recession (increasing taxes while running up debt is worse, for instance), I don’t believe it’s the best way to respond, either.

Of course I’m just a mere amateur investor, and Gordon Brown doesn’t read Monevator, as far as I’m aware (even though he nationalised Northern Rock just after I suggested he should. Coincidence? Fair cop.)

If you are reading, Gordon, I’d humbly ask you to consider what people will actually spend their extra tax-rebated income on:

  • If you’re poor, you need all the help you can get to pay for costlier food and fuel – the alternative is debt or going without. Good for the poor, then – and they’re the best target for tax cuts in terms of getting spending going – but not spectacular in terms of usefully growing the economy.
  • In my case I’ll immediately boost my savings. Most middle-class people will do the same, or pay down their mortgages. I won’t spend a penny of the extra tax on a new fridge, an extra haircut, or any of the other things that could help revive the economy (short of my savings shoring up my bank’s balance sheet, and the Government has already bailed out the banks with our money once).
  • Other people will use their extra income to pay down debt. While getting out of debt should be the number one priority for any individual, it’s exactly what the Government doesn’t need us to do as a nation. The UK economy needs us to spend, spend, spend, even though that’s partly what got us into this mess in the first place.

When saving is bad, and spending is good

This strange state of affairs – that the Government needs us to spend in the face of the downturn, but that individually we’re better off saving – is known as the Paradox of Thrift.

The paradox was popularly defined by the great and suddenly popular British economist John Maynard Keynes. In simple-ish terms:

In equilibrium, total income (and thus demand) must equal total output, and total investment must equal total saving. Assuming that saving rises faster as a function of income than the relationship between investment and output, an increase in the marginal propensity to save, all other things being equal, will move the equilibrium point at which income equals output and investment equals savings to lower values.

Okay, sorry, that wasn’t much simpler was it?!

Let’s try it again in probably too simple terms (with my apologies to any economists reading):

The paradox of thrift is that saving is only a good thing for society up to a point. If you or I spend less of our money on plasma TVs or hot dogs and save more instead, we lower the total demand in the economy. Saving is only good for the wider economy in so much as businesses will use our savings to invest in new economic activity. Saving beyond that will actually increase the pain of a recession, by effectively taking money out of circulation.

The paradox of thrift is one of many things that afflicted Japan in its ‘lost decade’. Scared by Japan’s huge stock market and property crashes, its people began to save too much of their income for the good of the Japanese economy, and as a result it dipped in and out of recession for years.

Why we should build roads, railways, and factories instead

If Gordon Brown was a proper follower of John Maynard Keynes, he’d be investing more in infrastructure instead of cutting taxes.

Upgrading the UK’s railways, roads and airports, for example, would provide thousands of jobs right now, when they’re needed, and so trickle money out into the wider economy, as well as eventually increasing Britain’s economic competitiveness against other nations.

Of course, we’d still have to pay for all these shiny new projects in the future – Government borrowing would rise, and would one day need to be repaid. But we’d hopefully all be a little richer on the other side of the recession, because Britain would be doing a little more business because of the investment we’d make today, so the pain of those tax increases would be lessened.

On that note, yet another argument against tax cuts is that they don’t work because people understand they won’t last, and so save more to pay for tax rises in the future. Again, people have based careers on arguing out this stuff, but it’s another point to consider.

A more immediate problem is that the bond market will be well aware that the Government is freely spending.

If bond investors believe that Gordon Brown has lost control over public spending, long-term bond rates will likely rise, increasing the cost of borrowing for businesses and for our own fixed rate mortgages. This would actually drain money out of the economy, making matters even worse.

Tax cuts are better for boosting votes than the economy

Despite his 10 years at the Treasury, Gordon Brown has repeatedly proved he’s weirdly immune to the (so-called) laws of economics.

This is the man who claimed he’d presided over an “end to boom and bust”, remember, despite centuries of economic history suggesting otherwise.

Why then does he want to cut taxes rather than spend? Could it be because infrastructural investment looks like (and often is) wasteful Government largesse, but that tax cuts look like the actions of a Government worth voting for? Surely not!

If Brown does cut income taxes for all, then sadly I’ll be increasing my savings to prepare for tax rises in the future, and for any higher mortgage rates. My country may need me to spend, but I’m no more a financial kamikaze artist than the modern day Japanese.

If you’ve just started to take action in the face of the downturn, you might get some ideas from my four tips to surviving the credit crunch. If you’ve already taken cover, try these advanced anti-credit crunch goals.

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Will Blinkx (BLNX) be the UK’s answer to Google?

Important: What follows is not a recommendation to buy or sell Blinkx. I’m a private investor, storing and sharing notes. Read my disclaimer.

Name: Blinkx   Ticker: BLNX
Listed in: London (AIM)   Business: Technology
More information: Digital Look / Google Finance
Official Site: Blinkx

Key numbers for Blinkx (10/11/08)

Share price: 19.25p
Market cap: £53.4 million
Net cash: Approximately $32 million
High/low (12 months): 35.75p / 14.75p
P/E (Latest/Forecast): n/a  / n/a (loss making)
PEG (Latest/Forecast): n/a / n/a (loss making)
Yield: 0%/0%

Blinkx is a search engine for video content, which uses speech recognition technology to index videos. It was spun off by Autonomy, the FTSE 100 search specialist, in May 2007, and was listed on the FTSE AIM market priced at 45p to go. It ended the day up at 63p.

Since then it’s risen and fallen (mainly fallen) and is trading on today’s latest Interim Results as I type at 19.25p.

While the price has gone up and down, Blinkx’s traffic and revenues are only going higher. Today’s results for the six months to the end of September 2008 highlight:

  • Strong revenue growth up 115% to $6.4m from first half FY08
  • Top and bottom line performance ahead of analyst consensus
  • Gross profits up 106% to $4.5m from first half FY08
  • Unique visitors up 106% year on year to 64 million and page views up 267% year on year to 668 million in September 2008 (source: comScore)
  • Daily Video Search run rate of over 7,000,000 per day in September 2008
  • Content hours increased 78% year on year, from 18.5 million to 32 million
  • 70 new content partners added, bringing total to over 420 media organizations, including Getty Images, Time Inc. and CBS
  • Addition of top-tier syndication partners, including ITN, MSN UK and Rambler

I’ve not looked closely at how Blinkx calculates gross profits from my quick perusal of its results, though, since we’re soon told it amounts to a $3.3 loss for the period, or a loss per share of 1.17 cents, which is nearly double the operating loss per share from last year, stripping out the IPO costs.

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The Clapham House Group (CPH) (UK)

Important: What follows is not a recommendation to buy or sell The Clapham House Group. I’m a private investor, storing and sharing notes. Read my disclaimer.

Name: The Clapham House Group
Ticker: CPH
Listed in: London (AIM)
Business: Restaurants
More information: Digital Look / Google Finance
Official Site for Investors: The Clapham House Group

Key numbers for The Clapham House Group (7/11/08)

Share price: 53.5p
Market cap: £19.60 million
Debt: Approximately £12 million
High/low (12 months): 321.50p / 53.50p
P/E (08/09/10): 4.5 / 8.5 / 6.6
PEG (Latest/Forecast): 0.2 / 0.3
Yield: 0%/0%

The Clapham House story

My discovery of The Clapham House Group began several years ago, when I ate the best burger of my life near Clapham Junction, South London. The chips weren’t bad either, and the milkshakes – generous, multi-flavoured, served in a proper silver milk shaker – were to die for.

“This joint, The Gourmet Burger Kitchen, is going to be huge,” quoth I. “If I ever got the chance to invest in something like this, I would in a flash.”

A short while later I got to invest in something exactly like The Gourmet Burger Kitchen (GBK), when it was acquired by The Clapham House Group, a new London-listed company headed up by David Page, the former bigwig behind the hugely successful (and once quoted) Pizza Express. Page was going to make The Gourmet Burger Kitchen the new Pizza Express, with a Gourmet Burger bar in every town in the country and so on.

For some reason, Clapham House also bought an Indian delivery chain called The Bombay Bicycle Club (nice, but overpriced) and The Real Greek (mezze food, which I never fancy myself). Neither set the world alight. It also bought Tootsies, a sort of family-friendly rival to GBK, frequented to my eye mainly by estranged parents putting on a brave face for Sunday breakfast with the kids.

I bought some shares on a dip, the expansion rolled on, and for a while the shares did very nicely, netting me a three-bagger, if I remember correctly, when I sold out most of my holding at around £2.50. I was prompted to do by a new GBK I spotted in the Brunswick centre in London, which was tucked away down a side alley, whereas previous sites had occupied good positions for passing trade.

As recession fears mounted, the shares have kept falling, particularly after a profit warning at the start of the year.

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Five ways your pet could cost your pension dear

(Image: annia316)

I love animals, and I’ve kept pets since I was a child. They’re funny, sometimes loyal, they make me happy, and they keep me in touch with nature.

Over the past 20 years or so, though, pets have turned from being relatively cheap additions to the household into major moneypits.

I’ve succumbed myself. When I was a kid, I loved aquariums full of affordable tropical guppies, tetras and angelfish. These fish weren’t cheap for a young newspaper delivery boy – they cost me weeks of saved pocket money – but they were a bargain compared to what came next. After university I got into keeping tropical marine fish and corals, which are only marginally more affordable than a serious crack habit. The fish cost 10-20 times as much to buy, and you need lots of expensive equipment. Even the water costs money, since you need to buy salts to recreate the conditions of the ocean and purify the tap-water, too.

My aquarium addiction has never threatened my saving and investment budget, but I’m not sure that’s normal. If certain family members and friends of mine are any guide, many who aren’t saving for old age are spending money on pampered pets.

Pet inflation is biting. Think of the expensive crossbreeds of dogs made popular by celebrities, where once we’d have been happy with a cheerful and pretty mongrel or even a common pedigree like a lab or a spaniel. Exotic snakes and lizards costing hundreds of pounds that need to be fed with pricey live food, big outdoor aviaries for small birds, land for a pony – all big ticket items compared to the housecats of yesteryear scrounging on leftovers.

If you can afford to keep these animals, why not? But be aware it’s easy to underestimate the costs of maintaining even a dog or a cat, let alone a pot-bellied pig or a mini-coral reef in your living room. Ask the pet rescue centres who have to deal with ever more unfortunate animals outgrowing their owners’ pet budget as the credit crisis has deepened.

Here’s five things to consider when budgeting for a pet, plus one bonus for pet-owners looking on the bright side:

1. A pet is for life, so budget beyond the sticker price

A pedigree dog doesn’t cost £500 – it costs all the food, vet bills, food bowls, dog jackets, kennels, and insurance costs that add up over its lifetime.

Sainsbury’s Bank estimates the annual cost of a pedigree dog is over £500 a year, others say £10,000. One study found dogs can easily live for 10-15 years or more, bringing the lifetime cost to an average of £9,000.

That’s high enough, but imagine if instead you’d petted other people’s pooches in the park rather than buying your own and invested that £500 a year in the stock market.

If you started at 30, after 10 years you might have built up a pot of nearly £8,000 assuming 8% return a year. By the time you retire at 65, your pension pot could have grown to over £50,000.

Can you afford a dog now if it means you’ll be £50,000 poorer when you retire?

You can do these sums for all kinds of household expenses and end up thinking you shouldn’t spend a penny, true, but it’s all about priorities. I’d rather have a dog than a sports car. I see I can’t afford both when I calculate the cost to my medium-term savings goal of replacing my salary with investment income.

2. Think hard about pet insurance

Pet insurance may not be worth it. Often it’s never claimed, and rarely does it cover the entire bill of treating your animals. Pundits say it typically comes with plenty of exclusion clauses, making it hard to claim what you may feel you’re entitled to. I’ve never bought it, though I might if I had a very expensive pet.

On a positive note, pet insurance is a way of forcing you to put aside money in advance, which is better than spending on your credit card to treat your sick pet. But you’ll be paying a hefty premium for the privilege of letting someone else (the insurer) look after it for you, as one American study found:

The most important thing you need to know about pet insurance is that it is a form of enforced savings that almost never covers the entire bill. You can accomplish the same thing by paying the same monthly premium to your savings account.

The advantage: If your pet has little cause to visit a vet beyond annual checkups, the amount saved belongs to you, not an insurance company. The risk, of course, is if you run into unusually expensive veterinary needs.

The problem with pet insurance is all its fine-print pitfalls. Indeed, buying a policy may end up increasing a pet owner’s total expenditures on veterinary care by thousands of dollars, according to our analysis of five plans. That’s because on top of deductibles required by all the insurers, plus any co-pays, unreimbursed costs, and exclusions – all of which you pay out-of-pocket – you also pay premiums. Seemingly small $11 to $50 per-month premiums can add up to $2,000 to $6,000 or more over a pet’s lifetime.

If you decide to go ahead with pet insurance, rather than say putting money for vet bills aside in a dedicated account, then also be aware that comparing the offerings can be a nightmare, says The Guardian.

Be sure to start with a comparison website like Money Supermarket, and be prepared to read a lot of fine print.

3. Do you really need a bigger goldfish bowl?

Not literally: goldfish bowls are bad for any fish. I mean do you really need a 200-gallon aquarium, or are you just trying to keep up with your online neighbors?

The tanks of the month owned by elite fishkeepers at Reef Central are stunning, but the owners freely admit they take several hours, even days, to keep ticking over. The aquariums also cost several thousand pounds to set-up, and with fuel bills rising, coral tanks can cost hundreds to light each month due to the expense of trying to recreate the tropical sun indoors. (I know several aquarists downsizing for this very reason). A tank like this is an amazing sight, even if you’re not a fish fanatic, but amazing enough to eat up 25% of your annual spending or saving money, for example, and half your weekend?

Any animal lover needs to be alert to their passion overriding their common sense. Say you’re a dog fan. Is a labradoodle going to give you more pleasure on a walk than a plain labrador? Is it going to look prettier than a poodle? Unlikely. They’re lovely animals, but they’re a fashion purchase. If you’re ultimately buying one just to be trendy, get a new jacket instead – it’ll be cheaper in the long-run.

Now if you’ve truly fallen in love with some particular breed of dog or cat or you’ve planned for an eight-foot long aquarium in your living room for years, I’m right behind your purchase. Life is for living, and all that.

Just remember that with touchy-feely hobbies, like romance and kids, we too often feel grubby and cheap bringing money into the equation. I think that’s a mistake, which it brings me on to…

4. As veterinary bills go up, difficult decisions get even more difficult

Okay, this one is even trickier to address than the previous point.

The fact is it costs a lot of money to treat certain ailments of pets, whether through drugs or surgery – it can easily amount to hundreds of pounds, sometimes thousands. In the old days, pet owners would have likely had the animal put to sleep. Today, we’re more willing to spend a fortune keeping our beloved animals alive.

Look, I get why, I really do. But did the pet owners of yesteryear love their animals less? Was their dog not just as much part of the family? My recollection is if anything pets were even more important in those simpler times.

I think our society is getting softer and more hypocritical as we become richer and more cut off from the land. So people who spend £500 on vet bills for a budgie’s broken foot happily eat battery chicken eggs. Owners of the weak pedigree dogs will spend hundreds easing their pet’s discomfort, then go out and order veal or foie gras for supper.

Monevator isn’t the site to discuss the morality of any of these issues. I would urge though an element of clear-headedness comes with pet-owning. I realise having a living creature in our care that we’ve loved feels morally different to the treatment of one in a farm, but there’s no logical difference.

In practice, if you’re keeping one animal in pampered luxury while eating cheap meat, you’re throwing money away and fooling yourself.

It’s about balance. Do I take my pets to the vet? Of course. Would I spend £30 on drugs for a sick pet rabbit? Definitely. Would I consider £250 surgery to remove a possible tumour? No. Money isn’t infinite. I’d rather give animals in my charge the best care I can within reason and spend a little more on free range meat in the supermarket, than spend £700 treating a rabbit like this pet lover:

It must be a truly heartbreaking decision to have to make, and one that I hope no-one reading this ever has to confront. But with costs such as £300 to treat a broken leg in a cat and up to £1000 for the same injury in a dog, more and more animals are being referred to charities in a bid to save their lives. I myself have recently witnessed first-hand the expense that a pet can incur, as one of my rabbits came down with severe pneumonia. Thankfully, and somewhat miraculously, he came through OK, but the final bill came to over £700. Were it not for my insurance, I’m not sure where I’d have found the money.

You may feel like they did, and I respect your decision. (In this case, insurance covered the bill anyway). Just consider whether you can afford to be sentimental. If you can, no worries. If you can’t really afford it, but think you will be overcome and spend the money anyway when a beloved animal gets sick, then as the writer above says, for you pet insurance may be a necessary evil.

Be sure you understand the costs. If you can’t afford the cost of even moderate medical care for a pet, don’t buy one.

5. Could you choose a pet that earns its keep?

If you like all kinds of animals and your property has a bit of land, you could consider owning pets that are also paying guests. How about:

  • Your own herd of cows? The Dexter breed is specially small and becoming popular as prices of meat and milk rise. It will provide you with all the milk you need, and mow your lawn, too.
  • If you keep chickens, the eggs need not be any more expensive than in the shops, as this calculation on the cost of home-reared eggs shows, and you’ll know they’re having a happier life, too. Chickens are great fun to own – good luck if you plan to eat your pet one day, you’ll need a heart of stone to kill it.
  • A trained and photogenic dog might be of interest to a pet talent agency like Animal Acting in Europe or Hollywood Paws in the States. Think carefully before you part with any cash, obviously… You might try the Kennel Club if you want to train an existing pampered pooch.

On the bright side, owning a pet might bring reduce the cost of YOUR health insurance

The health benefits of owning a pet are well-known. Studies have demonstrated they can improve mental health, increase the sociability of their owners, and even improve the latter’s life expectancy by reducing stress and encouraging exercise.

I’ve read of health insurers reducing premiums if they’re customers owned a dog that was regularly walked. Unfortunately I can’t find any evidence, as Google is overwhelmed by coverage of pet insurance when I try to look for relevant policies. If anyone can offer any pointers in the comments, that’d be much appreciated.

I hope I’ve made clear I’ve got nothing against pet owners – how could I, as a pet owner myself? I also understand that people will sometimes spend more than is strictly rational on their animals.

All I’m saying is make sure the costs of owning, maintaining, insuring and medically treating your pet are properly considered and accounted for in your budget, and not brushed aside by a warm and furry feeling that could leave you chilly in your later years.

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