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Who’s bought your vote?

A rare political rant today, which you are of course free to ignore. Alternatively please do have your say (politely, constructively) in the comments. My hope is that by keeping politics restricted to these occasional blood-letting rambles, we can hopefully keep the rest of the site and article comments relatively ideology-free.

Last time we faced a general election, the economy was uppermost in voters’ minds. I even wrote a few posts [1] on Monevator about what I thought needed to be cut, slashed and kyboshed – and also where Government might helpfully spend some money.

Of course, over the five years that followed neither my manifesto nor anyone else’s was achieved.

That’s what you get from a Coalition government that takes office after the money has run out, and yet must minister to the needs of a country that’s grown comfortable on 15 years of economic growth and free-flowing public spending. A queer pitch indeed!

But you know what? I think it turned out okay.

Spending was reigned in a bit, taxes were cut a bit – usefully from the bottom with the personal allowance raise, and from the top, with the end of the mean-spirited 50% rate of tax – and getting the national books in order has at least became accepted lip service among all the parties, if not always the reality on the ground.

Oh, and the NHS has not been destroyed. Millions of people do not languish on the dole queues. At the same time, George Osborne is behind his own targets for tackling the deficit.

Muddling through a crisis like this is one way forward.

If I have one major criticism, it’s that there wasn’t boldness on true infrastructural investment [2], given the incredibly low cost of long-term borrowing.

I have no appetite for permanently higher state spending as a share of GDP from here, nor for Gordon Brown-style “investment” that walks out the door every evening in the form of higher salaries.

And I understand that some are skeptical of the value for money from any major projects.

Nevertheless, the fact is there are some things a country needs, such as roads, rails, airports, bridges, tidal and nuclear power stations (and in the UK simply more houses) where the state can usefully get involved.

In the earlier years of the crisis, I think such investment would have delivered a lot of bangs for the buck. It might have been a wash overall long-term, in terms of return on investment, but it would have meant more jobs during the downturn and making something good out of a bad situation.

Also, rather like buying shares in a bear market, the odds are surely more in your favour if you spend money as the state when demand from the private sector for the same skills and opportunities has evaporated.

Not doing more visible state spending in the UK is not the glaring failure that I think it is in the US – their roads and bridges are literally falling apart – but it’s still been a missed opportunity.

Six of one and half a dozen of the other

So what about the next five years?

I haven’t written much about the economy recently, and I won’t do so now.

In the eyes of all but the ‘house of paper money, mountain of debt’ fundamentalists, we’re clearly out of the emergency ward. Reasonable people can disagree about how much further and how fast spending should be ‘cut’ (or more likely at best held in real terms) or where the axe should fall. Plenty do elsewhere.

But I don’t think voters are so bothered in this election.

All the main parties have signed up to some sort of fiscal restraint (in the loosest sense of the word) and my gut says the existential doubts that led to everything from the Occupy movement to the rise of UKIP has waned.

Also for everyone who fears, say, a return to profligate spending by a Labour government, there’s another who worries about the rise of inequality and the fact that the super-rich have done so much better over the past five years.

Often, as in my case, those worries reside in the same numbskull!

So I don’t think people believe they are voting to save the nation this time. Rather, they are much more likely to vote based on the outlook for their own wallets.

True, we all know there’s a big economic element to that end.

If a Labour government spooked the money markets, the pound fell and interest rates soared, that could have a much bigger impact than getting a few hundred extra quid in free childcare.

Similarly, if a Conservative/UKIP alliance took us out of Europe and started dismantling public services along the way there could be massive upheaval, too.

But I think there are so many often-contradictory permutations that many floating voters aren’t even bothering to evaluate them, and they will instead resort to self-interest to guide their vote.

And it’s floating voters who swing elections.

It’s housing, stupid

I’m the most floaty voter you’ll ever meet – I have voted for four parties to my recollection, in national and local elections – and I’m finding the current choice amongst the most difficult ever.

I had pretty much resolved to go Conservative again this time. I judge we can do with another five years of half-serious attempts at curbing state spending, and Ed Milliband’s talk of price controls and unilaterally raising the minimum wage really bother me.

(I’m a fan of the minimum wage, incidentally, but only when it’s done through the painstakingly established regulatory process that’s been put in place. Not when it’s lifted on a whim by a party chasing cheap votes).

However in the past few days the Conservatives have come out with two policies that I personally find repellent.

Firstly, the proposed changes to inheritance tax to lift £1 million family homes out of the levy altogether.

I know most people hate inheritance tax, and I’m always accused of being a left-wing commie agitator when I say I want it to be raised.

But the point – which my critics never seem to address – is someone somewhere has to be taxed – unless you’re a true zero-State free market radical, which almost nobody is.

All the major parties are really talking about is 2-5% difference in State spending around the 40% share of GDP mark. So however you do it, that’s a lot of tax that needs to be collected from somewhere.

On principle, I think it’s better to more heavily tax dead people and their heirs who did nothing to earn their windfall gains, because you can then reduce the taxes levied on earnings and on the wealth created by entrepreneurs.

As I say, I know most of you don’t agree with me. Even my left-wing friends go red when they think about paying tax on their parent’s semi-detached pile with easy access to good grammar schools.

Oh well, I’ve never written articles for this website to win fans.

But even if you don’t like inheritance tax, you must surely at least question the logic of this particular Conservative move.

Because if you were going to reduce inheritance tax on any particular asset you could choose, the stupidest one to favour in the UK has to be residential housing.

Save now, pay later

It was one thing to turn pensions [3] into inheritance tax planning vehicles for the mass-affluent, which is what has effectively happened in the past 12 months.

I didn’t agree with it, but there you go.

However to take an asset – UK housing – that is in structurally short supply, where high prices cause daily misery for millions, and to make it even more attractive to sit in it, unproductively squatting for future gains – that is downright irresponsible.

What moderately wealthy empty-nesters living in a capacious four-bedroom house are going to downsize now, knowing that all it will do is expose the money they release to inheritance tax?

On the contrary, they will be advised to consider buying even bigger and more expensive homes to try to shield their (children’s) assets.

Mass downsizing alone won’t solve the housing crisis [4], but it would be a start.

I want [4] capital gains on residential property (deferred until the point of death), so you can see that this policy is the opposite of where I think we should be going.

The only other option is even more building – something in the order of 300-400,000 homes a year for at least the next decade.

We’re barely doing a quarter of that.

Many of those new homes will have to be built in green belts and pretty market towns across the South East.

I wonder how that will go down?

We need to build at least 250,000 more homes annually anyway, even if we put the housing stock we’ve already got to more efficient use.

But this policy just makes things worse.

No way to compete

One thing you need to know about me to understand my perspective is I was not born into a comfortable middle-class home in the South East. The world was not my oyster.

I came to London from the provinces with a suitcase, and my instinct is always going to be to think of other smart young people who want to do the same.

Already the wealthy middle and upper classes are re-capturing the arts and media scene wholesale – a change that has happened in my lifetime – as their children are about the only ones who can afford to do the unpaid entry-level work demanded, or who can think about a lifetime of sub-par earnings in a city where house prices are approaching 10-times the average wage, knowing they’ve an inheritance to look forward to and plenty of help in-between.

Their parents are there to assist them with tuition fees, deposits for flats, and all the rest of it.

The resultant crushing of the meritocracy that emerged in the 1950s and 1960s is bad enough when applied to the arts, but I can now foresee it impacting the sciences, engineering, and even entrepreneurship itself. (I don’t think it’s a coincidence that every new Silicon Roundabout founder I hear has a plummy Home Counties accent).

You might say you don’t give two hoots, because you’re in the haves and the have-nots can look after themselves.

Fair enough, from a personal perspective. Ugly but honest.

However what is the impact going to be nationally if we move to a society whereby wealth and opportunity is channeled down a narrowing funnel of families, and real social mobility is curbed?

I’ll tell you. It means more mediocre but well-educated offspring of parents who’ve made it (or, eventually, whose own parents made it) doing mediocre work in positions they are occupying because some smarter kid from anywhere 50 miles from London never showed up to compete.

A nation increasingly run and ruled by the Nice But Dim types who currently thrive as upscale estate agents in London.

At least until China and India come along to eat our uncompetitive lunch.

I shudder.

Flog it!

Now I’ve got my left-wing ire up, I will turn to the subsidized right-to-buy social housing association policy that’s been revealed this week by the Tories.

Yet ironically my complaint here comes more from the free-marketeer who sits on my other shoulder.

Don’t get me wrong – given my comments above, I clearly think it’s idiotic for the Conservative Party to encourage the sale at a discount of what little social housing we have left.

However I think it’s even worse when you consider low-earners who’ve scrimped and saved to buy one-bedroom flats or starter homes in the private market – or who are perhaps still renting and saving to do so.

They will be left to watch glumly as those who happened to be in housing association property are granted a one-off windfall gain by the State.

It’s another lottery. Not the genetic lottery of inheritances and the Bank of Mum and Dad, but a lottery of happening to be sitting in the right state assets when the ruling party of the day decides to give them away on the cheap.

How fair.

Nothing really fits me

At this point I’m naturally thinking I might have to cast my vote elsewhere, despite the Conservatives being the party I think is best having their hands on the tiller for the another five years – and despite the fact that they would undoubtedly be the best for my own wallet.

Sadly Labour has veered to the Left, while the Liberal Democrats have some silly anti-capitalist policies in their manifesto, particularly regarding capital gains tax.

(Before somebody pipes in and claims I’m inconsistent in being against reduced capital gains tax allowances but all for inheritance tax, here’s a clue – me and Richard Branson [5] took risks when we allocated our money and we’ve made losses and gains along the way. Your child simply happens to be related to you – they did nothing to get the money, and the only risk they took for their inheritance was their sense of personal achievement being smothered by your generosity).

What about the fringe parties?

I think UKIP has jumped the shark – it did a useful job in making immigration [6] something the chattering classes can cautiously discuss without being socially ostracized, but the party itself is clearly populated by rank-and-file nutters.

Indeed I’d summarize the fringe party offerings as:

So those aside, I’ve collated below the three main party’s manifesto pledges that I think are most relevant to Monevator readers, from a personal finance and investment perspective.

In other words, I’ve focused on pledges that impact earned income, wealth, and spending on things like rail fares and childcare.

To that end I have not covered benefits, as I’ve assumed few Monevator readers are living in social housing on welfare. (My apologies if that’s you – and I admire your aspiration.)

If you think I’ve missed out anything important from a personal finance perspective, please do let me know below, and if I agree I’ll add it to the list.

Conservatives

You can read a summary of the rest of the manifesto at the BBC [7], or you can read the whole thing at the Conservative’s website [8].

Labour

  • Cut tuition fees from £9,000 to £6,000 a year

Read more of the manifesto via the BBC’s summary [9], or see the whole thing at the Labour website [10].

Liberal Democrats

Read more of the manifesto via the BBC’s summary [11], or see the Liberal Democrat website [12].

Who would you vote for, from a personal finance and investment perspective, and why? Let us know below, but please note I will be deleting any swearing, frothing, or truly swivel-eyed ranting. (I’m allowed a small amount of the latter above. It’s my pub, and I’m the landlord).