You know things have come to a pretty pass when a term like "progressive austerity" come into use, especially when an egalitarian (?) think tank originates it. See this
21 May 2009 Financial Times piece by Richard Reeves, head of
Demos. Excerpt:
Second, progressive austerity means giving the public sector more
than just a hard squeeze. The principal lesson from Canada – where
spending was cut by 10 per cent in the mid-1990s – is that whole
budgets, agencies and departments should be axed. The default
assumption in spending rounds is that money will continue to flow
towards an activity. Expenditure must address a clear need, through
demonstrably effective policies.
Much of the quangocracy that has
sprouted under Labour will fail one or both of these tests. Regional
development agencies, sector skills councils and the communities and
local government department should all go. Any agency with the word
“improvement” in its title could probably disappear without discernible
negative effects. Middle-class welfare should end. Child benefit should
be abolished. Subsidised higher education ought to be targeted at
low-income students.
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