Austerity, a renowned term in the realms of political economy- is a term used to describe government initiatives to tackle existing crises such as government debt. Austerity can come in a form of cuts in public expenditure, tax increases or both and it is usually done in very tight economic conditions.
Blyth's book; Austerity is a guide to understanding how the global economy has found itself in crisis and he offers the following definition to the term Austerity when he says it is “a form of voluntary deflation in which the economy adjusts through the reduction of wages, prices and public spending to restore competitiveness, which is best achieved by cutting the state’s budget, debts and deficits”. One of the world's largest economies, the UK has adapted a fiscal policy as a response to the great recession and in 2009 David Cameron declared that "the age of irresponsibility is giving way to the age of austerity" and by the 2010 Coalition government of the Conservative and Liberal democrats the first austere policies were in action which lead to less people being able to access the housing market, less people in employment, the rate of life expectancy in England nearly halved between 2010 and 2017, and more people were living off of food banks due to the George Osbourne, the Chancellor of the Exchequer's who achieved his goals by goals through substantial reductions in public expenditure and tax increases amounting to £110 billion.
In his book, Blyth presents three reasons as to why austerity is dangerous and that is because it impacts those on the lower income bracket more than anything else (40% of the US income distribution hasn’t had a wage increase since 1979), it ignores the notions that all countries cannot be austere at the same time and that it simply doesn't work. He structures the book into three sections, the second section of the book is an examination of previous historical attempts at using austerity as a way to restore economic growth through market competition.
In this section the author combines the austerity with liberal economic policy that is weary of state intervention in the economy seeing as it as useless. He combines the ideas from Locke and Smith to the Austrian School, Schumpeter and Friedman, Blythe demonstrates the persistence of austerity policies. The strongest element of this section is the ‘natural history’ of austerity in which the experiences of austerity in the US and UK in the 1920s and 1930s, and Denmark and Ireland in the 1980s, are considered in the context of the countries such Lithuania, Bulgaria, etc..
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