rednev
There is non worthy of worship except God
- Joined
- Jul 7, 2006
- Messages
- 24,305
No, Alistair Darling laid out a plan for cuts pre the election, but he took the sensible view that doing so in the middle of a fragile recovery would be a disaster, so at a slower pace then the tories. He was right
Also, since he became shadow Chancellor, Ed Balls (a Keynesian, by modern standards) has devoted a lot of energy to getting across that Osborne should put the brakes on the cuts in response to what's happened to the economy over the past 2 years. It's not so much about policy in 2010, it's about reacting to the conditions in front of us at the moment.
You have a fair point here - it's difficult to say how much it would have been different on this particular occasion. Generally speaking though, I find the Tories to be much more competent and trust-worthy on economic matters, based on history.
There's no doubt that there is a historic perception that the Tories are more economically competent, although Blair and Brown did go a long way in changing that. Labour lost the public's trust, but that's largely down to a hysterical media, much of which was out for Brown's head.