Sharper Axes, Lower Taxes - Big Steps to a Smaller State

288 Pages Posted: 28 Sep 2011

See all articles by Philip Booth

Philip Booth

City University London - The Business School

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Date Written: July 13, 2011

Abstract

The government’s 2010 Comprehensive Spending Review was anything but comprehensive. The cuts to government spending were modest, and large swathes of state activity were barely touched. Britain will remain a heavily regulated, high-tax, high-spend economy. Instead of totally reviewing the functions of the state and how the government should achieve its objectives, in most areas the spending review was merely a pruning exercise.

This monograph advocates a different approach. The authors provide strong evidence that high levels of taxation and public expenditure are hampering economic growth. They also examine the role of the state in key areas and find that current policies are extremely inefficient, imposing high costs but delivering poor results.

By combining substantial spending cuts with fundamental reform, outcomes can be improved at the same time as taxes are reduced. Britain can become a dynamic, low-tax economy with welfare systems that no longer penalise work in the way they currently do. At the same time, individuals and families would benefit from high-quality healthcare, education and infrastructure that was focused on consumer interests rather than producer interests.

JEL Classification: H00, H10, H11, H21, H51, H52, H53, H55, H56, H66, H61, H71

Suggested Citation

Booth, Philip, Sharper Axes, Lower Taxes - Big Steps to a Smaller State (July 13, 2011). Institute of Economic Affairs Monographs, Hobart Series No. 38, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1934856

Philip Booth (Contact Author)

City University London - The Business School ( email )

106 Bunhill Row
London, EC1Y 8TZ
United Kingdom

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