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Last 3 Posts @ May 17, 2008 11:49:22 AM EDT

NOT BRASSED OFF..... (16 hrs, 44 mins ago)

Apologies for not blogging earlier on but today recovering from Mayor-making last night in Mytholmroyd. Thanks to Hebden Bridge Junior Band for saving the day and pra...

Grimmer Up North

Transparency = popularity. Apparently (17 hrs, 8 mins ago)

The good ol’ High Court seems to have had the final word on whether the details of MPs’ expenses claims are published. Well, transparency is what it’...

And another thing...

Rangers riot aftermath (17 hrs, 10 mins ago)

<!--Mime Type of File is image/jpeg --> Manchester United fans are to pay the price for the Glasgow Rangers riot, which took place here in Piccadilly Gardens not tw...

Stephen Newton's diary of sorts...

Monday, May 05, 2008

Ten New Policies - 2 comments

One of the indulgences of election-watching is to attempt to interpret what the electorate - aggregating across millions of individual decisions - 'really meant' . In defeat, this usually turns out to be a desire for greater movement on the writer's own pet policies; in victory, proof that the electorate's flirtations with the other side meant those half-baked ideas of yours were merely ahead of their time... Ideas do come cheap, and no-one spares a thought for the intelligent people within Government who developed what appeared to be a sound idea into legislation that the mainstream media, and those who lost most from it, insisted was a thoughtless or callous attack, and which now takes the blame for electoral defeat. That's a general point, not a defence of the 10p tax change (has there been one?)

Anyway, leaving all that aside, and for what it's worth, here are ten policy ideas of my own. They reflect my current ideological viewpoint, which might not be compatible with anyone else's vision of the Labour Party, but I imagine them to be both popular and just. Take from them what you will. Note that if I haven't covered a particular area, that could either mean that I think things are just right at present (e.g. foreign policy, and international development), or that I don't have any ideas at present.

In no particular order:
  1. Workers' Control. Freedom for all workers, not just trade unionists, in a push for co-operative/mutual ownership that extends across the private and public 'sectors'. This offers the chance of economic autonomy for all, as an alternative to capitalism. It rejects Statism, in favour of co-operation and competition. Everything else is mere tinkering.
  2. A Referendum to decide between three revenue-neutral personal tax systems: (a) the status quo, (b) a more 'progressive' one, (c) one that reduces income tax in favour of an extensive inheritance tax.
  3. Assessment of the feasibility of replacing certain benefits, and the national minimum wage, with a guaranteed national minimum income.
  4. A tougher line on monopolistic behaviour: especially in the broadcast/printed media, but including the actions of public sector trade unions.
  5. Investigation of the role of planning controls and private land ownership in artificially inflating/sustaining house prices, slowing redevelopment, and limiting (note) aggregate economic freedom.
  6. A 'loosening' of the criminal justice system: giving Police the powers they say they need to enforce the law thoroughly, in return for appropriate scrutiny; and investigate the state of, and capacity of the prison system.
  7. Removal of any restrictions upon local councils adopting London-style 'congestion' charges.
  8. Removal of immigration 'targets' and other arbitrary restrictions, in return for greater aid for host areas.
  9. Do whatever is necessary to address the dysfunctional relationship between central government and teachers: whether it be reconciliation, or an amicable separation.
  10. Disestablishment of the Church of England: so that it may adapt to more honestly reflect the views of Christians, rather than public opinion, and to expunge its residual political power.
There you go. I've been very brief, but can expand upon individual points on request.

I hardly feel I've formed the basis of a future, winning Labour Manifesto, let alone fostered 'unity', or provided Gordon Brown with a strategy he can hit the ground running with, but the Sunday papers have been full of them, so he's not missing out.

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Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Education vouchers II - no comments

I hadn't really intended the last post on vouchers to hog the top spot for almost a week, but it was worthwhile, and some interesting comments have been left. There are even more (currently 28) at Stumbling and Mumbling's response to the article. I should have more time to blog (and, perhaps, think) by the end of next week.

Incidentally I've set up a poll on vouchers that is open to everyone with a B4L login. As usual, you have a full 100 votes to allocate between the various options, according to your preference and your level of interest. If you're quick (i.e. second) you can see how I voted.

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Friday, May 11, 2007

Education vouchers - 9 comments

I'm sure this won't endear me to fellow Labour bloggers, but the Economist (actually, it's now last week's edition - sorry) has an interesting evidence of successful experiments involving school vouchers:
[...] Harry Patrinos, an education economist at the World Bank, cites a Colombian programme to broaden access to secondary schooling, known as PACES, a 1990s initiative that provided over 125,000 poor children with vouchers worth around half the cost of private secondary school. Crucially, there were more applicants than vouchers. The programme, which selected children by lottery, provided researchers with an almost perfect experiment, akin to the “pill-placebo” studies used to judge the efficacy of new medicines. The subsequent results show that the children who received vouchers were 15-20% more likely to finish secondary education, five percentage points less likely to repeat a grade, scored a bit better on scholastic tests and were much more likely to take college entrance exams.

Voucher programmes in several American states have been run along similar lines. Greg Forster, a statistician at the Friedman Foundation, a charity advocating universal vouchers, says there have been eight similar studies in America: seven showed statistically significant positive results for the lucky voucher winners; the eighth also showed positive results but was not designed well enough to count.

The voucher pupils did better even though the state spent less than it would have done had the children been educated in normal state schools. American voucher schemes typically offer private schools around half of what the state would spend if the pupils stayed in public schools. The Colombian programme did not even set out to offer better schooling than was available in the state sector; the aim was simply to raise enrolment rates as quickly and cheaply as possible.

These results are important because they strip out other influences. Home, neighbourhood and natural ability all affect results more than which school a child attends. If the pupils who received vouchers differ from those who don't—perhaps simply by coming from the sort of go-getting family that elbows its way to the front of every queue—any effect might simply be the result of any number of other factors. But assigning the vouchers randomly guarded against this risk. [...]

More evidence that choice can raise standards for all comes from Caroline Hoxby, an economist at Harvard University, who has shown that when American public schools must compete for their students with schools that accept vouchers, their performance improves. Swedish researchers say the same. It seems that those who work in state schools are just like everybody else: they do better when confronted by a bit of competition."
There must be a chance of such a scheme being introduced, whatever Labour activists hope. Why? Because voters are (evidently) riled; because private education is - say the figures - becoming a socially acceptable rather than an exceptional choice for parents; and because there'll come a point when schools have the resources they need, the buildings, the staff, the uniforms, the energised, performance-paid Heads, the rooms full of flat-screen monitors, but with limited success in equipping children for the world of work, training, and higher education.

Clearly the introduction of vouchers shouldn't be intended as a substitute for other education policies, but if it happens to work - as it appears to in Sweden - perhaps it can replace other policies that don't work? Perhaps, also, our current resistance stems from unfamiliarity or national peculiarity, rather than an internationally-consistent ideological position? Why not pick a council and try an experiment? If it appears to work, add another council; if not, scrap it and try something else. I can't see a quicker or cheaper way to find out the truth, once and for all.

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Thursday, January 11, 2007

Ruth Kelly - 4 comments

Firstly, apologies for a post about tea earning undue publicity at the top of this blog over the past two days. I can't promise there's any more original thought in this post either, as the recent controversy about Ruth Kelly's son being sent to a school in the private sector covers more issues than I'm prepared/competent to sum up in one single post.

One argument I hope we can nail is that Labour politicians - irrespective of their being in Government - have a particular responsibility to use state-provided services even under exceptional circumstances - when it should now be entirely clear that the ending of private sector involvement is not a goal or an ambition in any area of society or the economy, and that they should direct their efforts to encouraging best practice, and to reducing the social and economic barriers that deny ordinary people the chance to make their own choice.

I'm not suggesting that eliminating that argument - one, perhaps, that only mischievous journalists cling onto - simplifies or elucidates the debate much, so I'll just link to four posts I would use as the basis for further thought if I had much more time.

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