flatpack-
Are we talking about different crises? I'm talking about the massive debts Labour ran up from 2001 to 2007 which meant that, when the credit crunch hit, there was no surplus to take up the spending slack that occurred when tax receipts fell.
If New Labour ran a balanced budget, we would still be over 8% in deficit since the financial crisis. We were vulnerable no matter what, because of the huge amount of tax receipts we get from the City of London and the fact that we don't manufacture anything.
Do you know about those massive debts? Would you like to? Here are the spending figures for all governments from 1901, but pay close attention to Labour from 2001 onwards. Note the deficit run every year from 2001.
Note how the Tory scum ran a deficit every year - bar two - from 1979 to 1996. That's a streak of running a deficit for 15 years.
In fact, since the 1950s, most governments ran deficits most of the time. The state of the economy in 2007 was roughly 3% - just over the EU threshold. If you compare the block from 2002-2007 where New Labour ran deficits, with the previous block run by Tory scum from 1991-1996, you see that the Tory scum ran a total cumulative deficit of £222K, and New Labour ran a total cumulative deficit of £201K.
I don't disagree that the banks should have been left to fail. In a free market economy that's exactly what should have happened, but as we all know, Gordon Brown was anything but a free marketeer.
He was too much of a free marketeer. He deregulated the banks and continued the neo-liberal policies of the previous Tory administrations. Perhaps if he had been more of a socialist, then the UK might have been in a better position now.
We can speculate either way, but we know for certain that public spending was not the cause of the crisis or subsequent recession. That lies squarely at the hands of gambling Capitalists.