April, 1918
The Figures of the National BudgetA
Large Increase in Revenue and a Larger in ExpenditureComparisons
with Last Year and with the EstimatesThe
Proportions borne by Taxation still too LowThe
Folly of our Policy of Incessant BorrowingIts
Injustice to the Fighting Men.
At first sight the figures of revenue
and expenditure for the year ending March 31st are
extremely satisfactory, at any rate on the revenue
side. The Chancellor anticipated a year ago a
revenue from taxation and State services of L638 millions,
and the receipts into the Exchequer on these accounts
actually amount to L707 millions. On the expenditure
side, however, the increase over the Budget estimate
was very much greater. The estimate was L2290
millions, and the actual amount expended was L2696
millions. Instead, therefore, of a deficit of
L1652 millions having to be met by borrowing, there
was an actual gap, to be filled by this method, of,
roughly, L1990 millions.
To take the revenue side of the matter first, this being by
far the most cheering and satisfactory, we find that the details of the revenue,
as compared with last years, were as follows:
Year ending Year ending
Ma, 1918. Ma, 1917. Increase. Decrease.
Customs 71,261,000 70,561,000 700,
Excise 38,772,000 56,380,000 17,608,
Estate, etc.,
Duties
31,674,000 31,232,000 442,
Stamps 8,300,000 7,878,000 422,
Land Tax 665,000 640,000 25,
House Duty 1,960,000 1,940,000 20,
Income Tax and
Super Tax 239,509,000 205,033,000 34,476,
Excess
Profits
Duties, et,214,000 139,920,000 80,294,
Land Value
Duties 685,000 521,000 164,
Postal Service 35,300,000 34,100,000
1,200,
Crown Lands 690,000 650,000 40,
Sundry Loans, etc.
6,056,250 8,055,817 1,999,
Miscellaneous 52,148,315 16,516,765
35,631,
707,234,565 573,427,582 153,414,550 19,607,
133,806,
Net Increase.
A more interesting comparison perhaps is to take the actual
receipts during the past financial year and compare them, not with the former
year, but with the estimates of the expected yield of the various items.
In this case we get the following comparisons:
L L L
3
Actual. | Estimated. | Difference. |
Customs | 71,261,000 | 70,750,000 + 511,000 |
Excise | 38,772,000 | 4,950,000 + 3,822,
|
Estate Duties | 31,674,000 | 29,000,000 + 2,674,
|
Stamps | 8,300,000 | 8,000,000 + 300,
|
Land Tax and House Duty | 2,625,000 | 2,600,000 + 25,
|
Income Tax and Super Tax | 239,509,000 | 224,000,000 + 15,509,
|
Excess Profits Tax | 220,214,000 | 200,000,000 + 20,214,
|
Land Value Duties | 685,000 | 400,000 + 285,
|
Postal Services | 35,300,000 | 33,700,000 + 1,600,
|
Crown Lands | 690,000 | 600,000 + 90,
|
Sundry Loans, etc. | 6,056,000 | 7,500,000 1,444,
|
Miscellaneous | 52,148,000 | 27,100,000 + 25,048,000 |
Certainly, the country is entitled
to congratulate itself on this tremendous evidence
of elasticity of revenue, and to a certain extent
on the effort that it has made in providing this enormous
sum of money from the proceeds of taxation and State
services. But when this much has been admitted
we have to hasten to add that the figures are not
nearly so big as they look, and that there is much
less “to write home about,” as the schoolboy
said, than there appears to be at first sight.
Those champions of the Government methods of war finance
who maintain that we have, during the past year, multiplied
the pre-war revenue, of roughly, L200 millions by
more than 3-1/2, so arriving at the present revenue
of over L700 millions, are not comparing like with
like. The statement is perfectly true on paper,
and expressed in pounds sterling, but then the pound
sterling of to-day is an entirely different article
from the pre-war pound sterling. Owing to the
system of finance pursued by our Government, and by
every other Government now engaged in the war, of
providing for a large part of the country’s
goods by the mere manufacture of new currency and credit,
the buying power of the pound sterling has been greatly
depreciated. By multiplying the amount of legal
tender currency in the shape of Treasury notes, of
token currency in the shape of silver and bronze coinage,
and of banking currency through the bank deposits which
are swollen by the banks’ investments in Government
securities, the Government has increased the amount
of currency passing from hand to hand in the community
while, at the same time, the volume of goods to be
purchased has not been increased with anything like
the same rapidity, and may, in fact, have been, actually
decreased. The inevitable result has been a great
flood of new money with a greatly depreciated value.
Index numbers show a rise of over 100 per cent. in
the average prices of commodities during the war.
It is, however, perhaps unfair to assume that the
buying power of the pound has actually been reduced
by a half, but it is certainly safe to say that it
has been reduced by a third. Therefore, the revenue
raised by the Government during the past year has
to be reduced by at least a third before we are justified
in comparing our war achievements with the Government’s
pre-war revenue. If we take one-third off L707
millions it reduces the total raised during the past
year by revenue to about L470 millions, less than
two and a half times the pre-war revenue.
From another point of view our satisfaction
with the tremendous figures of the past year’s
revenue has to be to some extent qualified. The
great elasticity shown by the big increase of actual
achievement over the Budget estimate has been almost
entirely in revenue items which cannot be expected
to continue to serve us when the war is over.
The total increase in the receipts over estimate amounts
to L69 millions, and of this L20 millions was provided
by the Excess Profits Duty, a fiscal weapon which
was invented during the war, and for the purpose of
the war. It has always been assumed that it would
be discontinued as soon as the war was over, and if
it should not be discontinued its after-war effect
is likely to be very unfortunate at a time when our
industrial effort requires all the encouragement that
it can get. Another L25 millions was provided
by miscellaneous revenue, and this windfall again
must be largely due to operations connected with the
war. Finally, the L15-1/2 millions by which the
income tax exceeded the estimate must again be largely
due to inflation and extravagance on the part of the
Government, which, by manufacturing money, and then
spending it recklessly, puts big profits and big incomes
into the hands of those who have stocks of goods to
sell or who are in a position to produce them.
If, therefore, the satisfaction with
which we regard the big total of the Government’s
revenue receipts has to be considerably modified in
the cold light of close observation, the enormous increase
on the expenditure side gives us very little comfort
and calls for the most determined and continued criticism
if our reckless Government is to be made to turn over
a new leaf. In the early days of the war there
was much excuse for wasting money. We had to
improvise a great Army, and a great organisation for
equipping it; there was no time then to look too closely
into the way the money was being spent, but this excuse
is long obsolete. It is not possible to waste
money without also wasting the energy and working
power of the nation; on this energy and working power
the staying power of the country depends in its struggle
to avert the greatest disaster that can be imagined
for civilisation, that is, the victory of the German
military power. Seeing that for many months past
we have no longer been obliged to finance Russia, and
to provide Russia with the mass of materials and the
equipment that she required, the way in which our
expenditure has mounted up during the course of the
year is a very serious blot on the year’s balance-sheet.
We spent during the year ending March 31st, L2696
millions against L2198 millions in the previous year,
an increase of close upon L500 millions; L63 millions
of this increase were due to interest on war debt,
the rest of it was due to increased cost of the war,
and few business men will deny that very many of these
extra millions might have been saved if our rulers
and our bureaucratic tyrants had been imbued with
any real sense of the need for conserving the energy
of the nation.
Much has been done by the Committee
on National Expenditure to bring home to the Government
opportunities for economy, and methods by which it
can be secured. Can we be equally confident that
much has been done by the Government to carry out
the advice that has been given by this Committee?
The Treasury is frequently blamed for its inability
to check the rapacity and extravagance of the spending
Departments. It is very likely that the Treasury
might have done more if it had not been led by its
own desire for a short-sighted economy into economising
on its own staff, the activity and efficiency of which
was so absolutely essential to the proper spending
of the nation’s money. But when this has
been admitted, the fact remains that the Treasury cannot,
or can only with great difficulty, be stronger on
the side of economy than the Chancellor of the Exchequer,
and that the task of the Chancellor of the Exchequer
of imposing economy on a spendthrift War Cabinet is
one of extreme difficulty. I hope it is not necessary
to say that I do not urge economy from any sordid
desire to save the nation’s money if, by its
spending, victory could be secured or brought a day
nearer. I only urge it because I believe that
the conservation of our resources is absolutely necessary
to maintain our staying power, and that these resources
are at present being scandalously wasted by the Government.
Inter-departmental competition is still complained
of in the latest report of the National Committee
on Expenditure, and there seems to be still very little
evidence that the Government Departments have yet
possessed themselves of the simple fact that it is
only out of these resources that victory can be secured,
and that any waste of them is therefore a crime against
the cause of liberty and progress.
It is possible that before these lines
are in print the Chancellor will have brought in his
new Budget, and therefore any attempt to forecast
the measures by which he will meet next year’s
revenue would be even more futile than most other
endeavours at prophecy. But from the figures
of last year as they are before us we see once more
that the proportion of expenditure raised by revenue
still leaves very much to be desired; L707 millions
out of, roughly, L2700 millions is not nearly enough.
It is true that on the expenditure side large sums
have been put into assets which may some day or other
be recoverable, and it is therefore impossible to
assume with any approach to accuracy what the actual
cost of the war has been for us during the past year.
We have made, for instance, very large advances to
our Allies and Dominions, and it need not be said
that our advances to our own Dominions may be regarded
as quite as good as if they were still in our own
pockets; but in the case of our Allies, our loans to
Russia are a somewhat questionable asset, and our
loans to our other brothers-in-arms cannot be regarded
as likely to be recoverable for some time to come,
owing to the severity with which the war’s pressure
has been laid upon them. With regard to the other
assets in which the Government has invested our money,
such as factories, machinery, ships, supplies and
food, etc., it is at least possible that considerable
loss may be involved in the realisation of some of
them. It is, however, possible that the actual
cost of the war to us during the year that is past
may turn out some day to have been in the neighbourhood
of L2000 millions. If, on the other hand, we deduct
from the L700 millions raised by revenue the L200
millions which represent the normal pre-war cost of
Government to this country we find that the proportion
of war’s cost raised out of revenue is slightly
over 25 per cent. This proportion must be taken
with all reserve for the reasons given above, but
in any case it is very far below the 47 per cent. of
the war’s cost raised out of revenue by our ancestors
in the course of the Napoleonic wars.
It seems to me that this policy of
raising so large a proportion of the war’s cost
by borrowing is one that commends itself to short-sighted
politicians, but is by no means in the interests of
the country as a whole, or of the taxpayers who now
and hereafter have to find the money for paying for
the war. In so far as the war’s needs have
to be met abroad, borrowing abroad is to some extent
inevitable if the borrowing nation has not the necessary
resources and labour available to turn out goods for
export to exchange against those which have to be
purchased abroad, but in so far as the war’s
needs are financed at home, the policy of borrowing
is one that should only be used within the narrowest
possible limits. By its means the Government,
instead of making the citizens pay by taxation for
the war as it goes on, hires a certain number of them
to pay for it by promising them a rate of interest,
and their money back some day. The interest and
the sinking fund for redemption have to be found by
taxation, and so the borrowing process merely postpones
taxation from the war period to the peace period.
During the war period taxation can be raised comparatively
easily owing to the patriotic stimulus and the simplification
of the industrial problem which is provided by the
Government’s insatiable demand for commodities.
When the days of peace return, however, there will
be very grave disturbance and dislocation in industry,
and it will have once more to face the problem of
providing goods, not for a Government which will take
all that it can get, but for a public, the demands
of which will be uncertain, and whose buying power
will be unevenly distributed, and difficult to calculate.
The process, therefore, which postpones taxation during
the war period to the peace period seems to be extraordinarily
short-sighted from the point of view of the nation’s
economic progress. Recovery after the war may
be astonishingly rapid if all goes well, but this
can only happen if every opportunity is given to industry
to get back to peace work with the least possible friction,
and a heavy burden of after-war taxation, such as we
shall inevitably have to face if our Chancellors of
the Exchequer continue to pile up the debt charge
as they have done in the past, will be anything but
helpful to those whose business it will be to set the
machinery of industry going under peace conditions.
As things are, if we continue to add
anything like L2000 millions a year to the National
Debt, it will not be possible to balance the after-war
Budget without taxation on a heavier scale than is
now imposed, or without retaining the Excess Profit
Duty, and so stifling industry at a time when it will
need all the fresh air that it can get. Apart
from this expedient, which would seem to be disastrous
from the point of view of its effect upon fresh industry,
the most widely advertised alternative is the capital
levy, the objections to which are patent to all business
men. It would involve an enormously costly and
tedious process of valuation, its yield would be problematical,
and it might easily deal a blow at the incentive to
save on which the supply of capital after the war
entirely depends. A much higher rate of income
tax, especially on large incomes, is another solution
of the problem, and it also might obviously have most
unfortunate effects upon the elasticity of industry.
A tax on retail purchases has much to be said in its
favour, but against it is the inequity inseparable
from the impossibility of graduating it according
to the ability of the taxpayer to bear the burden;
and a general tariff on imported goods, though it
would be welcomed by the many Protectionists in our
midst, can hardly be considered as a practical fiscal
weapon at a time when the need for food, raw material,
and all the equipment of industry will make it necessary
to import as rapidly and as cheaply as possible in
order to promote our after-war recovery.
Apart from these purely economic arguments
against the high proportion of the war’s costs
that we are meeting by borrowing, there is the much
more important fact of its bad effect on the minds
of our soldiers, and of those members of the civilian
population who draw mistaken inferences from its effects.
From the point of view of our soldiers, who have to
go and fight for their country at a time when those
who are left at home are earning high wages and making
big profits, it is evidently highly unfair that the
war should be financed by a method which postpones
taxation. The civilian population left at home,
earning high profits and high wages, should clearly
pay as much as possible during the war by immediate
taxation, so that the burden of taxation may be relieved
for our soldiers when they return to civil life.
In view of the hardships and dangers which our soldiers
have to face, and the heroism with which they are
facing them, this argument should be of overwhelming
strength in the eyes of every citizen who has imagination
enough to conceive what our fighting men are doing
for us and how supreme is our duty to do everything
to relieve them from any other burden except those
which the war compels them to face. There is
also the fact that many members of our uninstructed
industrial population believe that the richer classes
are growing richer owing to the war, and battening
on the proceeds of the loans. I do not think
that this is true; on the contrary, I believe that
the war has brought a considerable shifting of buying
power from the well-to-do classes to the manual workers.
Nevertheless, in these times misconceptions are awkwardly
active for evil. The well-to-do classes as a
whole are not really benefited by having their future
incomes pledged in order to meet the future debt charge,
and if, at the same time, they are believed to be
acquiring the right to wealth, which wealth they will
have themselves to provide, the fatuity of the borrowing
policy becomes more manifest. For these reasons
it is sincerely to be hoped that our next fiscal year
will be marked by a much higher revenue from taxation,
a considerable decrease in expenditure, and a consequently
great improvement in the proportion of war’s
cost met out of revenue, on what has been done in the
past year. At our present rate of taxation we
are not nearly meeting, out of permanent taxes, the
sum which will be needed when the war is over for
peace expenditure on the inevitably higher scale, pensions,
and interest and sinking fund on war debt.