Katie59
ronib
MaizieD where does HS2 sit in your argument re public services and infrastructure?
HS2 is a public infrastructure project, there is a great deal of doubt that it will result in any growth or benefit. Would the money be better spent in other areas.
There might be doubt that HS2 will bring future benefit to economic growth, but at present some of the money the government has put into it is providing jobs, both directly and indirectly, and therefore is entering the domestic economy as workers spend their wages. Not only that, but money will be going to the suppliers of all the materials and machinery being used for the construction, to the contractors carrying out the work etc. etc. etc. It is not being poured into a big black hole. It is circulating in the economy and sustaining people and businesses.
Of course, we don't know how much is going abroad to sustain the businesses of foreign suppliers and we don't know how much is sitting doing nothing in the accounts of profiteering companies and overpaid CEOs and company executives (because the already well off tend not to spend their surplus money into the domestic economy). But every single penny of the money the government is investing in HS2 is being paid to someone and much of it will be benefiting the economy.
Of course, a great deal of that money will be coming back to the state by way of taxation and very likely the wealthier recipients may invest some of their surplus in gilts, which also returns some of the money to the government.
And, the expenditure will show up in our GDP and growth figures.
So, however much the project might be considered as a great white elephant, however much of a loss it might make once it is in operation, the money currently being put into it is benefiting our economy. Money doesn't make moral judgements or judgements of utility or cost effectiveness; it's a completely neutral instrument.
What is frustrating is knowing that more money could be spent elsewhere with the same immediate benefit to the economy and arguably better long term outcomes for the economy but the idea that the country has a finite quantity of money constrains it.
And, of course, we have a government which cares nothing for the wellbeing of our citizens and which is ideologically opposed to state spending because it is in the grip of neoclassical economic dogma.