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Dude, where's my North Sea oil money gone?
#1
A surprising article, for me anyway, simply because I never really expected a MSM newspaper to tell this story.

But then, it's all done and over with so nothing that can now be done about it. Que sera.

I would also argue that some of the revenue seriously benefited the oil companies, and Thatcher's privatisation policy absolutely enriched bankers and their friends. I was still in the City at the time and watched greedy bankers salivate as each new state privatisation issue was announced. There were even schemes where employees were encouraged to buy into new issue shares on the day of floatation, and then sell those shares as soon as the next day (in some cases) at a big profit - because everyone knew the issue price of the shares were seriously (and designedly) undervalued, to cause a bonanza.

Quote:Dude, where's my North Sea oil money?

For a few years, the UK enjoyed a once-in-a-lifetime windfall only, unlike the Norwegians, we've got almost nothing to show for it

[Image: North-Sea-oil-rig-011.jpg]We pumped hundreds of billions of North Sea oil out of the water off the coast of Scotland. Photograph: Philip Stephen/bluegreenpictures

Last Wednesday, every single Norwegian became a millionaire without having to lift a lillefinger. They owe the windfall to their coastline, and a huge dollop of good sense. Since 1990, Norway has been squirreling away its cash from North Sea oil and gas into a rainy-day fund. It's now big enough to see Noah through all 40 of those drizzly days and nights. Last week, the balance hit a million krone for everyone in Norway. Norwegians can't take a hammer to the piggy bank, amassed strictly to provide for future generations. And converted into pounds, the 5.11 trillion krone becomes a mere £100,000 for every man, woman and child. Still, the oljefondet (the government pension fund of Norway) owns over 1% of the world's stocks, a big chunk of Regent Street and some of the most prime property in Paris: a pretty decent whipround for just five million people.
Wish it could have been you with a hundred-grand bonus? Here's the really nauseating part: it should have been. Britain had its share of North Sea oil, described by one PM as "God's gift" to the economy. We pumped hundreds of billions out of the water off the coast of Scotland. Only unlike the Norwegians, we've got almost nothing to show for it. Our oil cash was magicked into tax cuts for the well-off, then micturated against the walls of a thousand pricey car dealerships and estate agents.
All this was kick-started by Margaret Thatcher, the woman who David Cameron claims saved the country. The party she led still touts itself as the bunch you can trust with the nation's money. But that isn't the evidence from the North Sea. That debacle shows the Conservatives as being as profligate as sailors on shore leave.
Britain got nothing from the North Sea until the mid-70s then the pounds started gushing. At their mid-80s peak, oil and gas revenues were worth more than 3% of national income. According to the chief economist at PricewaterhouseCoopers, John Hawksworth, had all this money been set aside and invested in ultra-safe assets it would have been worth £450bn by 2008. He admits that is a very conservative estimate: Sukhdev Johal, professor of accounting at Queen Mary University of London, thinks the total might well have been £850bn by now. That doesn't take you up to Norwegian levels of prosperity they've more oil and far fewer people to divvy it up among but it's still around £13,000 for everyone in Britain.
Hawksworth titled his 2008 paper on the subject: "Dude, where's my oil money?" We don't have any new hospitals or roads to show for it: public sector net investment plunged from 2.5% of GDP at the start of the Thatcher era to just 0.4% of GDP by 2000. It is sometimes said that the money was ploughed into benefits for the miners and all the other workers Thatcherism chucked on the scrapheap, but that's not what the figures show. Public sector current spending hovered around 40% of GDP from Thatcher through to the start of the banking crisis.
So where did our billions go? Hawksworth writes: "The logical answer is that the oil money enabled non-oil taxes to be kept lower." In other words: tax cuts. When the North Sea was providing maximum income, Thatcher's chancellor, Nigel Lawson slashed income and other direct taxes, especially for the rich. The top rate of tax came down from 60p in the pound to just 40p by 1988. He also reduced the basic rate of income tax; but the poor wouldn't have seen much of those pounds in their pockets, as, thanks to the Tories, they were paying more VAT.
What did Thatcher's grateful children do with their tax cuts? "They used the higher disposable income to bid up house prices," suggests Hawskworth. For a few years, the UK enjoyed a once-in-a-lifetime windfall; and it was pocketed by the rich. The revolution begun by Thatcher and Reagan is often seen as being about competition and extending markets. But that's to focus on the process and overlook the motivation or the result. As the historian of neoliberalism Philip Mirowski argues, what the past 30 years have been about is using the powers of the state to divert more resources to the wealthy. You see that with privatisation: the handing over of our assets at knock-down prices to corporations and supposed "investors", who then skim off the profits. The transformation of the North Sea billions into tax cuts for the wealthy is the same process but at its most squalid.
Compare and contrast with the Norwegian experience. In 1974, Oslo laid down the principle that oil wealth should be used to develop a "qualitatively better society", defined by historian Helge Ryggvik as "greater equality". Ten oil commandments were set down to ensure the industry was put under democratic control which it remains to this day, with the public owning nearly 70% of the oil company and the fields. It's a glimpse of what Britain could have had, had it been governed by something more imaginative and less rapacious than Thatcherism.
If Scotland had held on to the revenues from North Sea oil, the question today would not be how it would manage solo, but how London would fare without its bankrollers over Hadrian's Wall. Oljeeventyr is how Norwegians refer to their recent history: the oil fairy tale. It conveys the magic of how in just a few decades, they have been transformed from being the poor Nordic neighbour to being the richest. We have no equivalent term for our North Sea experience, but let me suggest one: a scandal.


The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge.
Carl Jung - Aion (1951). CW 9, Part II: P.14
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#2
Yes, a scandal alright. Don't know where this myth about Tory sober and responsible money management comes from. They all trumpet it and they are all shite at it in reality. Oh, to be a Norgwegian where the government governs for the greater good. It surely sucks to be British.
"The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways. The point, however, is to change it." Karl Marx

"He would, wouldn't he?" Mandy Rice-Davies. When asked in court whether she knew that Lord Astor had denied having sex with her.

“I think it would be a good idea” Ghandi, when asked about Western Civilisation.
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#3
Christoher Harvie wrote "Fool's Gold, the story of North Sea oil", published byHamish Hamilton, London in 1994.
He made the comparison with Norway as wel..
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#4
Jan van den Baard Wrote:Christoher Harvie wrote "Fool's Gold, the story of North Sea oil", published byHamish Hamilton, London in 1994.
He made the comparison with Norway as wel..

Looks ike a good read Jan. The whole story, well, perhaps much of it anyway, of the recent push to Scottish independence has stemmed from the Sassenachs pissing the North Sea windfall up against the wall. Not many tories up north.
"The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways. The point, however, is to change it." Karl Marx

"He would, wouldn't he?" Mandy Rice-Davies. When asked in court whether she knew that Lord Astor had denied having sex with her.

“I think it would be a good idea” Ghandi, when asked about Western Civilisation.
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#5
[quote=Magda Hassan]Yes, a scandal alright. Don't know where this myth about Tory sober and responsible money management comes from. They all trumpet it and they are all shite at it in reality. Oh, to be a Norwegian where the government governs for the greater good. It surely sucks to be British.


Its worse being American...at least the British have their National Health Service, with its faults. We in the USA [don't for a minute believe about Obamacare! - employers now are lowering weekly hours below 30, so they don't fall under Obamacare, etc.] have almost zero health care and the wealthiest [sic] nation on Earth has all that money in the hands of the upper 0.1% The rest.....well....we have NOTHING to show for being the wealthiest nation on Earth....except also being the baddest killers as well as imprisoners, tortureres, invaders, etc....oh, yes, and electronic eavesdroppers.


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