Serious Change Blog

May 27, 2009

Less Is More

Filed under: Campaigns — Lisa Evans @ 10:15 am


The Tax Payers Alliance (TPA) is a huge success in terms of how frequently it is quoted and the range of publications it is quoted in.

 

The basic premise is that people don’t like having ‘their’ money taken away from them, in the form of taxes, and wasted. The TPA then extends this basic premise to show the inadequacies and inefficiency of the government.   

 

But how does the TPA do this?

 

The Reports

 

The website produces 4-5 reports a month. This is a lot less than I thought relative to the amount of coverage it gets. But each report fits the public mood and is well written. You can see them all here:

 

http://tpa.typepad.com/home/research-by-the-.html#April2009

 

It seems that a common theme in these reports is to 1) find the amount of UK tax paid for a particular service, ideally one that is inefficient or doesn’t have strong public backing, and 2) divide that cost into the number of households and then 3) report that the government is taking this amount of pounds from your family and wasting it.

 

The reports do range in detail. Some are simple freedom of information requests with a short introduction:

 

http://tpa.typepad.com/waste/files/TheGlobalWarmingIndustryinLocalGovernment.pdf

 

Others are more detailed reports about government departments that are described and recommendations made, like in this fisheries policy analysis:

 

http://www.taxpayersalliance.com/cfp.pdf

 

The Blogs

 

The rest of the site is made up of blog posts which fit into the categories of:

-         Media Coverage summaries of articles where the TPA has been quoted. This makes up most of the blogging on the site.  

-         Economics 101 includes a time line of tax, and other blog entries under headings such as; Corporate Tax, Dynamic Modelling, Fairness, Flat Tax, Green Taxes, Income Tax, Regulation.

-         Better Government contains a document outlining how the government should be run by successful business people: http://tpa.typepad.com/bettergovernment/files/BetterGovernment.pdf . Then breaks down the criticism into the government departments of health, defense, education, energy, law and order, international aid, EU and then has some categories concerning quality and structure and trust of government.

-         Burning Our Money is the most humorous part of the site, this contains the ‘non-job of the week’. Then there is the ‘rewards for failure’ section which includes bonuses at the BBC, just quoted from the telegraph and Sun, no original research here. There is also reporting on public sector pensions and Taxpayer-funded politics.

-         European Union this is a campaign to stop the EU rip-off.

-         Blogs By Location in West Midlands and TaxPayers’ association of Europe.

 

The Book

 

This is where it all began for the TPA in 2005, with volunteers writing the ‘Bumper Book of Government Waste’. The book shows how £101 billion is wasted by the government.

 

http://tpa.typepad.com/waste/2007/10/the-bumper-book.html

 

The Campaigns and Lobbying

 

There seems to be only one campaign on the whole site. It was launch in January and is to ‘stop the EU rip-off’:

http://www.taxpayersalliance.com/eu/

There are campaign materials to download and links to reports.

Aside from this the TPA will report on other people campaigning or lobbying and they also show public support for campaign groups like the NoToID

http://www.taxpayersalliance.com/campaign/2009/05/what-on-earth-is-the-point.html

 

In the End

 

So what can we learn from this?

 

-         A well thought out book or large report is enough to get media attention initially.

-         Then don’t underestimate the value of regular, well placed reports combined with killer PR.

-         Back up with regular blogging, doesn’t have to original, just on topic.

 

A TPA interview and office visit is reported at:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/7241315.stm

 

 

 

May 23, 2009

Without The Hot Air

Filed under: Review — Lisa Evans @ 9:49 am

Here is my three sentence summary of David MacKay’s book

Sustainable Energy - without the hot air

The UK can’t live off its own renewable energy with current technology.

If we make efficiency savings by electrifying transport and use different heating technology and add in some of: nuclear power, clean coal or other countries renewables, we could make many energy plans that add up to demand, without reducing our quality of life, for 2050.

This will require serious change to our current lives, and this change will be rewarding in every aspect.

May 7, 2009

Seriously Angry

Filed under: Campaigns — Lisa Evans @ 2:13 pm


I like the Daily Mail. It doesn’t represent my views but I have to admire how powerfully it conveys its messages. It is angry, argumentative and fantastically critical.  

 Here are two stories that I think, having read the Daily Mail for the last few months, are representative of its attitude to UK energy. Then I talk about what we can learn from them.

So, I was delighted when I read this about wind farms with quotes from David MacKay. It has conclusion of  “And, yes, we need to invest in more renewable energy. “ and “The answer is messy, expensive and fraught with controversy and debate. But it is not blowing in the wind.”

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-1172230/Are-wind-farms-lot-hot-air–windy.html?ITO=1490

 

The next day was budget day and there was: “Tough new targets on tackling climate change will cost every household in Britain at least £600 a year, push more than a million people into poverty and send fuel bills soaring, experts warned today.”

 

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1172626/BUDGET-2009-Government-spend-1billion-green-initiatives.html?ITO=1490

 

This article goes on to say that “Critics said the targets, which include a drive to build more windfarms, would cost the economy £14billion a year by 2020 and would have only a negligible impact on climate change.”

 

So it is quite possible to have, in the same paper, using the same stock photos, science stories very positive about renewable energy but political and editorial stories that are totally negative about the way it is happening and its effects.

 

And it’s the criticism that is the headline grabbing stuff. It is more emotive to think of the government taking money from your family and wasting it, than it is to think about how cool it would be if we had a load of windmills.  

 

But actually criticizing the government is a useful activity. The current situation is that we have a set of targets for reducing carbon emissions; it is 80% reduction from 1990 levels, by 2050. There are no complete plans yet for how to reach that target.

 

I would like to see groups getting together to intelligently criticize the government for missing opportunity with renewable technology and not having good enough policy or any policy at all and present these arguments in journalist sized pieces.      

 

How would you do this?

 

The Daily Mail gets lots of its source material from The Tax Payers Alliance and Migration Watch. Again these two bodies don’t reflect my views, but they do an excellent job of communicating what they are about.

So, what about setting up a news source like this but for constructive criticism of UK energy policy?

May 6, 2009

Learning from Obama

Filed under: Mood — Lisa Evans @ 12:31 pm

This radio program gives some insight into how Obama catered the ‘green’ part
of his election campaign to different levels of environmental skepticism. For example he emphasised the gains to the car industry and being competitive with Japan and China in the ‘automobile state’ of Michigan .
http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b00jrpvs/b00jrpsq/Costing_the_Earth_Obamas_Green_Dream/

It also reinforces the ideas that Anthony Giddens puts forward in his book The Politics  Of Climate Change.  Anthony Giddens (Labour life peer and sociologist) had to say in this interview about the book (http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/factual/thinkingallowed/thinkingallowed_20090325.shtml):

  • The strategy of trying to scare people about the future catastrophe of global warming doesn’t work because it is an abstract notion of what might happen in the future.
  • We need to show people there are many positive innovations that will reduce the risk of climate change.
  • With innovations we need to talk about opportunity not risk, benefit not just costs.
  • He sees the difference between himself and the Green party as he has more interest in the sharp edged technological innovations than the protection of nature.
  • He expresses the opinion that nuclear is the technology that can scale in the short term.
  • We need incentives rather than taxes.
  •  He says that Obama is an inspiration, as he sees the new economy converges with climate change investment.
  • Energy markets should be under some government control as markets won’t do the job on their own.
  • He wants to see a group of business leaders who publicly put forward the idea that it should be only those companies that are ‘environmentally progressive’ that will be competitive in the future. And they will lead by example.
  • He puts forward the idea that we need a wider set of measures of growth/welfare for the future, as he believes that the economic growth measures we have do not reflect the total sum of human welfare.

May 5, 2009

UK Energy Demand

Filed under: Technologies — Lisa Evans @ 3:06 pm

If you want to get a picture of what energy consumption is like in the UK at present, you can do worse than look at this Energy trends: March 2009:

http://www.berr.gov.uk/files/file50354.pdf

It is quite useful to have these figures in mind when reading things like David MacKay’s Without The Hot Air. It shows you how much we will have to change to get to a low carbon energy system, like the energy plans MacKay suggests. It is detailed plans for a new energy system that will be taken seriously by DECC, so we have to understand in as much detail where we are and how we can change.

UKenergy