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Squandered (Paperback)

by David Craig (Author)
4.1 out of 5 stars See all reviews (24 customer reviews)
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Squandered + Gordon is a Moron: The Definitive and Objective Analysis of Gordon Brown's Decade as Chancellor of the Exchequer
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Product details

  • Paperback: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Constable (7 April 2008)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1845298322
  • ISBN-13: 978-1845298326
  • Product Dimensions: 19.6 x 13 x 2.3 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars See all reviews (24 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 53,563 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

    Popular in these categories:

    #5 in  Books > Business, Finance & Law > Economics > Debt & Deficits
    #5 in  Books > Business, Finance & Law > Professional Finance > Public

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Product Description

Review
"* 'A gripping and important book, one that is impossible to read without becoming angry.' - New Statesman"

Jeff Randall, Daily Telegraph
'Read this book and prepare to weep.'


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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Back Cover
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Customer Reviews

24 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.1 out of 5 stars (24 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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39 of 41 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars New Labour autopsy makes grisly but compelling reading, 11 May 2008
By K. T. O'Reilly (SE London) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Since the recent local elections, there's been much speculation about why New Labour got the sort of pounding normally reserved for Rocky Balboa's opponents. The answer lies inside this book. David Craig lays out in painstaking detail just how we've been taxed so punishingly and why all that money has had little or no effect on improving our country. It's a splendidly researched book. Even as a veteran Private Eye reader, I found plenty here I wasn't aware of.

I know, I know - you're thinking this could easily be dry and boring, it's about politics and economics after all but I promise you it's anything but boring. Craig's prose is very readable and he makes you laugh loud and often, usually with disbelief at how our money is indeed being squandered. The chapters on the EU and the fate of half our gold reserves will make your jaw hit the floor. Other parts of the book, those dealing with the treatment of the elderly, patients in the NHS and our troops fighting Blair's wars will make you want to throw something.

As the previous reviewer said, this is not Tory propaganda - Craig is quite scathing about the Tories in places. His opinions seem neither left nor right wing really. He argues against pointless government expansion and pointless privatisation with equal gusto, demonstrating how both waste our money. You may not always agree with him on everything but he makes his points well. His main point is of course that New Labour has been a disaster for this country. It would take an extremely loyal and self-deluded New Labour fan (probably with the last names Blair or Brown) to finish this book and disagree with him.
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32 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A fair successor to "Plundering the Public Sector", 26 May 2008
By David Levy (London, UK) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Though this book makes your blood run cold at the thought of the profligate wastefulness of this dreary quango-obsessed government and the appalling taxation burden that must befall us within a very few years as a result of their bone-headed corporate stupidity, I don't think this is as penetrating a work as it could have been, despite its non-stop, and I thought slightly breathless, recitation of the numbers. I certainly don't think it's in the same league as "Plundering the Public Sector" (2006), written by Craig with Richard Brooks, which analysed in brilliant and occasionally hysterically amusing detail a few of the most bafflingly inept New Labour projects - most impressively from my point of view the foolish and fundamentally misconceived NHS IT system, the ludicrously misnamed "Connecting for Health". There was a real attempt in that work to get to the root of the corporate newspeak and double-think, and to convey the infuriating self-serving, self-congratulatory sneery superiority of these intellectually-challenged wastrels. Actually, the self-serving bit is very well covered here, though it isn't analysed as it should be, as an Orwellian rewriting of commonsense, but as a group of comically stupid political minnows and their slick corporate buddies on the mutual make with their salaries, expense accounts and perks - necessary but not quite sufficient. How is it that a supposedly well-informed electorate has allowed this structured lunacy to take over our lives for the past 12 years? Why are there so few serious books, like this, that even attempt to describe what has gone so horribly wrong? (One answer may be that, like celebrity-without-demonstrable-talent, or the Lottery, we are all secretly waiting for that chance call from Quangoland - or Non-Departmental Public Bodies as Craig tells us they have now been renamed - to join them at the trough.) Craig appears to work brilliantly in a team - his tenacious ability to get hold of facts and figures (and to present them in marvellously simple and dramatic graphical format) is unsurpassed by any of our pusillanimous mass-media. If he could team up next with Simon Jenkins, on scintillating analytical form in "Thatcher & Sons" (2007) we could have the book that finally finishes off this floundering and talentless government.

Whatever my criticisms, any author who can bring to light the following quote (in "Plundering the Public Sector") has to get a prize for something; when I first read it I thought I might need emergency resuscitation. Quizzed by the Parliamentary Accounts Committee about a trifling £4 bn overspend (or was it £6 bn? - he wasn't quite sure) the Chief of Defence Procurement said: "This is not money which we have overspent ... what you are seeing is a level of disappointment". Quite so.

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16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Squandered, 1 Aug 2008
David Craig assembles data that, when assessed across the total New Labour period, points not just to outrageous incompetence, but to structural problems in how the country is run that suggest that the UK government simply cannot deliver its leadership role. The book is an indictment of New Labour but it also shows how the Tories and the civil service contributed to what is now an economy in free fall.

David Craig's figures speak for themselves. The message is clear. more and more of our money is being taken from us to create a class of inexperienced, incompetent and unaccountable parasites who are not only doing nothing to advance the cause of the people but who have become ulcers, draining life from the economy and constraining the creativity of the British people. When looked at over time, as 'Squandered' does, and free from wildly unjustified claims of 'prudence', we see details of:

- lazy promotion of pseudo growth by the active encouragement of low wage immigration on a scale never experienced before
- cuts in spending on equipment for the soldiers in the field at a time when the government pursues a deeply flawed policy of invasion (that was opposed by the mass of the UK populace
- growth in administrators and 'management' far in excess of the growth in numbers of nurses, police, soldiers and teachers
- profligate government borrowing at a time when the economy was buoyant to be paid back when the business cycle is reversed
- Public Private Finance 'Initiatives' that have increased the costs of the services being provided and which have been so badly managed that the tax payer will be carrying an unpredented economic burden for decades to come
- pension policies that mean 99% of civil servants have essentially unfunded, inflation-proof, final salary based pensions, while 72% of the private work force have nothing that compares to this - yet who have ot foot the bill out of future taxes (not out of pension funds that are earning interest)
- above all, our money has been spent and our futures put in hock without achieving any compensatory benefits: failing, dirty hospitals, new and refurbished schools whose new designs are condemned as 'mediocre' by the National Audit Commitee; falling education standards and higher rates of illiteracy; more serious crimes and increaing numbers of prisoners despite large sums spent on policing
- sale of over half the nation's gold stock when the gold market was at rock bottom, handled in such an absurd way that the price was driven even lower before the gold was even sold - putting billions in the hands of a Chinese Government wise enough to buy when price was low
- creation of quangos lined with unqualified party faithful who are now also on inflation-proof final salary linked pensions and who have absolutely no accountability to the people or the government
- pumping of money needlessly into a corrupt, unaccountable and self-serving EU whose accounts have been rejected by auditors for 11 years
- increasing the number of MPs while 50 - 60% of law making is now done from Brussels
- foolhardy promotion of poorly specified, intrinsically unworkable software projects such as ID cards and natioanl databases, whose costs escalate while their benefits either recede or disappear
- billions spent irresponsibly on consultants who added little value and on projects whose budgets are invariably out of control, from NHS computers to Olympic villages.

David Craig's book covers all the major government departments. It shows that the incompetence is not isolated - it is endemic. Despite the terrifying message of 'Squandered', Mr Craig offers some constructive proposals to prevent the current situation leading to a major collapse of the economy. He himself, though, appears to have little confidence that either our elected or our unelected masters will be capable of carrying them out.

New Labour inherited a healthy economy, freed from the disastrous Exchange Rate Mechanism (which Labour had advocated as strongly as the Tories) at a time when world markets were growing rapidly. Inflation for the 5 years before and after the arrival of new Labour was about the same. But where did the resulting wealth go? Sucked into taxation and unproductive house price rises, into abortive government spending and the creation of 600,000 new jobs for civil servants. The result - inflation and recession. Where are the genuine productive new jobs that New Labour claimed to have been created? They are with low wage immigrants while the numbers of the nation's euphemistically named 'economically inactive' has doubled.

My interpretation of Mr Craig's book is that the UK's system of government has failed us and will continue to do so unless there are major changes, not just in faces but in the selection process that resutls in such incompetence.

Despite all the verbiage, 'New Labour' turned out to be 'Old Labour' disguised in spin. MR Craig's figures show how Labour has repeated its old pattern of taxing success and spending on failure. It has pandered to a financial industry thta does not invest in Britain and discouraged investment in British technologies that can reduce the costs of living and improve out living standards. It has spent billions instead on abortive projects that have brought us close to cultural and economic breakdown.

In the absence of a competent opposition, in the face of New Labour's in-fighting following the failures of Phoney Bliar and Gawdhelpyou Brown, and with a media industry that has exchanged investigative journalism for celebrity baiting, 'Squandered' is the wake-up call we have been lacking. It's a bitter read, but thank you, David Craig for pulling it altogether and pointing us (and maybe our unbeloved Leaders) towards a different future.






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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars A Book Every Voter and Taxpayer Should ReadA MOST
A MOST enlightening read. After reading it, my first reaction was "How do they get away with it?", it is almost unbelievable, how our elected representatives, and the top civil... Read more
Published 3 months ago by Tiller

1.0 out of 5 stars Could Do Better
Essentially, this is a disappointing book - much less focussed and insightful than the author's previous writings about consultancy and IT procurement. Read more
Published 3 months ago by RH

4.0 out of 5 stars A little lazy, but engrossing
Having read Plundering the Public Sector, I was no less taken with Squandered.

Whilst it could be argued that the reliance on the British right-wing press for... Read more
Published 5 months ago by F. G. Lelliott

4.0 out of 5 stars Its true!
If you read a decent UK newspaper you'll be familiar with a lot of this book although to read about so much waste in one sitting is still pretty appauling. Read more
Published 6 months ago by Ms. L. Escobar

5.0 out of 5 stars I recommend this book without reservation and urge everyone to read it.
I bought "Squandered" and I finished it recently. I whole-heartedly recommend this excellent, very detailed and well-researched book. Read more
Published 8 months ago by Margaret Wilde

5.0 out of 5 stars A real eye opener
This is one of those books that I thought at first would be another boring book about politics written by another dry academic. Read more
Published 9 months ago by Mrs. C. A. Veasey

3.0 out of 5 stars Good points but please don't quote the Dail Mail!
As a long time NHS employee, first as a nurse then latterly as a manager, I've seen first hand how billions have been pumped into health, the ranks of bureaucrats have swelled... Read more
Published 11 months ago by Andy M

4.0 out of 5 stars Read and vote
You must read this book before you vote in the next General Election. You'll read how it's rich bureaucrats that have done best under Labour, not the poor. Read more
Published 11 months ago by Charles

4.0 out of 5 stars You'll suddenly want to withold your taxes
There's a quote from a review printed on the book itself along the lines of "It's impossible to read this without becoming angry" and that pretty much sums it up. Read more
Published 11 months ago by Eagle Fly Free

3.0 out of 5 stars Enjoyable Enough, with Reservations
I read this book on a train journey as it is fairly short. At times I felt overpowered by the profusion of figures, and I think here caution is called for. Read more
Published 12 months ago by Colin Jervis

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