Please let's not allow this to become another discussion of economic models? By all means start a thread about those, Maisie, but this one was started to discuss the cliches used by politicians to position the Overton Window, and/or to control the vocabulary used to discuss important issues in the lead up to the election.
I understand that it can be frustrating when people don't share your outlook on something that matters to you, but an adherence to one particular theoretical perspective shouldn't be able to dominate threads on different subjects. I also understand that in your opinion debate is being controlled by those who see Economics in terms of a household budget and who use language in keeping with that point of view, so there is some crossover with the purpose of the thread, but whereas that is a good example of how language matters, it is not without its own controversy as others have entirely different and equally strongly-held viewpoints.
Chestnut, I'm not sure how people can substitute other definitions for concepts which are deliberately vague and meaningless. I don't know what 'the economy will fall off a cliff' means, or what 'the NHS is on its knees' means to the person who is saying it. I know that after the Truss/Kwarteng budget the pound fell, interest rates rose and the Band of England had to step in to protect pension funds, and that it is increasingly difficult to get an appointment with a GP, that operations are routinely cancelled and that ambulances take ages to arrive. Whether that is the same as the meaning that was intended or not is impossible to tell. Some would say that the NHS suffers from top heavy management and is 'on its knees' as a result, or that the economy would 'fall off a cliff' if money were spent on social care and free education for all.
What colour car do you have or did you used to drive?
A drop in the ocean in the great schemes of things....but replicated by how many more


. Which I think we have discussed before.