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Deputy Prime Minister sets out difficult choices the UK faces

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In a speech at the Institute for Government in central London on Monday 15 June 2010, Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg gave the government’s response to the Office of Budget Responsibility’s first report and explained that the UK had some difficult but necessary decisions to take to reduce the deficit. The full text of Mr Clegg’s speech is below:

“Following this morning’s report from the Office for Budget Responsibility, we know that the alarming state of our public finances is even worse than we thought. In many ways the challenge is bigger; the dangers are more acute; and the need to set out how we’re going to put things right, is even greater than we realised. This afternoon I am going to highlight five points:

“One: the damage to our public finances.

“Two: why the turmoil in international – and particularly European – sovereign debt markets, make it essential for us to set out a rescue plan now. 

“Three: that there is nothing progressive about denying the need to act. Doing nothing will rob us of the space to protect the most vulnerable, and public services from the effects of cuts.

“Four: that this Government understands the need to balance fiscal responsibility with supporting growth.

“Lastly, that action to tackle the deficit must be guided by our values, not just by fiscal arithmetic. That is why we will do everything we can to make sure the difficult decisions we take are fair and just.

“Before I talk about the kind of decisions we face, let me just set out where we’re starting from. This morning, the Office for Budget Responsibility – an office established by this Government – published its first assessment of the public finances. 

“Rather than having the forecasts determined by whether the Prime Minister or the Chancellor blinks first, we have asked for a truly independent view.  The OBR’s assessment is sophisticated and careful and shows us two things: Our problems are more serious than we realised. And there are no more excuses; we have to get on with putting things right.

“We and many others have been warning for some time that the growth forecast in the March Budget was optimistic. The OBR confirms this. And because trend growth is lower than expected, the structural deficit is larger than anyone realised. Remember: that’s the bit of the deficit that will not go away as the economy recovers. In 2010/11 it’s going to be 8% of GDP – that’s £118bn; £11 billion more than Labour told us, rising to £13 billion next year. So the scale of the problem is even bigger than we thought. 

“The OBR is using a central – rather than a cautious – forecast, a like for like comparison with the March Budget would show an even bigger increase in the structural deficit.

“The OBR recognises, market expectations of the new Government’s actions have already reduced the forecast deficit and supported growth. The OBR assumes interest rates based on current market expectations.  These are today lower than at the time of the March Budget, in part because of the determination the coalition Government has already shown to deal with the deficit.

“The OBR’s independent analysis paints a stark picture.  We are now facing the highest budget deficit in Europe, the highest deficit in the G20. Borrowing this year will be ten and a half per cent of GDP, with debt topping 60%.

“We are right to choose to tackle the deficit for three reasons.

“First, today’s projections from the OBR – bad as they are – are based on relatively low and stable interest rates.  If we falter, if we fail in our commitment to reduce the deficit, these will rise and we will find ourselves paying ever more in debt service and ever less on public services.

“Second, this is not a deficit that will correct itself with the passage of time.  A structural deficit does not correct itself. It has to be addressed. Otherwise, we will commit our children and grandchildren to ever-greater indebtedness.

“Third, and perhaps most importantly, we may be an island but we do not stand alone. The extraordinary developments of the last few weeks in the Eurozone matter enormously for the UK.  Most immediately, they matter because the attitude of markets has changed.  What began three years ago as a crisis of household – then bank – debts has now become a sovereign debt crisis.  Markets have stopped believing that all European governments can service their debts.  They have started to charge much higher rates to those whose plans they distrust. 

“I was in Madrid on Friday.  There, the government has seen the premium they have to pay investors to buy their bonds compared to German bonds jump from a half of one per cent to two per cent in only a few weeks.  As the nation with the highest deficit in Europe in 2010, we simply cannot afford to let that happen to us too.  So the world has changed since the days people advocated a looser fiscal policy.  We need to adapt to those changing circumstances and change our fiscal position, too.

“We are not alone - across Europe countries are now being decisive in their consolidation efforts. Germany, Italy, Spain, Portugal have all announced new measures in recent weeks, and the G20 has given its strong support to our plans, calling on countries with serious fiscal challenges to accelerate the pace of consolidation.

“Because everyone knows that refusing to act carries too great a risk. It’s the same for people in their ordinary lives. If you get into debt and that debt spirals, you’re faced with a simple choice - you can pay it off yourself before you do any real damage to your credit rating, you can hold off until the bank makes you pay the money back, or you can wait until the bailiffs come round. Well, Spain has had the banks step in, Greece has had the bailiffs round, but in Britain we’re determined to get on top of this problem for ourselves. 

“This government, will not allow our hand to be forced by the markets. We are going to see through the deficit reduction that is an absolute prerequisite for turning Britain’s fortunes around.

“So we have started that process, already announcing £6.2bn worth of spending cuts in this financial year, made through driving down waste and improving efficiency. That’s a first step, and the Chancellor will be setting out more comprehensive plans to tackle the deficit in the Budget next week. That will be followed by a spending review in the autumn, detailing our spending plans for the coming years.  

“But make no mistake: this is not a task we relish. Nor was it our choice. This is the legacy that we, as a new government, and we, the British people, were left. It is the only way we can get our public finances on a sound footing. And – and this is the absolutely crucial point – to do anything else would not only be irresponsible, it would be a betrayal of our progressive values.

“Because there is nothing progressive about denial. There is nothing progressive about condemning ourselves and our children to decades of debt, higher interest rates, fewer jobs.  How will we pursue social justice with billions of pounds of taxpayers’ money disappearing down a black hole every year?

“The choices that were available to us just two months ago are no longer available. We have to set out a plan now so that we can still be in control of our future. By taking action, by being responsible, by not denying the reality we now face, there is still room for manoeuvre in how we tackle the deficit. By taking action, we do something hugely important: we give ourselves the chance to shape outcomes - to do all we can to bring down the deficit in a way that delivers fairness, to protect those who need it most. We put ourselves in a position where we can still direct money to the most disadvantaged children through our pupil premium. Where we are still able to improve access to healthcare for families in disadvantaged neighbourhoods.

“If we wait, none of these things will be possible. Every parent knows that what you want most for your children is for them to have all of the opportunities you had, as well as all those you didn’t. If we leave our children paying off our debts, we rob them of those opportunities and we condemn them to a future that is less secure.

“This government will not commit that kind of intergenerational theft. We are going to get on with the job of fixing the public finances, while we can still do it on our own terms.

“But, be under no illusion: while I believe this course of action is the right one, I also recognise that it will not solve Britain’s economic problems on its own.  So it must be accompanied by other measures.  Foremost among these is the need – as we return our public finances to balance – to support economic growth. 

“I have already referred to the challenges facing Europe’s economy.  As a number of countries across Europe take steps to deal with their fiscal deficits, there is a legitimate concern about the sources of future growth.  In my conversations in Berlin and Madrid at the end of last week, this was a recurrent theme.  I said then what I say today: with fiscal policy tightening and conventional monetary policy loose, there are limited macroeconomic tools to stimulate growth.  So we have to look hard at the structural reforms that can unleash the potential of our people and our economies.

“Working with our European partners, this Government will press for a more ambitious set of measures to open new markets for our goods and services.  Outside the EU, we will be champions for trade liberalisation.  Inside the EU, we will press for the removal of regulations that stop British firms competing fairly in other markets and that prevent British consumers from getting the best deals on price and services.

“And here in the UK, this Government will lessen the burden on the UK’s private sector and look for ways to free up the flow of credit to successful, viable British businesses.  As we reduce spending we will also look to reduce regulations and red-tape: releasing entrepreneurship and freeing up those with the drive and ideas to generate jobs and prosperity to do so.  We will also work closely with the banking sector to increase banks’ willingness to lend to the productive economy.  After the huge investments taxpayers have made to save the banks from collapse, the time for rent-seeking and excess reward is over.  We want banks to get back to the boring but important business of lending cautiously to prudent, growing, job-creating businesses.

“As we approach challenging decisions about public spending, we will seek to protect the best of the research carried out at our universities, and seek to boost vocational skills in our Colleges. We will look for ways to support private sector investment in R&D.

“And we will look at the ways public money can act as a catalyst for private investment in our nation’s infrastructure, particularly in energy and transport. These projects will take time, but they will both help create jobs and help create the competitive infrastructure that our economy needs.

“I know that there are many people in business, in the private sector, who feel that they have already made huge sacrifices as a result of the recession. I have met countless businesses that have had to scale back, or dismiss staff. Countless employees for whom pay freezes and reduced hours have already become a fact of life.  And while public sector pay was still rising at the end of the recession, wages in the private sector were already in decline.

“So we will need to seek greater fairness between the public and private sectors and between different regions of the country. When I talk to my constituents in Sheffield, many of whom work in the public sector, about the state of our public finances, I see how realistic they are; how pragmatic they are. Yes, they, like everyone, want reassurance that the people who caused his crisis – the banks – will never hold the whole economy to ransom again.

“And this government takes very seriously the need for fundamental, structural reform of our banking system to minimise that risk, as well as the need for a new banking levy so that banks pay their fair share. But, more importantly, what the people I meet working in the public sector really want is for politicians to be honest about the decisions ahead.

“Some decisions are not difficult. Cutting waste, for example, is relatively straightforward. Where there is fat, it should be trimmed. Like the £600m we’re cutting from quangos; the £95m from government IT spending; the £1.15bn in areas like consultancy and travel costs.

“But these are the easy choices. There will be tougher ones too.  Take public sector pay. In an ideal world, no one wants to see people working in the public sector see their real incomes fall, and this government is committed to protecting those on the lowest wages. But when there has already been pay restraint in the private sector, when the public pay bill now costs the country £160bn every year, and when the alternative is greater job losses we cannot refuse to now look at public sector pay too.

“Take pensions. Of course public sector workers deserve a decent income when they hit retirement; no one doubts that. But the current situation is not fair. Private sector workers have already seen final salary schemes close, while returns from defined contribution schemes fall. So can we really ask them to keep paying their taxes into unreformed gold-plated public sector pension pots? It’s not just unfair, it’s not affordable.

“Today’s OBR report shows that expenditure on public sector pensions will rise from £4 billion in 2010-11 to over £9 billion in 2014-15.  As we face up to living within our means, we cannot ignore a spending area which will more than double within five years.

“On that point, let me also say that this government strongly feels that it is right that there is an end to the very generous final salary pension scheme currently enjoyed by MPs. Reforms to pensions and pay that impact directly on the public sector will of course need to take the needs of different parts of the country into account. Some parts are much more dependent on jobs in the public sector than others and we are acutely aware of the need to ensure they don’t suffer disproportionately as a result of future cuts.

“Finally, on welfare: I believe the welfare state is one of Britain’s greatest triumphs - you can judge a society on the help it provides to those people who need it most. But when you have five million people living on out-of-work benefits, 1.4 million of whom for nine of the last ten years, when our welfare bill stands at a £87bn and rising – nearly the same as we spend educating our nation - we have to reform welfare to help people into work, to ease the burden on the taxpayer, while all the time ensuring people who need support, get that support.

“So we can either take the difficult decisions in the vast areas of pay, pensions and benefits, or we will see higher job losses in the public sector and less money in public services. And we must take these decisions together. That’s why this government is asking people to come forward with your ideas on how we can reduce public spending, in a consultation that will run across the summer. But, more importantly, because we know that, if we are going to ask the people of Britain to come with us on this difficult journey, our choices must be your choices too.

“These are the challenges we face. And at their heart is the choice facing this Government: We can ignore the black hole in the public finances, taking small steps that tinker at the edges - tweaking, hesitating, hoping growth will magically return - but ultimately refusing to set out the far-reaching action necessary to balance the books until that action is, eventually, forced on us by nervous investors and unforgiving markets.

“Or – we can confront the need to bring down the deficit while we are still in a position to do so in a way that is both fair and just. To deal with this problem now so we don’t leave our children to pay the price later. And that is this Government’s choice.”

 

http://www.cabinetoffice.gov.uk/newsroom/news_releases/2010/100615-choic...

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AXED: £10BN OF PROJECTS AGREED IN BROWN'S LAST-GASP SPENDING SPR

AXED: £10BN OF PROJECTS AGREED IN BROWN'S LAST-GASP SPENDING SPREE

MINISTERS were preparing to axe schemes worth more than £10billion yesterday after uncovering yet more of Labour’s secret last-minute spending.

Chief Secretary to the Treasury Danny Alexander announced that 12 projects costing £2billion had been cancelled while others totalling £8.5billion were suspended.

Among those hit were a new hospital in Teesside, proposed law courts in Birmingham and the manufacture of military helicopters.

Mr Alexander warned that spending of a further £1billion would beslashed in Chancellor George Osborne’s emergency Budget next Tuesday.

Anger erupted in the House of Commons as Labour reacted furiously to the announcement. But Mr Alexander, the Lib Dem minister overseeing the spending squeeze, insisted the coalition Government was “cutting with care”.

He said Labour ministers had given the go-ahead to the projects in their final days in office – and that the funding was to come from emergency Treasury reserve coffers and presumed savings in Whitehall that were never likely to materialise.

Mr Alexander said: “We are determined to tackle the unprecedented budget deficit and bad financial management we have seen over the past decade but are equally determined to do this in a way that is fair and responsible.

“As a result of the poor decisions made by the previous government, I have taken the decision to cancel certain projects that do not represent good value for money and suspend others pending full consideration in the Spending Review.

“We have also found another spending black hole in the previous government’s plans – projects had been approved with no money in place to pay for them. I am determined to deal with this head-on.” The decisions follow a Government review of 217 schemes worth £34billion launched by Labour since the start of the year.

Cancelled projects include a £25million visitor centre at Stonehenge and the £450million North Tees and Hartlepool Hospital. Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg was braced for a backlash in his Sheffield constituency after an £80million loan to Sheffield Forgemasters, a firm due to build parts for nuclear power stations, was axed.

But the biggest saving, of £7billion, will come from the postponement of a new generation of search and rescue helicopters for the Ministry of Defence and the coastguard. In the Commons, Shadow Treasury Chief Secretary Liam Byrne attacked Mr Alexander’s announcement.

He said: “Both the country and the Liberal Democrat party beyond will be aghast this afternoon at your attack on jobs, your attack on construction workers, your attack on the industries of the future and the cancellation of a hospital.

“What could be more front line than this? In five minutes you have reversed three years of Liberal Democratic policy of which you were the principal author. What a moment of abject humiliation.” But Mr Alexander hit back by pointing out that Mr Byrne, on leaving the Treasury, had left a note to his successor saying: “There’s no more money, good luck.”

Campaigners against Government waste applauded the cuts last night. Matthew Elliott, of the TaxPayers’ Alliance, said: “Large-scale spending cuts must be made as soon as possible.”

http://www.taxpayersalliance.com/media/2010/06/daily-express-axed-10bn-o...

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GOVERNMENT ACCUSED OVER VAT HIKE

CAMPAIGNERS last night accused the Government of overturning pre-election pledges on VAT.

The TaxPayers’ Alliance said the Tories and Lib Dems both vowed not to increase VAT from 17.5% if they came to power.

But their Coalition Government is today expected to raise the rate to 20% – increasing the price of almost everything and costing the average household £425 a year.

Matthew Elliott, of the TaxPayers’ Alliance, stormed: “Both parties told voters they wouldn’t hike VAT and people will be very angry if they backtrack on that.

“The Government has no mandate for this tax rise.”

Charities and trade unions voiced concern that the move would hit the poorest hardest as they spend a higher proportion of their money.

A VAT hike would add about 2½p to a litre of petrol and 7p to a pint of lager.

The change is tipped to come into force next year and it would raise an extra £11.4billion for the Treasury.

PM David Cameron’s official spokesman said: “The Prime Minister has been very clear that the priority at this present time is to tackle the deficit.”

But Shadow Chancellor Alistair Darling said: “My worry is that they seem to be oblivious to the fact that if you cut and you don’t have a counter-balancing strategy for growth, you will get into the problems that we’re now beginning to see in Europe.”

Another expected move in Chancellor George Osborne’s Budget, a capital gains tax leap from 18% to 40%, has also came under fire.

Government spending curbs could see gold-plated public sector pensions coming to an end, with workers facing the prospect of paying more towards their funds.

The one piece of good news for people’s wallets is a proposed freeze on council tax bills next year, and possibly the year after.

http://www.taxpayersalliance.com/media/2010/06/daily-star-government-acc...

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Emergency Budget: The axe falls

After weeks of warnings about the size of the deficit facing Britain, George Osborne will finally present his emergency Budget today.

The Budget, a long-promised part of the Tory campaign, has been preceded by several high-profile ministerial statements insisting that the economic problems facing Britain are worse than originally thought.

Warnings about the scale of the deficit have come from prime minister David Cameron, chancellor George Osborne, deputy prime minister Nick Clegg, former chief secretary to the Treasury David Laws and current chief secretary to the Treasury Danny Alexander.

Analysts concluded that the repeated statements were an attempt to soften the public up for the bad news to come - and that today's Budget would be a particularly gruesome package of spending cuts and tax rises.

Nearly £30 billion of spending cuts are expected to be announced today, along with £15 billion of tax rises.

Deputy prime minister tried to act quickly against any rebellion in his own ranks by firing off an email to party members admitting the Budget was likely to be "controversial".

"Without action on the deficit, we will carry on racking up unaffordable debts our children will have to pay off," he argued.

"And we will undermine the economic growth needed to create jobs and opportunities for all of us. There is nothing fair, liberal or progressive about any of that."

The welfare system is set to be severely limited by today's announcement. Having offered gifts in the form of the income tax threshold and council tax, the chancellor will be forced to take capital from welfare budgets and VAT hikes if he is to make serious inroads into the deficit.

VAT, which affects the poor more than it does the rich, is particularly problematic. Organisations as diverse as the Taxpayers' Alliance and the TUC are opposing any change in this area.

To Read More click here: http://www.politics.co.uk/news/economy-and-finance/emergency-budget-the-axe-falls-$21380489.htm

http://www.taxpayersalliance.com/media/2010/06/politicscouk-by-ian-dunt-...

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Cuts the best way to ensure growth

TODAY is D-day for George Osborne; his first Budget, presented to Parliament at 12.30pm today, could be remembered as a turning point in modern British economic history. If he flunks it, Osborne is finished; if he pulls it off, stabilises the national debt, begins to unwind the excess of the Labour years and ensures that any tax hikes are not too damaging to competitiveness, Osborne could set in train a slow comeback and reverse this country’s accelerating decline.

One thing is clear: the coalition’s honeymoon period is over. The savage attacks from the left, Keynesians and the unions have only just begun. While there is a broad consensus that the budget deficit needs to be reined in, there are plenty of influential commentators who argue that spending cuts at this time would endanger the recovery, hurt Britain’s long term fiscal and economic prospects, send unemployment soaring again and hit the poor disproportionately. I’m not convinced by any of these claims: it seems that the opposite is true and that the UK can no longer afford to live beyond its means, with the state borrowing vast amounts of money to finance a badly managed and oversized public sector. It is not moral or progressive to borrow as if there were no tomorrow, shackling unborn generations with massive bills and risking a continental-style sovereign debt crisis. The only reason gilt yields have collapsed over the past couple of months is the belief that the coalition will tackle the deficit; if it were to wimp out now, the retribution from those whom we are asking to finance our profligacy would be as harsh as it would be instant.

A research note from the TaxPayers’ Alliance is illuminating: using the Beacon Economic Forecasting model of the UK, it argues that only ambitious cuts in spending will deliver improvements in Britain’s fiscal position as well as its economic prospects (and hence employment, asset prices and wages). Beacon is a small consultancy run by David B Smith, for many years Williams de Broe’s chief economist and now chairman of the Institute of Economic Affairs’ shadow monetary policy committee. It has won awards, including being judged the most accurate forecaster a few years ago by a Sunday newspaper; its models are especially interesting because they give an important role to the supply of money as well as to the tax burden as an influence on economic decisions.

The model finds that deficit reduction and economic recovery would be best served through a mixture of spending cuts and tax cuts – namely, immediate and substantial spending cuts followed by broad tax cuts around the 2014 Budget.

The results by 2020 – compared with keeping to the 2010 Budget’s policies, which is what those who oppose cuts implicitly support – are dramatic. The debt stock would be £1.6 trillion instead of £2.4 trillion on the no-cuts scenario; 60.6 per cent of GDP instead of 94.5 per cent. The budget would be in surplus to the tune of 1.3 per cent of GDP, instead of a deficit of 2.8 per cent of GDP.

The only way to strengthen the economy is by cutting spending and eventually taxes – not by maintaining debt-financed expenditure, let alone hiking tax (which would further squeeze the private sector and damage the UK’s long-term growth potential). Osborne must cut sensibly and thoughtfully, while making sure that the poor are protected – but cut he must.

http://www.taxpayersalliance.com/media/2010/06/city-am-cuts-the-best-way...

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Child Poverty Action Group urges Osborne to protect low-income f

Child Poverty Action Group urges Osborne to protect low-income families in Budget

Child poverty campaigners are warning Chancellor George Osborne not to break the government's commitment under the Child Poverty Act, ahead of the emergency Budget.

In a letter to Osborne, Imran Hussain, head of policy, rights and advocacy at the Child Poverty Action Group, criticises the coalition government’s steps to stop the extension of free school meals and one-to-one tuition for the most disadvantaged pupils. He warns that every economic decision should be able to pass a "fairness test" or inequality impact assessment, and that successful programmes such as Sure Start and free school meals should be protected.

Hussain also urges the government not to limit Child Tax Credit to families with incomes below £50,000 a year, saying such a move would reduce incomes in middle- to low-income households and make the benefit system more complex.

"It is unfair, unjust and unacceptable that low-income families, who derived little benefit from the economic boom and suffered most during a recession that hit the poorest the hardest, should now be forced to make further sacrifices that will push them deeper into personal debt and crisis to pay off a national debt generated by a reckless financial sector," Hussain wrote. "Economically, it would be a grave error to cut jobs, support and services to families and children whose well-being is crucial to our future economic prospects."

The group is also calling on Osborne to retain universal child benefit within a more progressive system of taxation and avoid a rise in VAT, which it warns would hit the poorest households hardest.

http://www.cypnow.co.uk/news/ByDiscipline/Social-Care/1011319/Child-Pove...

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