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WSWS : News
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: Britain
Britain: Labour's budget sets stage for further attacks on
welfare
By Jean Shaoul
20 March 1999
Gordon Brown's third budget as Chancellor of the Exchequer
was greeted enthusiastically by most political commentators. It
was almost universally acknowledged that he had squared the circle--combining
redistribution of income with a business-friendly budget.
This claim is entirely false. The budget was the opposite of
redistribution in any progressive sense. The measures benefit
big business, not the poor. They signal the end to universal entitlement
to benefits regardless of income. The proposals further define
New Labour's agenda of eliminating welfare, establishing workfare
and returning to a modern-day version of the nineteenth century
Poor Laws.
The claim that Brown's budget was redistributive rests on his
tweaking income related tax and tax credits in numerous ways.
The basic rate of income tax falls from 23 to 22 pence in the
pound, National Insurance Contributions are cut slightly for low
wage earners and raised for those on top pay. Tax relief on home
mortgages is to be ended and the married couple's tax allowance
abolished in favour of a means tested child tax credit. A new
disabled person's tax credit will be introduced. The net impact
of all these changes in the first full year of implementation
will be a reduction of £1.4 billion in personal taxation.
The new children's tax credit of £8 per week is "targeted"
on the "deserving" poor. It is part of a shift away
from universal welfare towards a systemic increase in means testing
that includes the working family tax credit, incapacity and widow's
benefits, pensions and legal aid. These new tax credits and income
guarantees are not entitlements resulting from collective social
insurance but discretionary payments by the state, if it deems
the recipients "deserving". They can be withdrawn or
changed as the state sees fit. This marks an important redefinition
of the Welfare State.
Very few will benefit from these new tax credits. More importantly,
the most needy who do not work, will get very little because they
are not considered "deserving".
All the changes in personal taxation are more than compensated
for by increases in a range of consumption taxes on insurance,
tobacco, airport, vehicles and petrol. Consumption taxes fall
particularly harshly, in both absolute and relative terms, on
the poor and constitute a further redistribution from the poor
to the rich.
The combined effect of Brown's three budgets so far leaves
the richest 10 percent of households worse off by just £2.53
per week. This is hardly soaking the rich. The working poor benefit
by only £7 per week and the very poorest by a miserly £3.48
per week.
According to the Institute of Fiscal Studies, these changes,
plus those already implemented, mean that the biggest gains have
not been at the very bottom, where people are dependent on benefits,
but for those in the second and third lowest income bands--people
in low paid work. This is in line with the government's drive
to force people off benefits and into low paid work in ways that
act as a low wage subsidy. So the sweatshop employers are the
real winners.
Furthermore, the overall tax yield is set to rise in the coming
period as a result of the shift to taxes on consumption and the
new energy tax: the "climate change levy". This is not,
however, to be spent on improving public services and renewing
the crumbling infrastructure. The Chancellor's budget conveniently
left out the fact that his plans for public services and benefits
show a fall of £14.5 billion over the next three years as
the National Debt is repaid.
Far from letting spending increase, the public services or
the "social wage" will be cut by more than under the
Tories. The rapid deterioration in housing, health, education,
social services and pensions means that more and more people must
make their own provision or make do with inferior services that
may soon disappear altogether.
The second theme of Brown's budget was that it was "business
friendly". He announced cuts in corporate taxation; tax concessions
to business; increased expenditure on start up ventures and incentives
for small and medium enterprises and a six-month wage subsidy
of £60 a week to companies that take on unemployed workers
over the age of 50. This is yet another measure aimed at forcing
workers, particularly the better trained and educated, into low
paid jobs.
The net result is that Britain is now Europe's premier tax
haven and investment location for the major corporations. The
central thrust of Labour's budget is to enable Britain's bosses
to fight for survival in a global economy. Yet Brown did not even
mention the world economy in his budget speech, let alone the
gathering storm clouds that have already brought thousands of
job losses to what remains of Britain's manufacturing base.
Unable to do very much to defend traditional capital intensive
industries such as chemicals, steel and engineering, he has concentrated
on the development of the low wage service sector and knowledge-based
industries with low requirements for capital: information technology
services, "Facilities management", outsourced business
services, call centres, and employment agencies. Support services
like these are the fastest growing sector and current darlings
of the stock market, displacing British Steel and other (former)
heavy weights from the top 100 companies. Despite low profit margins,
they offer a phenomenal 35 plus rate of return to their shareholders
on capital employed. It is this that lies behind the demands of
all the international agencies for the liberalisation of services
and the external procurement of public services.
Brown's adoption of the international agencies' rules on "transparency,
prudence, balancing income and expenditure, reducing the National
Debt and borrowing only for capital expenditure", locks future
governments into reduced public expenditure. It marks the increasing
control by international business over national economies. Chancellors
of all political persuasions must now manage state finances like
a latter day Dickensian bookkeeper, who makes minor adjustments
to ensure that the ledgers balance. Parliament--whose historical
role is to approve the supply of funds to the government of the
day--is reduced to near impotence.
The Conservatives had little to disagree with in Brown's budget.
The Liberal Democrats' sole complaint was that New Labour had
stolen their proposals. There was not a word of dissent from the
Labour lefts or trade union leaders. But for some, all of this
was still not enough. An editorial in the Financial Times
said, "The trouble with consensual policy making is that
it holds little promise of making significant inroads into heavy
social security bills, nor of eliminating labour market restrictions
that inhibit industrial restructuring."
See Also:
The End of the British Welfare State
[ WSWS full coverage]
http://www.wsws.org/sections/category/news/eu-brpov.shtml
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