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WSWS : News
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: Britain
: 2001
Election
Britain: Study finds Labour government spent less than the
Conservatives
By Liz Smith
4 June 2001
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A series of briefing notes by the Institute for Fiscal Studies
(IFS), published in the run up to the June 7 general election,
show conclusively that the Labour government spent less in its
first term of office than at any time during the preceding 18
years of Conservative rule.
The IFS finds that although government revenues rose by 2.9
percent of GDP (from 37.6 to 40.5 percent) during Labour's first
term, spending decreased by 2.4 percent (from 41.2 to 38.8 percent
of GDP). The result was to turn a large public deficit into a
massive surplus. Far from this benefiting ordinary working families,
it has been used to repay Britain's national debt and underwrite
New Labour's pro-business policies.
Tony Blair came to power in May 1997 pledging to keep to the
strict spending limits agreed by the outgoing Tory government.
His chancellor of the exchequer, Gordon Brown, said this proved
Labour had broken with the tax and spend policies
of its past and now followed prudent fiscal principles.
The final budget of Tory Chancellor Kenneth Clarke in November
1996 already enshrined some of the lowest increases in government
spending, thus total government spending fell by an average
1.0 percent per year during Labour's first two years at
the helm.
In its spending reviews announced in July 1998 and July 2000,
Labour promised to spend more money on Britain's public sector
after the initial two years of belt-tightening. According to the
IFS, much of this failed to materialise due to several government
departments not delivering the increases in spending allocated
to them.
Britain spends less than practically every other member of
the European Union, making the UK the fifth lowest spender
amongst the 17 EU (excluding Luxemburg) and G7 countries in 1999.
Only the US, Canada, Japan and the Irish Republic spent less by
comparison.
Under Labour, overall public spending as a share of GDP is
now lower than it was at the end of the previous Tory government
in 1997. National Health Service (NHS) spending over the first
two years of Labour's term grew by an average of just 2.2 percent
in real termsa lower increase than the 3.1 percent achieved
over 18 years of Conservative rule. In the last three years, whilst
larger real increases were allocated, the report notes, this
did not necessarily mark a break from the past since the NHS had
often experienced years of lower increases in spending followed
by years of larger increases in spending. Future NHS spending
is set to increase in real terms, by 5.7 percent a year, but as
the IFS points out, at 6.7 percent of GDP the UK has the lowest
public and total health expenditure compared with other G7 countries.
Citing the pledge made by Labour in 1997 that Education
will be our number one priority, and we will increase the share
of national income spent on education as we decrease it on bills
and social and economic failure, the report shows that during
its first two years in office Labour increased education spending
by only 2 percent, almost a full percentage point less than the
average annual increase in GDP for the same period. Labour is
also spending less on education as a percentage of GDP than its
Tory predecessors. Average education spending over this
Parliament will be 4.7 percent of GDP, which is actually lower
than the 5.0 percent achieved by the Conservatives in the last
Parliament.
Other areas of government spending have grown less quickly
under Labour than under the previous Parliament and the entire
period of Conservative rule from 1979. Social security spending,
defined to include Labour's much vaunted working families
tax credits that were supposed to improve the lot of low
income families, has only grown in real terms by 1.1 percent a
year, compared with 3.9 percent a year under the outgoing Conservative
government of John Major. The report states, This is particularly
important since spending on social security is the biggest single
element of public expenditure, comprising 30 percent of all government
spending.
Substantial increases in capital spending announced by Labour
have failed to materialise. Thus the IFS is able to show that
public sector net investment was on average less than 0.5 percent
of GDP per year, easily the lowest figure for any four-year
period since the Second World War.
Labour's proposals for welfare mean extending means testing
and continue the erosion of universal benefits such as the state
retirement pension, linked to the amount of National Insurance
contributions paid by an individual. Whilst means tested benefits
are more expensive to administer, the take-up rate is usually
lower than for universal benefits since not all those who are
entitled to claim do so.
Fewer people are now claiming welfare benefits than in 1997,
the exception being a 50 percent increase in the number of families
with children receiving an in-work benefit and a 20 percent increase
of those claiming sickness or disability premiums whilst receiving
income support.
In a particularly damning section on living standards under
Labour, the IFS concludes, income inequality was higher
in 1999-2000 than it was before Labour came to power.
The report quotes Blair's promise before becoming prime minister,
If the next Labour government has not raised the living
standards of the poorest by the end of its first time in office,
it will have failed. The IFS study then notes that although the
incomes of the poorest had risen, the gains experienced
at the bottom of the income distribution in the first three years
of the Parliament have been smaller than the growth in living
standards experienced by those higher up the income scale.
During the first three years of Tony Blair's premiership, the
incomes of the top fifth increased by twice as much as the bottom
fifth.
The IFS reports reveal that Labour's claims to be investing
in much needed public services are disingenuous. After years of
cuts and neglect under the Tories, the Blair government has made
some marginal improvement to the lot of a small number of the
deserving poor but largely at the expense of those
who are only marginally better off. Any miniscule gains have only
been introduced on the basis of extending low-wage labour and
eroding the living standards of millions through increases in
indirect taxation.
See Also:
Labour Manifesto sets out
privatisation of health and education
[19 May 2001]
Labour government announces
small rise in minimum wage
[3 May 2001]
Britain's
general election
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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