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Britain: Labour delivers a pre-election budget
By Julie Hyland
9 March 2001
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Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown delivered the Labour
government's fourth annual budget on Wednesday. Touted as a budget
to help working people, it continued the running down of welfare
spending.
Brown said that the "story of Britain is the story of
hard-working families struggling to do their best by their children".
The number of working mothers has increased by one million since
1984, and the number of families in which both parents work has
risen from less than one half of the total to more than two-thirds
over the same period.
Outlining what he claimed was an increase of over £5bn
in public spending, Brown said his budget was particularly targeted
at helping such families. The Working Families Tax Credit, aimed
at families on low incomes, will rise by £5 a week and maternity
pay and childcare allowances are to be increased.
More significant, the chancellor claimed, was his decision
to expand the number of people who will be taxed at the lower
10 pence income tax band, rather than at 20 pence in the pound.
The Treasury had rejected calls for across-the-board tax cuts,
Brown said, in order to target help on the less well off.
Such measures were designed to enable the chancellor to face
two ways at the same time. With a general election expected within
the next two months, the government wants to be seen as improving
living standards for working people. There is widespread unease
at the continuing deterioration of public services, such as health
and education, which have faced a continuous financial squeeze
over the last years. Apparently sympathising with such concerns,
Brown said that he had eschewed "representations from some
for billions in further tax cuts. But our priority has been and
is Britain's public services".
Fundamentally, however, the government is not prepared to do
anything that will upset the City of London, which has demanded
a tight rein be kept on public spending.
Only one week before the budget announcement the International
Monetary Fund had also warned the Blair government against a pre-election
"give away". Whilst praising much about the UK's economic
performance, the IMF report, released on February 28, said that
government plans to increase public spendingfloated some
time in advancecould lead to a "possible further real
appreciation" of sterling, with "negative consequences
for investment and growth".
The IMF report was released against the backdrop of growing
concerns that the US economy is moving into recession. The Financial
Times reported that the study "revealed a clear disagreement
between the UK authorities and IMF economists over the best way
to run fiscal policy". Whereas Brown had argued that tax
receipts should equal current spending, thus ignoring government
investment over the economic cycle, the IMF urged the government
to balance all public spending with taxes, including necessary
investment. To do so, the Financial Times reported, Treasury
estimates say this could mean tax rises or spending cuts of £10bn
by 2004.
This is not an option for the Labour government. Taking office
in 1997, it stuck rigidly to planned Conservative spending targets
for the first two years, with the result that the proportion of
national income spent on schools, hospitals and pensions is now
lower than under the previous Tory government. Brown justified
this on the basis of fiscal "prudence", promising that
Labour would never return to the days of "tax and spend"
policies. According to Brown, previous Labour governments had
a record of economic incompetence, because they had sought to
overcome social and economic problems by increasing public spending.
In contrast, the present Labour government would put economic
stability above "popular" measures.
When Brown delivered his budget, he spoke with the assuredness
of a man who believed his pronouncements had been vindicated.
Under Labour, Brown boasted, Britain "now has the lowest
inflation for 30 years; the lowest long-term interest rates for
35 years; mortgages now averaging £1,200 a year, lower than
under the last government; more people in work than ever before
and the lowest unemployment rate since 1975".
Inflation averaged just 2.1 percent last year, he continuedthe
lowest annual rate since 1963whilst interest rates had fallen
from 10 percent in 1979 to six percent today, delivering "the
longest period of consistently low interest rates since the 1960s".
In addition, manufacturing productivity had grown by 4.4 percent
and manufacturing exports by 11.8 percent, enabling a higher rate
of economic growth at three percent over last year, Brown said.
Public spending restrictions, falling unemployment and a corresponding
increase in tax revenuescombined with a sharp hike in indirect
taxationmeant the government will have amassed a £16bn
surplus by the end of this financial year in April, Brown went
on. This meant it could now announce spending increases worth
£5.3bn in 2001-02. As well as the just under £2bn
allocated in tax cuts, there would be £1.8bn for hospitals
and schools and £2bn cuts in fuel duties and cheaper vehicle
tax. Cuts in the level of UK fuel dutiescurrently the highest
in the worldwas the main demand of the fuel tax protestors
in September last year.
But the chancellor's crowning glory was his announcement that
Labour would hand back £34bn in debt repayments; meaning
that the Blair government would have repaid more of the national
debt during just one term in office than all governments combined
over the past 50 years.
The message was unmistakeablepublic spending concessions
would not be made at the expense of damaging Britain's international
competitiveness. Accordingly, the media gave Brown a rousing chorus
of approval for satisfying everyone. Rupert Murdoch's rightwing
Sun newspaper positively gushed support, urging Blair to
"clear the decks and call the election," and pledging
that it would back a vote for Labour. Based on Brown's budget,
other newspapers forecast an early electionpossibly even
by April 3.
But such excitement could not entirely drown out more cautious
voices. In parliament, the Liberal Democrats pointed out that
the chancellor had devoted five times as much financial priority
to tax reductions than investing in health and education. In addition,
of the £5.3bn spending increase, £2bn had already
been announced last year.
Other commentators pointed out that the change to the 10 pence
tax band would make little difference to the majority of employeesbeing
worth just 60 pence a week to most wage earnersand would
not be of any benefit to the low paid. Writing on the BBC's web
site, Professor John Curtice, a leading political analyst, pointed
out that "what is most striking about this budget is how
little of our taxes Mr Brown is giving back to usno more
indeed than the extra revenue that has been flowing into the Treasury
because the economy has been doing well". Brown's suggestion
that he was going to spend twice as much on health and education
as on tax cuts was misleading, Curtice continued; most of the
"increase is being funded out of unallocated spending monies
rather than an increase in the public spending total. Moreover
as in previous budgets he announced how much money he was going
to spend over three years rather than just one year, thereby apparently
exaggerating the scale of the increase".
The Blair government had first introduced the lower 10 pence
tax band in 1999 as part of its "welfare to work" policies.
The objective was to justify forcing people into low paid employment
by limiting their entitlement to welfare benefits. The government
sought to cover over its extension of means-testingwhich
has led to social security payments and many other benefits being
conditional rather than paid as a rightthrough various changes
to the tax system, and administered by employers through the company
pay roll.
Brown's budget announced the establishment of a Working Age
Agency in the next months. With its launch, unemployed persons
will be required to attend interviews that will assess what they
must do to secure a job before any benefit is paid. Brown described
the measure as "Employment first", and said it would
apply to all the unemployed, including lone parents with children
under five who are presently exempt.
As for hospitals and schools, both areas face a severe shortage
of resources and staff. Public sector wages have been held down,
while workloads have increased, consequently health and education
have hit severe recruitment difficulties. The government has sought
to utilise these problems to force public services into internal
competition, based on "performance" indexes and meeting
"value for money" criteria. This approach was strengthened
in Brown's budget, with his announcement that the extra money
for schools and hospitals would be paid directly to each individual
institution.
Even the budget's Tory and Liberal critics welcomed these measures,
but they were not enough to cancel out what several commentators
regarded as Brown's cavalier dismissal of growing problems in
the world economy.
In his remarks, Brown referred to the "slowdown"
in the US economy, but concluded that the British economy would
remain stable.
Whilst the chancellor was enjoying a surplus now, this could
rapidly change, his critics warned. The governor of the Bank of
England cautioned, "If America really sneezes, we all catch
cold". The British economy is considered especially vulnerable
to a US recession. Some 15 percent of UK exports are destined
for the US. More important still is the relatively high rate of
investment by British firms in the American market.
Earlier this month, the Office for National Statistics (ONS)
reported that growth in the UK economy had slowed sharply in the
last three months of 2000. The ONS said gross domestic product
(GDP) had grown 0.3 percent between October and December, less
than half the increase in the previous quarter. In January, an
independent industry report produced by Ernst & Young predicted
a sharp reduction in consumer spending and warned of 200,000 job
losses over the next 18 months.
Such forecasts contradict Brown's estimate that UK economic
growth would run at two-and-a-quarter percent up to 2003, which
would allow present levels of public spending to be sustained.
Brown expects government borrowing to stabilise at 1.1 percent
of GDP (£12bn) by 2004. Such assertions represent a "big
leap of faith" on the chancellor's part, the Financial
Times warned on Thursday.
See Also:
British
Politics
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