|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Britain
Britain: Labours re-launch stymied by worsening
economic forecast
By Julie Hyland
17 May 2008
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
The Labour government brought forward a series of measures
this week in a rearguard action to try to rescue its political
fortunes in wake of the partys collapse into third place
in the May 1 local elections.
With a by-election due on May 22, in which the Conservatives
are currently tipped to overturn a 7,000 Labour majority, Prime
Minister Gordon Brown sought to placate voters wrath.
On Tuesday, Chancellor Alistair Darling announced what many
described as an emergency mini-budget on taxation.
The governments abolition of the 10 pence tax band has severely
financially affected more than 5 million low-earners. While the
measure had been announced last year, it only took effect last
month.
In 2007, the move won applause from Labours backbenches,
not least because it had enabled the government to make cuts into
corporation tax. But a lot has changed since then, particularly
the sharp decline in living standards due to the global economic
crisis.
Rising food prices sent the UKs official annual inflation
rate to 3 percent in Aprilthe sharpest increase in the cost
of living in almost six years, rising 0.5 percent in just one
month. Reports indicate that the real cost of living, however,
is far greater, as food costs alone are increasing at an average
of 15.5 percent a year. Rising costs in other essentials such
as fuel and utilities mean that many families are already spending
£1,000 a year more out of pocketwithout taking into
account spiralling mortgage costs.
In his mini-budget Darling announced that personal tax allowance
would rise by £600. Those earning less than £40,000
per annum (the overwhelming majority) will gain up to £120
this year. The chancellor claimed that this would also compensate
the majority of those who lost out from the scrapping of the 10
pence tax band.
Labours attempt at a political re-launch was followed
by Brown outlining planned legislation to be brought forward in
the next Queens speech, which he claimed would create a
more prosperous and fairer Britain.
He set out the further reform of schools, hospitals
and the welfare benefit system. His government will grant new
powers to local authorities to intervene against failing
schools, link hospital funding to performance, introduce
tougher controls on immigration and more punitive measures against
the long-term unemployed.
The government had given an indication of just what this amounted
to in an earlier statement promising a radical shakeup of Englands
social care system for the elderly. State support for elderly
care is means-tested in England, with most having to pay for home
help and assisted accommodation. Thousands have been forced to
sell their homes to raise the finance as a consequence.
Health Secretary Alan Johnson said that the government was
initiating a six-month consultation period to consider how people
could be provided for in old age. He claimed that the government
had set no pre-determined answers, but went on to
make clear that what was intended is a move away from universal
state provision to an insurance-based scheme paid for by the individual.
If we are running out of so-called free personal carewhich
even the Liberal Democrats have dropped as a commitmentthen
you are looking at some kind of insurance that can be provided
by the state or the individual, he said.
It is a measure of how far removed Labour is from the realities
of millions of peoples lives that it could consider such
measures to be a popular re-launch. Moreover, while the government
claims that these moves are necessary because of a £6 billion
shortfall in provision, it has had no such qualms over using some
£100 billion of taxpayers money to shore up the banks,
or the some £800 million per month being spent on the occupation
of Iraq.
So right-wing are Labours politics that the Conservatives
are casting themselves as a progressive alternative,
even while boasting that they are the only party prepared to break
open the monopoly on state education and social welfare.
But as Brown was speaking in Parliament, asking the voters
to judge and test him on the basis of his economic
stewardship, his room for political manoeuvre was rapidly diminishing.
Not only are some 1 million low-earners still out of pocket despite
Darlings announcement, but hopes that tax changes will help
re-stimulate the economy were almost immediately dashed by the
Bank of Englands quarterly inflation report.
Governor Mervyn King warned that the the nice decade
is behind us and the economy was travelling along
a bumpy road.
Real take-home pay has not risen by much in the past
four yearsby well below 1 percent a year. The next couple
of years are going to see at least as great a squeeze on living
standards that will erode purchasing power, he continued.
The report spelt out that millions of working people would
be hit financially from all sides over the next period. According
to the Bank, gas, electricity and food prices will continue to
rise pushing inflation towards 4 percent while the housing market,
which it stated has already worsened markedly, is
set to fall even further. The banking crisis could continue well
into 2009, the report stated, while economic growth is likely
to slump toward 1 percent by the end of 2008, bringing the risk
of recession.
The assessment made a mockery of the trade union bureaucracys
claims that the chancellors tax allowance changes were sufficient
to salvage Labour. Tony Woodley, joint leader of Unite, had pronounced
that Darlings mini-budget meant the party was reconnecting
with Labours social conscience and with voters
generally, while GMB general secretary Paul Kenny congratulated
Brown and Darling for listening to the public and changing
tack.
No doubt the trade union leaders hoped that Darlings
measures would be enough to prevent the party imploding in an
orgy of unprincipled factionalism.
Labours latest drubbing in the polls coincided with the
publication of memoirs by Tony Blairs wife, Cherie, former
Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott and Blairs Middle East
envoy, Lord Levy.
All seized the opportunity to settle personal scores with Brown
directlyand to make some money in the process. Prescott
described Brown as prickly, saying that he could go
off like a volcano while Levy, who was arrested twice during
the cash-for-honours inquiry before being cleared of any wrongdoing,
told the BBC that it was inconceivable that the former
chancellor had not known about the partys financial arrangements.
Darlings announcement proved to be enough to silence
a potential rebellion by sections of Labour backbenchers who are
afraid they will lose their seats. Frank Field, who had led threats
to vote down the governments budget and who had said he
would be very surprised if Brown were still Labour
leader at the next election, pronounced his satisfaction with
the changes and publicly apologised to the prime minister.
But outside of Labours immediate environs, criticism
of Brown and the government in ruling circles rages unabated.
Under banner headlines on the day Brown spoke, the Independent
reported that the spectre of stagflation
associated with the 1970s was back on the agenda. The 15
percent decline in the value of sterlingas steep as when
the pound was forced out of the ERM on Black Wednesday
in 1992has exacerbated inflationary pressures, it
said, hitting living standards, especially for pensioners
and the poorest, hardest. There was little leeway for policymakers,
it continued, as they are pulled between the need to fight
inflation and avoid a slump.
Against this background, economists complained that Darlings
compensation package would push public borrowing towards £50
billion this year, jeopardizing the governments fiscal rules.
The Financial Times said that Darlings measure smacked
of desperation, as the government failed to make tax
policy with an eye to the long-term health of the public
finances and a coherent fiscal philosophy. It had shattered
any residual idea that Mr. Browns administration can run
an orderly fiscal policy, the newspaper pronounced.
Such comments were intended to serve notice that big business
will not tolerate any palliative measures, no matter how pitiful,
even at the expense of the governments fall.
More significant for Browns political survival was the
savaging he received in Rupert Murdochs Sun newspaper.
Describing Darlings tax changes as a gamble
with taxpayers money, it complained that it was not
the first time Gordon Brown has panicked in the face of the polls.
Having backed out of calling an early general election in November
it had rewritten a Budget just over two months old ... if
he can be persuaded to rip up a Budget, whats to stop Labours
union paymasters and the public sector demanding pay rises this
summer? the newspaper thundered.
There is already widespread discontent across the public sector
at the governments imposition of a below-inflation pay award.
The Sun is only too aware that this will grow significantly
over the next months and does not believe Brown has the mettle
to face down the opposition. In a particularly hostile piece the
next day, associate editor Trevor Kavanagh wrote that the local
elections had torpedoed this Government beneath the waterline.
As Gordon Brown prowled the TV studios saying sorry yesterday,
we were watching a dead man drowning. I give him six months.
Labour has burst asunder from stem to stern, its timbers
rotten to the core, he continued, as the Blair/Brown
Government has been sussed as the incompetent, interfering and
wasteful political con-trick it was from May 1, 1997.
Given that Rupert Murdoch and his tabloid have been one of
the main political backers of New Labour and have played a major
role in shaping its policies, such supposedly newfound wisdom
is deserving only of contempt.
In a comment in the Guardian designed to bolster Brown
by laying New Labours failings at Blairs door, Robert
Harris revealed the substance of the partys meltdown more
tellingly than he had perhaps intended. Complaining that the former
prime minister had cut and run, leaving New Labour high and dry,
Harris then opined that the current crisis in Labour was not so
much one of leadership as a crisis of purposeof existence,
in fact...
What is this thing called the Labour party for, exactly?
One can see why the Tories exist, and why the Liberals have endured.
But Labourthis friend of global corporations, this ally
of the neocons in Washington, this raiser of income tax on the
poorwhere is its place supposed to be in the political firmament?
For the likes of Murdoch, et al the answer appears to be clear.
The political con-trick of New Labour completely exhausted,
they are now looking at the Tories to repackage the same pro-business
agenda. For working people, however, Labours right-wing
putrefaction must underscore the necessity for the construction
of a new workers party based on socialist policies.
See Also:
Britains rich get richer even as
recession begins to bite
[14 May 2008]
Britain: Labours electoral meltdown
continues to worsen
[7 May 2008]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |