THE BUDGET IS
LIKELY TO PROVE A CRUCIAL MOMENT FOR THE GOVERNMENT
The coalition government has been warned against making
"senseless" cuts in spending ahead of Tuesday's Budget. Unions
said harsh action was not needed, while Labour accused the Tories of cutting
for ideological reasons and using the Lib Dem partners as "cover".
But Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg said cuts were needed
as the economic situation in Europe had got a lot worse in recent
months. These would be "difficult" but done "with
care", he insisted. In an e-mail to party members, the Lib Dem leader
acknowledged that the Budget - expected to be dominated by announcements of
spending cuts and tax rises - was likely to be "controversial".
But he said the "mountain of
debt" that the coalition had inherited from Labour needed to be dealt
with. "Without action on the deficit, we will carry on racking up
unaffordable debts our children will have to pay off," he said. "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 problem facing George
Osborne is that he knows where we're spending all our money - public
sector pay, pensions and benefits - but getting much of it back any time soon
is going to be incredibly difficult. Take welfare. Yes, there are
potentially huge savings but welfare reform is a long, slow slog.
All the evidence from the United States,
where they've already gone down this road, is that in the short term welfare
reform actually costs money. Why? Because you have to provide more support,
advice, training, childcare and so on to move people off benefits and back into
work. Similarly with pension reform - Yes, you can reform the system for
the future, but there's not much you can do about those already receiving what
Nick Clegg called "gold-plated
pension pots."
So while the coalition is keen to press
ahead with pension and welfare reform, it isn't going to solve our immediate
budget crisis. The bad news is that can only mean - in the short term -
steeper cuts and tax rises elsewhere. Chancellor Mr Osborne has said the
Budget will lay out "tough" but necessary plans to bring down
borrowing - set to total £155bn this year - over the next four years.
The opposition, unions and employer groups
have all expressed their concerns ahead of the chancellor's statement at 1230
BST (1130 GMT), as speculation continues that it could contain a rise in VAT
and a public sector pay freeze beyond the one year already proposed. Other
measures expected to be included in the Budget are a levy on banks and an
increase in non-business capital gains tax.
Mr Osborne has refused to say whether there
will be a multi-year freeze on public sector pay, or confirm newspaper reports
that welfare payments may be frozen although he has ordered a review of public
sector pensions.
Prime Minister David Cameron has already
suggested public sector pay and pensions will be hit, saying the deficit could
not be dealt with by "just hitting either the rich or the welfare
scrounger". Updating MPs on Monday on the outcome of last week's EU
summit, Mr Cameron said there was "unanimity" among European leaders
about the need for prompt action on cutting national deficits, saying any delay
would entail "major risks" to economic recovery.
All EU countries were having to take
"painful action" to cut borrowing but it was the "right thing to
do" for future confidence and prosperity. And Mr Clegg insisted that
while "cuts must come", they were born out of economic necessity not
driven by political dogma. He said the economic situation in Europe had
deteriorated significantly in recent months and accused Labour of both making
unfunded spending promises and "covering" up details of post-election
cuts they were planning.
"We have taken the difficult decisions
with care and with fairness at their heart," he said. "But
nonetheless, it will be controversial. This is one of the hardest things we
will every have to do." One Liberal Democrat MP, Bob Russell, has
already said he will vote against any package of measures which risks leaving
children worse off.
The BBC's political editor, Nick Robinson,
said Mr Clegg's attempts at reassurance reflected the fact that this Budget
would be a "bigger test" for his party than the
Conservatives. It is very, very important indeed that voices are raised
against... unfair cuts that endanger not just our society but our economy as
well” Shadow chancellor Alistair Darling said
the Conservatives were "using the current circumstances" as an excuse
to make "ideologically driven" cuts they had planned anyway and said
they were "using" the Lib Dems "as cover". And Mr
Miliband, one of the contenders to be Labour leader, said the coalition cuts
risked turning Britain into a "slow-growth economy".
"It is very, very important indeed
that voices are raised against senseless cuts, unfair cuts that endanger not
just our society but our economy as well." General secretary of the TUC, Brendan Barber, said the
chancellor's approach was "based on a series of
myths". "Deep urgent cuts are not needed, and run the risk of
the double dip [recession] - especially now much of Europe has signed up to the
same deficit fetishism," he said. The TUC also warned against
a VAT rise, saying such a move would be "deeply regressive" and those
on low incomes would "barely be able to absorb" the cost.
Local authorities said they would face
"very, very difficult decisions" in the future as central funding was
reduced. "It makes things very difficult in terms of how we
prioritise our services," Sir
Steve Bullock, chairman of Local Government Employers, said. In a move
intended to partly soften the anticipated blow of cuts and tax rises, it is
understood the government will press ahead with plans to encourage a Council Tax freeze in England next
year.
The Conservative manifesto proposed a
two-year Council Tax freeze
paid for "by reducing spending on government consultants and
advertising". That plan involved providing extra funding to councils
who proposed only small Council Taxincreases,
so they could then freeze them. It is not entirely clear yet how the
coalition government's plans would work, or how much it will cost.
But as well as the Council Tax freeze - and the
decision to axe Labour's plan to raise more money from a National Insurance
increase - the Budget will also provide a partial National Insurance exemption
for new firms based outside the south-east of England.
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I support Council Tax Rebates in assisting home owners and tenants in getting a rebate on their over-paid Council Tax.