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Critique of measures in
Pre-Budget Report
by Dr. Ros
Altmann
(All material on this
page is subject to copyright and must not be
reproduced without the author's
permission.)
Hi Paul
Sadly the Pre Budget Report is not what we needed.
It is just rearranging the deckchairs as the economy
continues to sink. Cutting VAT is not going to help
much and will cost the Exchequer £12 billion
while also costing retailers significant sums in
changing their prices, catalogues, invoicing etc. If
only some more radical measures had been introduced,
rather than continuation of the policy mindset that
has led us into this mess.
Sadly, the Government has not understood why we are
in this crisis. The problems stem from obsession
with short-term growth and profits, which led to far
too much irresponsible spending, lending and
borrowing and we will not solve them by yet more
short-term attempts to shore up spending using
borrowed money.
We need a radical reappraisal of how we run our
affairs. Why not take the opportunity to focus on
the ageing demographics, needs of pensioners,
bloated public spending and obsession with credit
and debt?
The budget suggests the Government's attitude is
'we have to do something' but it has not
thought through properly what it actually needs to
do for the medium term.
Hope you well (and hope I'm wrong!)
Ros
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Rearranging Deckchairs on The Titanic -
These Budget Measures Will Not Work
Budget measures will not work - they are just
rearranging deckchairs on the Titanic as our economy
sinks. Fine words and more public borrowing may help
us feel better, but they won't solve the
problems we face. Borrowing more and cutting VAT are
not what we need. Focussing on some of the major
unfairness of our society would be much wiser policy
- such as radical improvements for pensioners and
bringing back the 10p tax rate, while freezing
public sector hiring and identifying areas to cut
public spending waste.
Increasing VAT is not what we need.
There are already downward pressures on prices and
fears of deflation will mount, Government should not
add to this pressure. Cutting VAT will reduce tax
revenue and make public finances worse and will also
increase costs for retailers who have to adjust
prices and catalogues for the new VAT rate. In any
case, a 2.5% cut in prices won't get spending
going when people are expecting sales that slash
prices by 30%, 40% or more. France and Germany have
already decided VAT cuts are not sensible and I
agree with that. We saw with stamp duty cuts that
such measures have little or no effect, because they
are so tiny relative to price declines happening in
the market anyway.
Pensioners still not getting a fair
deal. Increasing pension credit and giving
pensioners an extra £60 (£1 a week!) is
welcome, but not going to help much if at all. We
know that take-up of pension credit is far too low,
so increasing credits will still leave millions of
pensioners in poverty.
No realistic measures to tackle public
sector over-spending. The state is spending
beyond its means, but Government is only paying
lip-service to addressing this. While continually
forecasting cutting public sector employment and
costs, the opposite has occurred in recent years.
Alternative policies to help alleviate the
crisis:
Bring back the 10p tax band
immediately. Rather than adding to
complexity by trying to 'compensate' the
losers, just undo the measure! A fair country will
tax its lowest earners by the lowest amount and a
10p tax band would help all workers straight away.
Pay the pension credit level to all
pensioners over age 75. This group is most
likely to spend, particularly on domestic goods,
does not have big debts to pay back and is in
desperate need of extra funding just to have a
decent lifestyle. We could roll the winter fuel
allowance and other 'freebie' gimmicks into
the payment. This will get rid of the problems of
low take-up, be fair to women, end poverty among the
elderly, end the requirement to buy an annuity by
age 75 and finally treat pensioners fairly. The
money can be taxed back from those with very high
incomes.
Freeze public sector hiring while
assessment is made of where cuts can be made and
what level of employment in the public sector is
affordable going forward, including the costs of
pension commitments in a transparent manner, rather
than hiding these costs away as at present.
Dr. Ros Altmann
07799 404747
ENDS
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