This budget is vintage Thatcher. The Lib Dems have been conned into  hammering the poor, choking off investment and cuts that risk plunging  this country into a longer and deeper recession.
This Budget is  an almighty gamble. It's the same old Tories squeezing the least  well-off households until the pips squeak because they have not changed  from when they said: 'If it's not hurting it's not  working'.
The Budget is a significant  redistribution of wealth from the poorest in our society to big  business.
Cuts in welfare benefits to children, pregnant women  and the homeless are being used to fund cuts in corporation taxes for  big business. Welcome to the coalition's concept of fairness.
Osborne  ploughed through a litany of 1930s economics while the Lib Dems looked  embarrassed.
The Budget is obssessed with getting rid of deficit  with little concern for the social consequences. It will mean job losses  on a gigantic scale and will put every public-sector worker at risk.
•  Freezing child benefit for three years, hitting low-waged households  hardest
• Freezing public-sector pay for two years, hitting some  of the lowest paid
• Reducing investment grants for the  struggling manufacturing sector to £25,000 and below
• Increasing  VAT from 17.5 per cent to 20 per cent, which will endanger the fragile  consumer recovery
• A 25 per cent cut in public spending in next  four years
• £11 billion welfare benefit cuts over next four  years.
In my opinion, there are two ways you can deal with the  deficit - you can cut or you can raise revenue.
We are calling  for the uncollected tax which big business avoids paying - £100 billion -  to be used to cut the deficit.
Well we knew that it was coming and we knew that it would be nasty, but  it certainly didn't make Today's Budget any more palatable.
Truth  has been turned on its head and the economy is being adjusted to deal  with a fiction.
That fiction is that swingeing cuts, the like of  which we haven't seen in a generation, are necessary if the country  isn't going to be thrust into chaos and bankruptcy.
But they aren't necessary and the  economy wouldn't have collapsed into entropic disaster without them.
The  truth is that the massive public-sector cuts and the vindictive attack  on the benefits structure that Chancellor George Osborne has inflicted  on us is a sop to the pressure from international bankers and  speculators, to the grey men of the IMF, the European Union and the  City.
It's a capitulation to those who have said that, unless the  government inflicts massive pain on the population, they will attack  the currency and the country's credit rating with all the considerable  weapons in their armoury, bringing about a crisis which would make the  Greek disaster pale into insignificance
The poor are once again  targeted disproportionately by this pack of coalition wolves, this  collection of Tory class warriors and Lib-Dem turncoats.
There's  £11 billion to be slashed from the benefits bill.That's a mind-boggling  sum to rip off from those least able to defend themselves. And it's  being done in the most dishonest way possible, by linking benefits to  the CPI measure of inflation rather than RPI at a time when the RPI  measure has gone up by 5.1 per cent in the past year , while the CPI has  risen by 3.4 per cent.
This will hurt households reliant on  benefits significantly because of the way that spending in poorer  households operates.
And it will hurt even more when the 2.5 per  cent VAT rise comes into effect on January 4, taking it to 20 per cent.
Spending  by government departments will, we are told, be cut by 25 per cent over  the next four years.
Put like that, it doesn't seem to be that  significant.
But when you realise that government departments  deal with everything in your life from schooling to health and safety at  work, the impact becomes a little clearer.
Public-sector wages  frozen for two years will certainly not please civil and public  servants. But this real-terms pay cut will hit the manufacturing and  retail sectors as well, with the dramatic cut in the amount of spending  power in the economy that it represents.
And freezing child  benefit for three years sounds like picking on families rather than  saving the nation's credibility. But perhaps abusing families is what it  takes to win brownie points with the City?
If we're all taking  the hit equally, why is corporation tax going to be cut by 1 per cent  every year for the next four? Doesn't sound all that equal to us.
What  this says is that we can forget about any recovery. The Tories and  their Lib-Dem toadies are going for broke.
They are front-loading  a huge attack on working people early in their term of office and  attempting to use phoney claims of a financial crisis to justify  redrawing the economic map of Britain.
Every service that is  crippled will be accompanied with a transfer to the private sector  justified by the specious claim of "attracting private capital," when  what will happen in reality is that what will be attracted are  profiteers and speculators.
The leeches will have a field day and  the profits will flow freely - as freely as the lifeblood of an economy  that is being hijacked by those who see public service as an  opportunity to milk the public purse and benefit recipients as mere  parasites and scroungers, not people in need of help and support from  their society.
It's an attack of huge proportions and unlimited  malevolence and we are going to have to tell this government that we are  having none of it.
It's an assault that will have to be resisted  by every parliamentary and extra-parliamentary resource that we can  summon. And it's a fight that must be won.
It’s the unemployed who are the forgotten victims & who seem to be demonised, patronised & blamed for unemployment within the wider media. In 1995 Labour shadow ministers did give clear indications, if elected, they would tackle some of the worse parts of JSA. They gave assurances & intention to make “speedy and far reaching reforms to eliminate the worse excesses” Not scrapping the "Job Seekers Allowance" is Labours’ Betrayal!
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Tuesday, 22 June 2010
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