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the Johnstone's View Index
Johnstone's View 31st July
2009
It would be funny if it weren’t such a
personal catastrophe for so many ordinary people in Britain
today. Gordon Brown has taken our economy for a decade-long
joyride and left it bruised, battered and in need of urgent
repair, throwing away all the economic gains of the 1980s
and 1990s.
It's increasingly clear that our economy
doesn't just need stability - it needs full-scale recovery.
That means immediate action to help employees, homeowners,
savers and families, as well as longer-term action to bring
down the cost of living, sort out our public finances and
spur economic growth.
First of all, we need to do all that we can
to help those who’s jobs are threatened. Since the beginning
of the year, unemployment has risen sharply and the credit
crunch has meant more companies are finding it hard to get
the money they need to keep their business alive.
This isn't good for the companies, many of
which are actually fundamentally sound; this isn't good for
the banks, which lend these companies money, and it's not
good for employees - who face being laid off.
David Cameron has announced that he will
consult on taking the best aspects of the American Chapter
11 system and give good companies breathing space to allow
them to rescue or restructure the business in the face of
the credit crunch.
This change will ensure that fewer good
companies end up in liquidation - and fewer people lose
their jobs through no fault of their own but of course, we
cannot save all companies that fail. When that happens, we
need to make sure the employees who lose their livelihoods
get the support and help they need to get a job as soon as
possible.
We also need to take immediate action to
help homeowners - and those who want a home but cannot get
one, because both are struggling.
The former have the threat of repossession
hanging over them as they come up to re-mortgage. That's why
the Conservatives proposed the plan to help re-open the
mortgage market with the Special Liquidity Scheme, which has
now been adopted by the Labour government.
And the latter just cannot get the finance
together to buy their first place. Last October, the
Conservatives promised a fully funded stamp duty cut taking
nine out of ten first time buyers out of this tax
altogether. Come on Gordon, what are you waiting for?
There's another area where this Government
has got to stop the dithering and start acting. It needs to
take immediate action to protect savers so that there is no
repeat of the scenes we saw outside Northern Rock last
September.
For a start, savers need the reassurance
that if another bank goes bust, their hard-earned cash is
protected, so the Government should act now to protect the
first £50,000 for each saver in the event of their bank
collapsing. There's nothing stopping them, they will have
the support of the Conservatives, they just need to do it.
Next, we must help families with their
finances and the rocketing cost of living. Of course, many
of the problems families face come from abroad. A global
food crunch is hitting people at the checkouts and the
rising cost of oil and gas is hitting people at the pumps
and whenever they pay their electricity bills.
But remember this. The biggest demands on
your money don't come from some far-off ‘world’ economy,
they are the never-ending demands for council tax, income
tax, VAT, road tax, tax on fuel and tax on fuel tax, to name
but a few.
The very least that the Government could do
is stop making the cost of living worse and that's why the
Conservatives are proposing a fair fuel stabiliser.
At the moment, tax revenues rise and fall
with the oil price. The increase in revenues from the North
Sea more than offset any dampening impact high oil prices
will have on tax receipts from the wider economy. Oil goes
up, the tax goes up, people feel all the pain - and the
Government gets all the gain. A fair fuel stabiliser will
end that. Under the Conservatives, the Government will share
the pain.
But in the end, the only sustainable way to
reduce the demand for taxation and cut the cost of living is
to bring down the cost of government and that's the next
part of our economic recovery plan.
After immediate action to help employees,
homeowners, savers and families, the next Government will
need to take long-term action to repair the damage that has
been done to our public finances and return to basic good
housekeeping.
I’m under no illusion that this will be
easy.
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