So who pays? What gets cut? Well, hardly a day seems to go by without a story in the press claiming that the cost of free personal care for the elderly is “out of control” and “unsustainable” . There are repeated calls to axe near-free prescription charges; to restore the graduate endowment and bridge tolls. Let’s end free bus passes; shut swimming pools and libraries. Museums - who needs ‘em? Clearly, everything has to be looked at. But there’s a real danger that we start from the wrong end, axing relatively cost-effective front line services rather than cutting administration. That is where the real savings are to be made ina public sector which is highly labour intensive. Great damage could be done to the quality of peoples’ lives, and the dignity of vulnerable groups, by slashing services that don’t actually cost very much while protecting the public sector bureaucracy.
Showing posts with label Barnett Formula. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Barnett Formula. Show all posts
Wednesday, July 14, 2010
Friday, July 02, 2010
Mad Max Budget - but is he serious?
After a stunned silence after the most draconian budget in modern times, the country is waking up to what the new age of public austerity will actually mean. Commentators paint a picture of a Mad Max dystopia - a country plunged into depression and decay. Crumbling schools, empty swimming pools, leisure centres boarded up. Feral children running riot as police numbers are cut. Potholes in the road filled with rubbish uncollected. A million public sector workers sacked; families evicted after losing housing benefits; strikes and civil unrest returning to the streets of Britain after nearly thirty years. Yes, it’s pretty grim.
So grim in fact that people are beginning to wonder if George Osborne really means it. Was the budget just a ploy to sound tough? Will it all be quietly laid to rest before the comprehensive spending review in the autumn spells out exactly where the cuts will fall? It’s actually very difficult to know how you go about cutting departmental spending by 25% in real terms. Do you throw a quarter of prisoners out of jail? Close a quarter of all libraries, museums, schools? You can't just sack social workers when there are statutory responsibilities like child protection. Health and overseas aid are the only departments given a clear exemption from the cuts, but even here there will be cost implications of the increase in VAT to 20%.
Labels:
Barnett Formula,
Budget,
Budget 2010. George Osborne
Saturday, May 29, 2010
Queen's Speech: why Scotland's laughing.
Ok, someone has to say it: last week's Queen’s Speech was really rather a good deal for Scotland. Even the SNP have been struggling to find things to complain about. And no - I’ve not become a spokesman for the ‘Condem’ coalition or been offered a gong in Cameron’s next honours list. We 're so suspicious of Westminster perfidy that we sometimes fail to see when it is playing straight. The only cries of pain I have been hearing are from Tory MPs bending over backwards not to say anything offensive about the Scots.
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