Growth or Bust
On the 20th of March George Osborn will deliver
his annual budget, in which he intends to stick to plan A, but has forgot what
plan A is. The government’s original
plan was for the private sector to lead the recovery and subsequently pay of
public sector bills. This is a good plan
one I agree with and has my full backing but the government has pursued policies which have restricted private sector growth and subsequently have led
to greater borrowing and prevented a reduction in the deficit. For the Conservatives to stand a real chance
at the next election the chancellor needs to produce a Tory plan for growth or
be prepared to return to opposition.
March 20th is a fantastic opportunity to unveil such a
budget.
For a start they need to stop attacking the banks by forcing
them to hold more cash and capital they are restricting lending to small and
medium sized businesses, this means
businesses can’t expand and subsequently supply extra jobs and increase
demand (they must also fight the proposed EU cap on bankers bonuses which will only lead to an exodus of talent). This policy is anti-enterprise,
that makes it anti Tory, and the last time I checked the Tories were supposed
to be in government. We also need to cut
the high taxes on fuel this will not only be great for haulage firms but will
subsequently lower costs for small and medium businesses it will also lower the
cost of living for your average family, as the cost of running a car is
unacceptable. A cut in VAT reducing it back down to 17.5% or greater, combining this with a cut to fuel tax and
your average families spending power will increase. We also need to lower the
top rate of tax from 45% to 40% to encourage investment and a bottom rate tax
of 10p would also be desirable. The
growth which will come from such a growth plan will allow the government to
start reducing the deficit. Also the
growth will allow for a rise in interest rates to tackle inflation and again
lower the cost of living however the timing of a rise in interest rates is
important as it could have a drastic effect on people’s mortgages. As the economy grows due to a Tory growth
plan similar to this, the government will still need to implement some more
cuts to spending this means international aid and the NHS cannot be
spared. It is the Chancellor’s choice
growth or bust.
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