Responding, , Chief Secretary to
the Treasury, said:
“John McDonnell offers nothing but failed ideas which would wreck
our economy, harm businesses and drive out investment.
“Far from delivering for the many, McDonnell’s damaging plans
would leave families with less money in their pockets and fewer
jobs. Labour would turn back the clock, with working people
paying the price.
“Only and the Conservatives will
ensure our economy remains strong, so we have more money to spend
on the things that matter, like the NHS frontline services and
properly funded schools.”
ENDS
Notes to Editors
-
Labour’s 2017 manifesto has been costed at £1,000
billion, meaning £11 billion more would be spent on debt
interest every year – paid for by hardworking
taxpayers. Labour’s plan to spend £1,000 billion
– equivalent to £3,500 per household each year – would just
lead to more debt, higher taxes and fewer jobs, hitting
ordinary working people just like last time. The additional
interest on the debt alone would be enough to pay for 400,000
nurses (The Sun, 25 October 2018, link).
-
The British Chamber of Commerce warned that Labour’s
plans for our economy would ‘send an icy chill up the spines of
businessowners and investors’. Adam Marshall
warned that Labour’s plans would ‘send an icy chill up the
spines of businessowners and investors. Nationalisation of
swathes of the economy would come at a huge cost. It would take
a chunk out of peoples’ pensions, put investment in the deep
freeze, and tarnish the UK’s reputation as an open, global
nation at the worst possible time’ (The Times, 23
September 2019, link).
-
The CBI said Labour’s plans to renationalise vast
swathes of the economy is ‘toxic’ and would have ‘serious
knock-on effects’. The CBI policy chief warned:
‘Loose talk of renationalisation will be toxic to investors
already reeling from existing uncertainty. Sending the right
signals matters for the UK economy. Without private sector
investment and innovation, efforts to tackle climate change or
upgrade infrastructure will falter, with serious knock-on
effects’ (The Sun, 22 September
2019, link).
-
Labour’s plans would hit working families with lower
wages and higher prices. Carl Emmerson: ‘What Labour
actually want you to hear is that the spending increases they
promise…would be funded by tax increases solely affecting the
rich and companies. This would not happen…in the longer term,
much of the cost [of tax rises] is likely to be passed to
workers through lower wages or consumers through higher prices’
(IFS, 26 May 2017).
-
Labour have proposed a punitive new tax every two
months since Corbyn took office – clobbering hardworking people
with endless tax hikes that would leave them with less money in
their pockets. These tax hikes include forcing
more families into paying punishing death duties, raising taxes
for 12.4 million workers by an average of £2,500, putting up
the cost of a family holiday and introducing a garden tax
(The Daily Express, 13 September
2019, link).