Commenting on the pace of the government's roadmap out of lockdown,
Christopher Snowdon, Head of Lifestyle Economics at free market
think tank the Institute of Economic Affairs, said:
"Even if the vaccination programme slows down next month, we are
in a far better place than anybody expected in January. The data
continues to exceed expectations, but the dates in the
government’s sluggish roadmap never move.
"Every extra day of lockdown produces diminishing returns and
mounting costs. Waiting another two months for hospitality to
reopen seems excessive when people will be meeting in their homes
regardless of government diktats.
"We should keep a watchful eye on the data, but we should not
stick stubbornly to an arbitrary timetable. There is now a strong
case for bringing the roadmap forward by four weeks."
Commenting on the economic impact of lockdown, IEA Economics
Fellow Jessop said:
"After the initial collapse last spring, when GDP shrunk by
nearly a quarter in just two months, the UK economy has actually
held up better than many had expected. Unemployment has remained
relatively low and there is plenty of pent-up demand in both
consumer and business spending. Activity should now recover
quickly this year as Covid restrictions are lifted.
"This resilience is partly a reflection of the extraordinary and
awfully expensive support that the government has provided to
protect businesses, jobs, and incomes during the lockdowns. But
it is also a tribute to the flexibility of the UK’s market
economy, demonstrated by the switches to online spending and
homeworking, and early signs of a rapid turnaround in employment.
"The government can therefore best help the recovery by getting
out of the way, withdrawing the emergency support as soon as it
is no longer needed and allowing stronger market-led growth to
repair any damage to the public finances.
"The tax increases announced in the March 2021 Budget were
unnecessary and potentially counter-productive. The government
should focus instead on shrinking the state, at least back to
pre-Covid levels, rather than intervening even further."