Cutting public services alongside tax cuts is “a
political con trick – giving with one hand while taking with
another” says union body
Commenting on today’s (Wednesday) budget and OBR report, which
shows:
- Average GDP growth has been just 1.5% since 2010 – the worst
for any government since the Great Depression.
- The UK’s pay crisis continues with this year's real pay still
below the 2008 level.
- The Conservatives have been the worst government for living
standards since records began.
- Household unsecured debt is expected to rise by £1,600 per
household this year.
TUC General Secretary Paul Nowak said:
“This is a deeply cynical Budget. The Chancellor knows he won’t
have to live with the consequences of the savage spending cuts
he’s already imposed across large parts of our public services.
“At a time when our schools, hospitals and councils are on their
knees, we needed a serious plan to rebuild Britain. All we got
was wishful thinking on productivity and pre-election gimmicks.
“This was the last roll of the dice from a desperate government
that has presided over 14 years of economic failure on growth and
living standards.
“The Tories’ record speaks for itself.
“The worst real wage squeeze in modern history. The worst growth
since the Great Depression. Crumbling classrooms and record NHS
waiting lists.
“The country deserves so much better.”
On the cut to NI Paul said:
“After 14 years of Conservative misrule millions are worse off.
“We all want to ease the financial pressure on families. But this
is a political con-trick – giving with one hand while taking with
another.
“No one wants tax cuts at the expense of their local services. We
need a proper long-term plan to raise wages for everyone and
to restore public services.”
On the Chancellor’s action to make non-domiciled
residents pay their fair share of tax, Paul said:
“The Chancellor’s action on non-doms is too little too late.
People will never forget that when our schools and hospitals were
starved of funds, the Tories put the very wealthiest first.
“His failure to act sooner on non-doms cost the exchequer
billions in lost revenue.”
ENDS
Notes to editors:
Public spending: Today’s OBR forecast says that
spending on public services will see “no real growth in
departmental spending per person over the next five years” with a
real cut in many departments’ budgets of 2.3 per cent a year from
2025-26