
FEW chancellors of the exchequer have ever reported such bleak news
to the country. On November 29th George Osborne used his autumn
statement to confirm that a foundering economy had thwarted the
government’s central mission: to eliminate (just about) Britain’s
structural fiscal deficit by 2014-15, the eve of the next election. The
author of austerity admitted that spending cuts would continue into the
next parliament.
The Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR), set
up by Mr Osborne to provide independent economic projections, laid out
the grim numbers. Growth in 2011 would be 0.9%, not the 2.3% forecast in
the June 2010 budget that committed the Conservative-Liberal Democrat
coalition to radical fiscal consolidation. The economy will grow by just
0.7% next year, and by 2.1% the year after. Even these figures look too
sanguine. And while slow growth is thinning tax receipts, more money
than expected will go on out-of-work benefits as unemployment peaks at
8.7% at the end of 2012, not the 8.3% predicted earlier.

The
consequences for Mr Osborne’s fiscal plans are profound. The deficit
will still be £79 billion ($124 billion), equivalent to 4.5% of GDP, in
the final year of this parliament (see chart). The national debt will
peak that year at 78% of GDP. By the following year it will be £112
billion bigger than was forecast in March. Britain will run a structural
deficit until 2016-17.
Such awful news would normally do for a
government. Ed Balls, Mr Osborne’s opposite number on the Labour
benches, certainly claims vindication. He predicted that rapid spending
cuts would choke off the economic recovery that was under way when the
chancellor took office in 2010. But the coalition has not yet lost the
confidence of voters.
Events in Europe have given the government
two lines of defence. First, Mr Osborne, backed by the OBR, says it is
natural for confidence in Britain to be lacking while the euro zone
struggles for survival. Labour accuse him of using the euro crisis as an
excuse for poor growth but many voters seem to think it is a good one.
Second, the chancellor has been able to argue that only by tackling its
deficit early did Britain avoid the crushing interest rates being paid
by the likes of Italy. A Populus poll released a week before the autumn
statement showed that voters trust the government over Labour to run the
economy by 40% to 26%. An ICM poll that came out at the same time
revealed that they tend to blame slow growth on factors beyond Mr
Osborne’s control such as the previous government’s debts, stingy
bank-lending and the euro crisis.
The real political hazard for Mr
Osborne is not a sudden loss of faith in his fiscal strategy, either on
the part of markets or voters—though there is some risk of both.
Instead, it is the gradual erosion of support for his party as living
standards decline. Public-sector workers (a constituency the
Conservatives courted in opposition as part of their mission to broaden
the party’s appeal) are in danger of being lost to the Tories for the
foreseeable future. Last year Mr Osborne froze the pay of all but the
lowest-paid public staff for two years. In his autumn statement, he said
this would be followed by a 1% cap on their pay rises for the two
subsequent years. Even if inflation falls to its 2% target, this will
mean a real cut in pay. He is also flirting with the idea of replacing
national pay standards with regional variations, which would leave many
even worse
No comments:
Post a Comment