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Economic Developmentopinion

Sir Albert's 'Jaws of Doom' return for a bigger bite

If the city council leader, when he first took office, dealt with the multi-billion pound contracts signed off by his predecessors then the city would already be making massive savings now

Government spendng cuts have bitten a huge chunk out of Birmingham City Council's budget

Just as you thought it was safe to go back into the waters of local government finance, up pops Jaws II. Indeed, Sir Albert Bore seems to have become Birmingham’s very own Steven Spielberg.

His creative flights of fancy have brought into our imaginations the Brummie ‘Jaws’, no less: .

It might well be a great white shark, or perhaps even a Jurassic Park T-Rex. But now he seems to be venturing into the E.T. zone.

The problem with the ever-increasing doom-fest is that it is starting to lose credibility; as much through the embellished and more lugubrious retelling of the tale.

We really did not need to be told how bad the revenue situation is for the city council. We got that, already. But Sir Albert seems to think we didn’t believe him the first few times round.

So, in a bizarre, reverse gilding of the lily we have to be told that .

It’s now even worse than the end of local government as we know it. “A fate worse than a fate worse than death,” as Blackadder put it.

Of course, highborn Osborne’s attack on the public sector involved a monstrous attack on local government finances from which it is reeling and which is counter-productive. There will be long-term negative social and economic consequences for nothing other than ideological gain.