º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Opinionopinion

An alternative to 'austerity capitualtion' and 'deficit denial'

David Bailey writes "Last Sunday I put my name to a letter to  The Observer  outlining an alternative to both "austerity capitulation" and "deficit denial". It backed a four point plan developed by the think tank Compass"

Last Sunday I put my name to a letter to  The Observer  outlining an alternative to both "austerity capitulation" and "deficit denial". It backed a four point plan developed by the think tank Compass and reads as follows:

"This week George Osborne will set out the government's spending plans for 2015-16 with the intention of continuing austerity measures beyond the next general election... This will be politically and economically disastrous.

Instead, the government should set out an alternative based around four key pillars.

First, there needs to be a significant investment in green and social infrastructure spending. A £55bn stimulus could generate up to 1m jobs, £187bn of additional GDP and almost £75bn in terms of additional taxation.

Second, tough new fiscal rules need to be set, with independent democratic oversight of government spending in order to earn the trust to borrow and spend people's money wisely.

Third, once recovery is assured, there should be an elimination of the structural deficit through a series of progressive tax rises and by making cuts in wasteful public spending.

And last, there needs to be a restructuring of the state and public services in order to ensure sustained efficiency, responsiveness and innovation. This requires a shift to the "coproduction" and localisation of public services that utilises the expertise, commitment and energy of the people who provide services and of the users of the services.

Britain cannot endure more unnecessary years of austerity and those who are least to blame for the crisis must not pay the price for it."

---

The letter, and the Compass Plan is important in that the next General Election effectively starts tomorrow, as the Comprehensive Spending Review (CSR) sets out the political landscape to the election and beyond. And it's also important in that tomorrow we'll hear big arguments in the House of Commons over very small differences.

Indeed, there is in fact very little difference between what the government and Labour are now proposing. So while Ed Balls will lay into George Osborne for "cutting too fast, too far", he will go on to lay out his very own version of austerity. We'll hear much about "cuts and caps" from both sides.

What struck me about the Compass Plan, and Neal Lawson's piece in The Guardian yesterday, was how closely they matched my own growing sense of unease. Ed Balls had been spot-on in opposing austerity but now appears to back it, which raises the question of whether Labour has in fact capitulated to austerity?

Compass argues that Balls' approach risks handing a "Get out of Jail Free Card" to George Osborne at a time when his approach has clearly failed and earlier high level supporters are abandoning support for austerity.