Back to the future
- 22 Mar 07, 09:42 AM
I felt almost nostalgic this morning when reviewing : it was very much in the tradition of Brown鈥檚 early Budgets and manifests the great paradoxes in his version of New Labour.
Here鈥檚 why:
1) Like those early Budgets, it imposed relatively tight constraints on public spending growth;
2) It was very good for the City, the creative industries and the service sector;
3) At best, it did nothing for Britain鈥檚 hard-pressed manufacturing sector and at worst it was harmful;
4) It was a reforming Budget in that it has undoubtedly simplified the personal tax and corporate tax systems (although much of what he proposes is simply a reversal of the tax-complexity of his own making);
5) It was rational, in aligning capital allowances with economic rates of depreciation;
6) It was tough on those individuals whom he perceives to be 鈥済aming鈥 the tax system, disguising themselves as small businesses (though in the process, he has probably hurt some proper small businesses);
7) It heaped its rewards on working families with children in the middle to low income brackets, took next-to-nothing from those on highest incomes, and contributed little to the childless at the bottom of the income scale;
8) He fudged the presentation of the Budget, in that he wanted it to be seen as both a serious reforming budget and a bribe to Daily Mail readers.
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