Chancellor George Osborne has told the country "Britain's economic plan is working but the job is not done".
Making his Autumn Statement Mr Osborne delivered good news for the economy. He welcomed revised growth figures, he said that borrowing was down to just £2,500 for every household and that the country's debt was £18bn lower than forecast in March.
But he welcomed the recovery cautiously and warned of "more difficult decisions", setting the tone for a statement that would contain little respite from tough austerity measures.
He said: "The hard work of the British people is paying off and we will not squander their efforts."
Some choose whisky, some gin, Mr Osborne opts for teaMr Osborne said that Britain was growing faster than any other major economy as he announced that the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) had more than doubled its growth forecast for this year to 1.4%.
He said instead of forecasting growth of 1.8% for 2014 they were now predicting 2.5% and, similarly, the forecasts for growth for the next four years had been increased.
However, he stressed that the country could not stop fighting for its recovery as a reassessment by the Office for National Statistics showed that £112bn had been wiped off the British economy during the depth of the 2008/9 great recession.
The statement had been so widely trailed that it contained few surprises. Mr Osborne outlined a number of smaller measures to target the cost-of-living crisis and continued to concentrate on a continued and strong recovery.
Mr Osborne and chief secretary to the Treasury Danny AlexanderKey measures included:
:: Pensions to be increased by £2.95 a week - with state pension age raised to 68 by the mid 2030s
:: The 2p rise in fuel next year would be cancelled
:: £1,000 off bills for all small high street retailers in a bid to revitalise town centres
:: £50 off annual energy bills by rolling back green levies
:: Tax breaks worth £200 for married couples who will be able to transfer personal allowances
:: A new capital gains tax for foreign investors aimed at preventing a property bubble in London and the South-East
:: £375bn of planned public and private investments in infrastructure projects to 2030 and beyond
:: Free school meals for children up to the age of seven
:: Job seekers aged 18 to 21 without basic maths or English to be forced to agree to training or lose benefits
:: A 2% cap on business rates and an extension of the rate relief scheme for small businesses
Mr Osborne announced that while the NHS would be protected from spending cuts, welfare spending would be capped.
He said: "Welfare budgets were completely out of control when we came to office and the number of households where no-one had ever worked nearly doubled.
"We have taken very difficult decisions to bring benefit bills down – and saved £19 billion a year for the taxpayer. We need to maintain that discipline."
The Chancellor concluded by pushing home the message: "The job is not yet done, let's keep going."
Ed Balls responds to the Autumn StatementIn a bad-tempered response the Shadow Chancellor, Ed Balls, accused Mr Osborne of being "out-of-touch" and said he had done nothing to improve living standards.
He said: "Living standards are not rising, they are falling year after year, after year", and pointed out that working people were £1,600-a-year worse off now than they were when the coalition came to power in 2010.
Anda sedang membaca artikel tentang
George Osborne Delivers His Autumn Statement
Dengan url
https://serverkecil.blogspot.com/2013/12/george-osborne-delivers-his-autumn.html
Anda boleh menyebar luaskannya atau mengcopy paste-nya
George Osborne Delivers His Autumn Statement
namun jangan lupa untuk meletakkan link
George Osborne Delivers His Autumn Statement
sebagai sumbernya
0 komentar:
Posting Komentar