Britain has missed out on £400bn of growth since
2010, says TUC
Tories blamed for creating economic ‘doom loop’ that
fails to recognise negative impact of spending cuts
Phillip
Inman
@phillipinman
Thu 2 Feb
2023 08.54 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/feb/02/britain-growth-doom-loop-2010-tuc
The failure
of successive Conservative governments to recognise the negative impact of
public spending cuts on the wider economy has meant Britain missed out on
£400bn of growth since 2010, according to a report by the Trades Union
Congress.
An
extension of austerity measures and wage restraint until 2027 under the
government’s latest budget proposals would almost double the amount of lost
income to £900bn, the TUC said.
If the UK
had remained on its average pre-1979 growth rate, the level of national income,
or gross national product (GDP), would be £2tn higher, it added.
Meanwhile,
the rocketing value of property, private pensions and shares have helped the
UK’s wealth to grow by 70% since 2010, with most of the gains going to the top
10% richest households. Since 1979, household wealth adjusted for inflation has
almost trebled, gaining £7tn.
Speaking
after Wednesday’s widespread strike action over pay by public sector workers,
the TUC general secretary, Paul Nowak, said that by cutting services and
“holding down wages in favour of a wealth boom for the rich, the Tories have
created an economic ‘doom loop’”.
Nowak said
research by economists at the trade union umbrella organisation revealed how
ministers were wrong to believe cuts to public spending after the financial
crisis supported the economic recovery.
He said
government spending cuts weakened the economy, without improving public
finances. “Weaker growth has resulted in lower revenues. But rather than
recognising cuts as a cause of weak growth, Conservative governments have
doubled down on cuts to departmental budgets and cuts to the real pay of public
sector workers.”
In the
aftermath of the 2008 banking crash, international organisations including the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the Organisation for Economic Cooperation
and Development calculated that government spending gave only a modest spur to
economic growth, allowing governments to make austerity cuts with little impact
on GDP.
Both
organisations later revised their analyses to show that public investment and
spending on other areas such as health and education provided a strong support
to GDP growth.
The TUC
report echoes analysis by the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) and the
Resolution Foundation that shows income from work falling behind the gains from
owning assets.
Successive
governments have taxed work more heavily than the gains on property, pensions,
stocks and bonds, allowing mainly older and richer households to make large
gains over recent decades while earnings remained flat.
Jeremy Hunt
said at the autumn statement last November that he wanted to improve the UK’s
growth rate and avoid “a doom loop of ever higher taxes and ever lower
dynamism”.
However, a
speech last week that focused on “enterprise, education, employment and
everywhere” was widely criticised by business leaders as being devoid of
policies.
Adding to
the pressure on the chancellor, the Treasury’s independent forecaster, the
Office for Budget Responsibility, is expected to say Britain’s recovery from
the pandemic and the cost of living crisis will be slower than most
industrialised countries when its predictions for GDP growth are published
alongside the spring budget in March.
A look
ahead by the IMF earlier this week predicted the UK would be the only major
economy to contract this year after being weakened by high interest rates,
still-high energy prices and trade restrictions following Brexit.
The
Washington-based IMF said it expected the UK economy to contract by 0.6% this
year – 0.9 percentage points worse than it had pencilled in just three months
ago and slower even than sanctions-hit Russia.
After the
autumn statement the IFS reported that in 2027 real incomes per head of the
population were on course to be a third smaller than if they had followed the
postwar trajectory.
The TUC
report said if the economy had followed the path of GDP over the 30 years from
1948 to 1978, taking into account inflation, GDP for 2027 would be £4.4tn
rather than the present forecast for £2.4tn.
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