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Brown admits that the time the time spending cuts is nigh.

September 16th, 2009 by tom | 0 Comments | Filed in Daily News, Employment, Recession, UK Banks, UK employment

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For the first time in many a long while, Prime Minister Gordon Brown has been drawn to admit that he would have no option but to make some public spending cuts, and that they would be both considerable and imminent.

Brown, addressing a meeting of trade unionists announced that the government would have no option but to “cut costs, cut inefficiencies, cut unnecessary programmes and cut lower priority budgets”. He went on to admit that a new pay austerity for the UK was on its way, hinting strongly that “realistic” public sector pay settlements were a must.

The Prime Minister’s comments were made at a meeting to the Trade Unions Council (TUC) held in Liverpool were obviously designed to pre-empt the forthcoming pre-Budget report due to be released in the autumn. The report will set out Labour’s plans for priority public spending and any cuts. Full details of departmental spending from 2011 are not expected to be included.

The suggestion that there me be public spending cuts is certainly radical, as Brown has steadfastly refused to admit the need for cuts in any form till now,

Not slow to take political advantage of Brown’s apparent turnaround was shadow chancellor George Osborne, who described the PM’s statement a “complete capitulation”.

The prime minister claimed the recession had thrown up some fairly major challenges and on each occasion the government had made the right choice: whether propping up the banks or cutting taxes to boost the economy.

Chancellor Alasdair Darling is expected to use the pre-Budget report to try to identify net cuts to accelerate the government’s plan to halve the deficit to 5.5 per cent by 2014. Never slow to criticise, Bank of England governor Mervyn King, says that the deficit cuts will be too timid.

Summing up his speech in Liverpool, Brown admitted that Britain was only just on the road to recovery – and conditions were “fragile”. He defended his governments over the last year by stating that they had rescued the banking system, saved up to half a million jobs and taken specific actions to help not business and home owners.

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