Category: Economy

  • Gordon Brown – 2001 Speech on Enterprise and the Regions

    Gordon Brown – 2001 Speech on Enterprise and the Regions

    The speech made by Gordon Brown, the then Chancellor of the Exchequer, in Manchester on 29 January 2001.

    Introduction

    It is a pleasure to be here in Manchester this morning.

    For two centuries Manchester and the North West have been a world wide centre for manufacturing strength. This region led in the 19th Century and now it can lead again.

    And let me say how pleased I am to be speaking here at UMIST. Founded early in the nineteenth century by the business community of Manchester, it enters the Twenty First Century a leading centre for scientific research, its links with business stronger than ever – promoting growth, jobs and opportunity for the North West region and beyond.

    Today I want to show how in the North West and the other regions of our country, the high ideals and public purpose contained in the economic goal of 1944 can be achieved.

    Full employment – defined as in 1944 as ‘high and stable levels of employment’ – was a reality for the country as a whole for twenty years after the Second World War.

    But not only did rising unemployment in the 1970’s and beyond undermine these goals but so too did persistently higher unemployment in our regions

    As recently as 1997, one in five working age households had no one in work in seven of our twelve regions and nations.

    Some believe that full employment can be achieved only by a return to macroeconomic fine tuning.

    Others believe that in the new more open economy governments cannot hope to meet the 1944 objectives.

    I reject both the dogma of insisting on old ways and the defeatism of abandoning the objectives. But to achieve full employment in all the regions is a large and ever present challenge and demands new approaches not the old ways.

    So since 1997 the new Government has been putting in place a new framework to deliver our growth and employment objectives.

    Last year I set down four objectives:

    – first: stability – a pro-active monetary policy and prudent fiscal policy to deliver the necessary platform of stability;

    – second: employability – a strengthening of the programme to move the unemployed from welfare to work;

    – third: productivity – a commitment to high quality long term investment in science and innovation, new technology and skills;

    – fourth: responsibility – avoiding short termism in pay and wage bargaining across the private and public sectors, and building a shared sense of national purpose.

    These conditions – requirements for stability, employability, productivity and responsibility – are and have always been the necessary conditions for full employment.

    The first condition, stability, is needed to ensure a sustainable high demand for labour. The second, employability, promotes a sustainable high supply of labour. The third, raising productivity, provides a sustainable basis for rising living standards. And the fourth, responsibility in bargaining, ensures a sustainable basis for combining full employment with low inflation.

    But there is a fifth condition I wish to discuss in detail today – the need for regionally balanced growth, essential if there is to be opportunity for all in all regions.

    Now the first generation of regional and urban policies – starting in the thirties – amounted essentially to ambulance work – first aid measures, urgently needed assistance and relief in areas of high unemployment.

    The second generation of regional policies came in the sixties when then the emphasis was on large capital grants and tax incentives for regions anxious to encourage mobile capital into our regions as inward investment.

    Now we are entering a third generation of regional policies inaugurated by Stephen Byers, David Blunkett and John Prescott, where we concentrate on indigenous measures – strengthening, within the regions, the essential building blocks of self generating growth. And on tackling the imbalances that prevent economic strength:

    – first, bridging the investment and enterprise gap;

    – second, bridging the skills gap;

    – third, bridging the technology gap, including support for e-commerce;

    – fourth, bridging the employment gap.

    Indeed, as these challenges suggest, now, as the economy starts to strengthen, is the perfect time to think not in a short termist way about our economic future but to think and plan long term; and to bring together strategic plans for our future.

    And I want to suggest that with the creation of the new regional development agencies – for which I believe John Prescott deserves our congratulations – we are not only recognising the many regional centres in Britain today and giving them new strength and powers. But we are creating, at a regional level, the economic policy instruments of the future: the measures that will foster innovation, develop the skills for the twenty first century economy, build a strong enterprise culture open to all and help us lead in the digital revolution and ensure all of us benefit fully from our participation in Europe.

    But the emphasis is not simply on local needs but on local initiative. Our reforms show that we are entering an era in which national government, instead of directing, enables powerful regional and local initiatives to work, where Britain becomes as it should be – a Britain of nations and regions where there are many and not just one centre of initiative and energy for our country.

    With regional development agencies and the flexibilities we are offering them there is for the first time both a shared understanding of the challenges the region faces and a strategic means of meeting them.
    Investment and enterprise

    In our Pre Budget consultation we welcome further proposals for encouraging enterprise in high unemployment areas.

    The 2001 Budget – and our future plans will continue this Government’s policies to offer greater incentives to business, remove unacceptable barriers that prevent people with enterprise getting on and, from the classroom to the boardroom, widen and deepen the spirit of enterprise in Britain.

    The Government’s ambition is to make opportunity for all the foundation of a more dynamic enterprise economy, breaking free of the old dependency culture in high unemployment areas.

    In an enterprise Budget we will consider extending capital gains tax relief and the 10p rate.

    In an enterprise Budget we will consider extending our R and D tax credit by examining proposals to do so from the CBI, EEF and others interested in improving Britain’s R and D effort.

    In an enterprise Budget we will consult on new reliefs for corporation tax including for intellectual property.

    As we move to an enterprise Budget we will consult on capital gains tax relief for the sale of substantial shareholdings.

    As we move to an enterprise Budget we are considering improvements in our enterprise management incentive scheme, the share options we offer new and dynamic companies.

    As we move to an enterprise Budget we will consider new incentives for urban renewal and inner city development.

    And an enterprise Budget means measures to encourage an enterprise culture in high unemployment areas where the greatest need is not more benefit offices but more businesses as we move from a dependency culture based on entitlements to a dynamic business culture based on enterprise.

    Instead of acquiescing in the old giro culture – simply paying benefits to compensate people for their social exclusion – we must back success rather than accept failure. And to do that we must extend fiscal and other financial incentives that open up economic and business opportunity in high unemployment areas, and encourage and reward new enterprise.

    If we are to achieve higher start-up rates in high unemployment areas, economic stability is critically important to business confidence, as we found in the early nineties when the recession not only destroyed existing businesses but discouraged new ones.

    So in the Budget our aim is to create the stronger enterprise culture that America enjoys, reduce the costs of business failure and address the sharp regional and local divergences in small business creation.

    Behind the creation of regional development agencies is our view that the way forward is one of empowering local people with skills and confidence.

    Indeed, our old cities and estates should be seen as new markets with competitive advantages – their strategic locations, their often untapped retail markets, and the potential of their workforce.

    And so it is right to put in place the best possible incentive structure to stimulate business-led growth as well as much bigger flows of private investment.

    So, to meet the challenge of increasing private investment in high unemployment areas by one billion pounds, we will now consult before the Budget on targeted tax incentives in four areas – cuts in stamp duty, reduced business rates, changes in capital gains tax and a new community investment tax credit.

    But changing our culture to one that favours enterprise in every area needs not just incentives but a real shift in attitudes too. And that will come about quickest if it starts, not in the boardroom, but in our schools.

    I want every young person to hear about business and enterprise in school; every college student to be made aware of the opportunities in business; every teacher to be able to communicate the virtues and potential of business and enterprise.

    I want businessmen and women to visit our schools and talk to their enterprise classes; I want every student to have a quality experience of working in a local business before they leave school. I want management training scholarships to be available even in the poorest areas and I want every community to see business leaders as role models.

    Regional coordination and accountability

    But let me say something more on our proposals for regional co-ordination – which will form our next five years’ programme for economic growth in our country – and the central role we see for regional development agencies as the strategic leaders of economic policies in the regions – in employment, skills, innovation and regeneration.

    The New Deal has already brought into being new partnerships between companies, the world of education and training, and the employment service.

    Regional approaches to the delivery of the New Deal and to training will become ever more important.

    The enterprise centres mean companies, universities and government must work together.

    The regional approach to venture capital funds, coordinated by the regional development agencies and the small business service, again requires business and government to work in partnership.

    To benefit fully from the university for industry, companies, educational authorities, schools and colleges themselves will want to form new partnerships.

    And local government – casting aside any idea that it should look inwards – must, as it looks outwards, be involved in all these initiatives.

    And we are ensuring the resources and flexibilities that regional development agencies need, but in return we are demanding strenuous targets be met in skills, innovation, business creation, new technology and employment. This is the new regional policy – locally sensitive and locally delivered, local people meeting local needs through local agencies.

    At every regional level, businesses, local authorities and the world of education will want to work together on their bids for funds and resources, and at the same time to make their case not just in Britain but abroad.

    And in making this happen the new local and regional centres of initiative in this country will show that leadership in Britain can come from every regional capital as much as from London itself.

    But as we develop regional policies that are locally generated and managed there has to be local and regional accountability too.

    Scotland Wales and Northern Ireland moved from 1997 to elected bodies. The Manifesto on which this Government was elected set out the options for elected regional government in England where there is popular consent for it.

    As we expand regional institutions – regional government offices, regional development agencies – so too we must expand regional accountability.

    John Prescott and I believe that in the consideration of new and better regional systems of accountability we need a greater role for both the House of Commons and the regional chambers.

    I hope that the regional chambers established in every region will hold annual hearings to examine the RDAS”’ annual reports and review progress against their published strategies – and report back on their findings. We should ensure they have the resources to meet this duty.

    By extending the scope for region by region initiatives and by complimenting these with greater accountability at a regional level and through the select committee system in the Commons, we are improving our ability to ensure that regionally set objectives are met.

    Combined with our national economic policy measures for stability, productivity, skills and responsibility, the third generation regional policy that I am describing is in my view the route to full employment in each region, that is employment opportunity for each region’s citizens.

    More than that, these are the means by which Britain is becoming a Britain of regions and nations with a new dynamism and where for locally generated initiatives we learn anew from each other, and where our diversity can become a source not only of new energy but of national strength.

    So our new development agencies both make sense of regional sentiment and respond to the challenges of the next millennium.

    Regions building new strengths from the ground upwards.

    Regions not looking in on themselves but looking outwards to the challenges of the global economy.

    Regions in which we make the connections so that schools and colleges, companies and local authorities work in a coordinated way for the same objectives – addressing inequalities within our regions.

    Conclusion

    I believe what is happening in each region today is showing the growing vitality of a new Britain, where there are new local and regional centres of initiative leading Britain.

    We are moving away from the old Britain of subjects where people had to look upwards to a Whitehall bureaucracy for their solutions – to a Britain of citizens where region to region, locality to locality we are ourselves in charge and where it is up to us.

    And where as a result Britain becomes stronger as each nation and region learns from another.

    In so many areas of our national life individual regions are leading the way.

    And what a strong country we can be when we are enriched by the different cultures and centres of initiative which together make up Britain.

    We are indeed stronger together, weaker apart.

    So, this morning I have suggested how we can strengthen our regional and national economy.

    I have said we must rediscover the national purpose that allows us to break from the old conflicts which have divided us.

    I look forward to a Britain in which instead of public versus private, state versus market, management versus workers, we have public and private, government and markets, employers and managers and workforces working together for the high levels of growth and employment we need for long term prosperity.

    I have pointed the way to full employment in this region in our generation.

    It is a challenge for all of us, a challenge that together we can meet and surmount.

  • Andrew Smith – 2001 Speech to the Better Public Buildings Conference

    Andrew Smith – 2001 Speech to the Better Public Buildings Conference

    The speech made by Andrew Smith, the then Chief Secretary to the Treasury, on 6 February 2001.

    Good Morning,

    It is important that we involve people across the whole of the public sector in promoting good design, and I am glad to see such interest at today’s conference.

    It is important to recognise that well designed buildings can reduce the overall costs of providing services, and they can increase the effectiveness of those services. Good design is fundamental to value for money. If we thought that ?best value? meant ?cheap?, and ignored the long-term savings good design can bring, we would be making a false economy. Best value is not the lowest price, but the best combination of whole life costs and quality. That doesn’t mean, of course, that the highest cost is best value either.

    Modernising Public Services

    The benefits good design brings are more important now than at any time in the last twenty years: Public services have faced years of neglect by previous Governments, and we have been faced with the challenge of investing in these services and in Britain’s infrastructure.

    When we took office, we faced both a record of chronic under investment in public services and a £27 billion deficit on the public finances, so our first task was to create stability and sustainable public finances. We have made the tough choices we needed to. We have set clear fiscal rules over the economic cycle: and today we not only have low inflation and stable growth but sound public finances and the national debt falling towards 30 per cent of GDP.

    It is this sustained improvement in our public finances that makes possible the prospect of sustained investment in our public services. In the three-year spending review last summer, we announced an additional £4 billion of capital spending this year, and net investment by the public sector is set to double over the next three years.

    This is a massive investment in rebuilding public services, and we expect a return for that investment. The public expects and deserves high quality services to be delivered on time, and the taxpayer deserves that they are delivered at the best value and to budget. Our overriding aim is always to secure better value for money in all forms of procurement – not as a cost-cutting exercise, but as a way of delivering more, better services and facilities from public investment.

    Benefits of Good Design

    Good public buildings are a demonstration of our respect for public spaces and communities. Landmark buildings, like the Tate Modern, can give new life and new identity to areas, and create new and valued public spaces. But there is room for better design in all public buildings, no matter how small.

    I am particularly interested in the role of good design in regenerating our most disadvantaged communities. The air of neglect, abandon, and hopelessness which blights poor areas is both a consequence and a cause of poor design as well as low investment – a vicious and debilitating circle of degeneration.

    Turning this into reverse in partnership with local people and businesses is one of our most urgent priorities. Good design, coupled with investment in everything from primary care facilities, to children’s play areas, to business start-up units will send a powerful and confidence-boosting signal that we care, we are listening to them, we are involving them and that we are making a difference.

    The benefits of good design are not just skin-deep. Well designed buildings can better serve the needs of the people who use them.

    They can reduce the costs of providing services over the whole life of a building, they can have a positive impact on the welfare and the productivity of the staff who work in them.

    There is a strong correlation between a high quality learning environment and good teaching, attitudes and behaviour. Well designed schools can have lower truancy rates and improved attendance, and better design in schools can also free staff and resources for the activities that matter. For example, one primary school found that by building a new one-storey building, it needed fewer teachers monitoring breaks, and three fewer lunchtime assistants. These are savings which can be put into educating children instead.

    Another study, by the University of Sheffield, of a purpose-built psychiatric unit in Hove, found significant improvements in outcomes for patients. Treatment times were reduced by 14%, patients spent less time in enforced isolation, and there were far fewer attacks on staff. Good design has added a great deal of value for both staff and patients, and this has delivered a significant improvement in terms of cost.

    Good design can actually save money. Well designed buildings are appropriate to the use they will be put to: their staff have a better working environment, and at the early stages, designers can take account of the costs of operating the building over its whole life.

    By taking account of the whole-life costs of a building at the earliest design stages, we can reduce them. Design improvements which improve the effectiveness of staff, or decrease the costs of running and maintaining a building, can pay for themselves many times over during the lifetime of the building.

    Taking an example from the private sector: BAA’s (British Airports Authority) office buildings had design and construction teams working together from the outset, and the result is an overall saving of 30% of costs. The public sector can and should learn from private sector projects like this.

    To make the most of the benefits of good design we do need a new approach to procurement, and a commitment at the highest. We need committed and aware procurers, well-constructed specifications, and integrated teams of designers and constructors, who can work together to ensure the final building does its job well, on time, and on budget.

    What Government is doing to promote good design

    PPP and PFI have also forced the public sector to raise their game, and become a better partner and a better procurer of public services. To get the right outcome for the citizen and the taxpayer, the public sector needs to be able to specify its requirements clearly, to negotiate with the private sector on equal terms and ensure the best value for taxpayers. And because PPP and PFI are not appropriate in all circumstances, we need to draw on our experience to deliver better deals and better buildings when using conventional procurement options.

    The Office of Government Commerce has been set up by this Government to promote best practice in all sorts of procurement across the public sector: the OGC has already produced the Better Public Buildings document with DCMS. It will help departments with their own projects, and where a Government-wide approach is needed it will manage or facilitate commercial relationships on behalf of departments.

    If the public sector is to make the most of good design, it is important that we are able to accurately asses the benefits of proposed designs. The Treasury’s ‘Design in PFI’ guidance has improved understanding of these benefits.

    The creation of CABE, the Commission for Architecture and the Built Environment in 1999, was another important step, and we welcome the work of the Construction Industry Council and CABE in developing key performance indicators and in providing help and advice on design and design procurement to public sector organisations.

    Prime Ministers Award

    Procuring better designed public buildings needs a strong commitment to good design from the very top. That applies to central Government, as well as to individual agencies and authorities. The Government is committed to better design, and that commitment will be carried forward by fourteen Ministerial Design Champions, who will drive forward better design in their departments.

    The number of public buildings which are outstanding examples of design, construction, and delivery, is growing every year. These embody high quality at reasonable cost and represent best value to the procurers, the users, and the public. To recognise these achievements, and as another sign of our determination to improve design, I am very pleased to announce today the ?Prime Ministers Better Public Building Award.”

    This award reflects the Prime Ministers personal interest in excellence in public buildings, and his commitment to raising the standard of public building projects by identifying and rewarding high-quality design and construction. The award will made to the most outstanding public building, and will be announced at the British Construction Industry awards on 24th October, the UK’s premier accolades for all-round excellence in design, construction delivery and performance.

    The award will be sponsored by CABE and OGC on behalf of all of Government, and it will be administered and judged under the aegis of the BCIA. The British Construction Industry awards have been made annually since 1988. They are promoted by the Daily Telegraph and the magazines The Architects Journal and New Civil Engineer, and have an extremely rigorous judging process, culminating with detailed visits to the short-listed projects during which all those responsible – client, designers, and contractor – are put through their paces. – The Judging panel is made up of eminent architects, engineers and contractors and always chaired by a heavyweight representative of the client sector – this year, it will be Sir Stuart Lipton, chairman of CABE.

    Entry forms will be available from the 22nd February, so I would like to invite you to enter for this important new award, any new public buildings projects of any size which you are proud of, whether as a client, a designer, a builder or a user. To qualify they need to have been completed and brought into use in 2000.

    Conclusion

    Prudent, targeted long-term public investment is not only a social good, but, in a changing and often insecure world, it is an economic necessity. It is only by investment in our frontline public services and infrastructure that we can equip ourselves for future economic challenges.

    The Government has already substantially increased capital spending, and we are determined that this spending should go as far as possible, to give the public the high-quality public services they deserve, and to create buildings and facilities we can all be proud of. There is a great deal we can gain from better designed buildings, and with your help and your commitment, I look forward to seeing many more outstanding public buildings in the future.

  • Gordon Brown – 2001 Speech at the Nottingham Business Centre

    Gordon Brown – 2001 Speech at the Nottingham Business Centre

    The speech made by Gordon Brown, the then Chancellor of the Exchequer, in Nottingham on 9 February 2001.

    Introduction

    It is a pleasure to be here in Nottingham this morning and I am particularly pleased to be here in the Nottingham Business Centre opened fifteen years ago by John Smith, created out of what was once the headquarters of Raleigh and now a thriving centre for new businesses – a regeneration that maintains and now extends the spirit of enterprise for which this city and region is rightly famous round the world and I am delighted too to have the opportunity to visit the East Midlands, a region where in the last four years 40,000 more people have found jobs, where because of the efforts of employers in this region youth unemployment has fallen by 20 per cent and long term unemployment has fallen by 70 per cent.

    And I think it important to record that vacancies – at up to 60 thousand – are at a record level, today over 50 per cent higher than what they were even at the peak of the boom in the late eighties.

    Inner City 100 Initiative

    It is fitting that here I am able to launch this morning the nominations for the Inner City 100. This exciting and unique initiative is an important part of our drive to open up enterprise to all through celebrating and show-casing the top 100 business successes in our most challenged inner cities – including here in Nottingham and in Leicester.

    IC 100 will show that even the most disadvantaged inner cities are not the enterprise “no-go” areas of the past, but the investment opportunities of the future. It will start to change the way that we see these areas and the way these areas see themselves.

    Inner City 100 brings together a powerful partnership from across Britain, including the Regional Development Agencies, the Small Business Service, the Royal Bank of Scotland, the New Economics Foundation and Financial Times which will publish the final top 100 list in the autumn.

    And I am grateful to all those involved and hope that business leaders and local representatives across the country will give their support.

    I look forward to hearing about the first nominations in a few minutes.

    I would like to thank you all for coming to this gathering of businessmen and women, academics, representatives from the Regional Development Agency together with respected Members of Parliament – great advocates in Whitehall for the needs of this area – at the start of our pre-Budget consultation roadshows.

    And let me say this pre-Budget consultation, one of many to come in the next few days and weeks, is a vital part of the modern Budget process.

    A few years ago the Budget process was shrouded in total mystery. By the time the Budget emerged from the red box on Budget day, Treasury ministers had spent many weeks in what was called “Budget purdah” – making no speeches, no appearances to listen or discuss the economy and insulated from public views and public scrutiny. A Budget untouched by consultation.

    And sometimes the results showed.

    But I believe a modern economy requires a modern Budget process. If we are to face the challenges of the global economy we must face them together – Government, business, local communities – in an open and consultative process – discussing ideas, listening to views, seeing at first hand what is needed, where the gaps in economic policy are and discussing with those who know best, those who created the best, how best they can be filled.

    And there is a special reason today for a more strenuous pre-Budget consultation. As I said in my Pre-Budget Report statement, our hard-won and newly won stability now offers Britain a unique opportunity we can either seize or squander – the opportunity to build from that platform of monetary and fiscal stability, low interest rates and financial discipline, the high and sustained levels of productivity growth that are essential to long term prosperity. And so today I want to talk today about the drivers of economic growth – skills, innovation, it investment, the enterprise culture itself – and how a modern regional economic policy based on local people making local decisions about local needs can further that.

    If we look back on our history there have been three generations of regional economic policy:

    The first generation of regional and urban policies – starting in the thirties – amounted essentially to ambulance work – first aid measures, urgently needed assistance and relief in areas of high unemployment.

    The second generation of regional policies came in the sixties when then the emphasis was on large capital grants and tax incentives for regions anxious to encourage mobile capital into our regions as inward investment.

    And now we are entering a third generation of regional policies, where we concentrate on indigenous measures – strengthening, within the regions, the essential building blocks of self generating growth. And on tackling the imbalances that prevent economic strength:

    First, bridging the investment and enterprise gap;
    Second, bridging the skills gap;
    Third, bridging the technology gap, including support for e-commerce;
    Fourth, bridging the employment gap.

    Start-Up Rates

    Let me give one example.

    All around us here in the Nottingham Business Centre we see examples of successful entrepreneurs. But that is not the case everywhere.

    Over the last two decades, small business creation rates have varied between regions in a dramatic way.

    Start up rates in 1999 ranged from 21 new VAT registrations per 10,000 citizens in the North East to 66 per 10,000 citizens in London. And the rate in the East Midlands was 34 per 10,000 citizens, around half the London rate, below the UK average.

    These figures show not only a gap in performance which we must explain but also the potential for each region, not just for business creation but for additional jobs.

    If the level of business in every region was the same as the national average there would be 135,000 more businesses registered for VAT across the UK. And as Treasury analysis shows that every extra VAT registration creates on average 3.7 new jobs this would mean around half a million additional jobs in some of the poorest areas of the country.

    So we have a long way to go. So the Budget focus on measures to encourage enterprise and entrepreneurship, especially in high unemployment areas and regions of the country, will include consulting on new tax incentives for business development and spurring the enterprise culture.

    Research shows that the recession of the early nineties not only destroyed existing businesses but discouraged new businesses – the number of small businesses starting and growing fell by a third and the crisis of confidence continued through most of the nineties.

    If we are to achieve higher start-up rates, economic stability is critically important and we need to build from a platform of stability and steady growth. That is why when we came into power we made the Bank of England independent, ensuring that interest rate decisions are taken in the best long-term interests of the economy, not for short-term political considerations.

    Inflation is now at historically low levels, long term interest rates are around their lowest for thirty five years and business investment has risen.

    Yesterday’s interest rate cut is possible because we have the lowest inflation rate for 30 years and because, in recent years, despite the rise in oil prices we have, with monetary and fiscal discipline, managed to keep inflation under control.

    So, through our macroeconomic policies, we are building the best foundation for stability and balanced economic growth throughout Britain.

    But stability is a necessary but not sufficient condition of business success. Now that we have greater stability, the next stage is to build through measures that improve investment, innovation, it and infrastructure and skills a stronger enterprise culture. Investment

    Because we believe investment in enterprise is the key to success in the new economy, we have cut small companies tax from 23p to 20p, introduced a starting rate of small business tax at 10 pence in the pound, cut mainstream Corporation Tax from 33p to 30p to its lowest ever level, cut Capital Gains Tax to 10p for long term investments and introduced accelerated tax allowances at 40 per cent for small and medium sized businesses and at 100 per cent for it that are of special help to manufacturing.

    As we prepare an enterprise Budget we will consider extending Capital Gains Tax relief and the 10p rate, and consult on new reliefs for corporation tax including for intellectual property. And as we move to an enterprise Budget we will consult on Capital Gains Tax relief for the sale of substantial shareholdings, and improvements in our Enterprise Management Incentive scheme, the share options we offer new and dynamic companies.

    And to further encourage investment in the regions, where business investment has been rising but not evenly and because one of the gaps is in the venture capital market in regions especially for risk ventures, we are proposing a regional venture capital fund, which will provide early stage venture capital for this region’s growing businesses, the world leaders of tomorrow – providing an estimated £120 million over the next 3 to 5 years. Innovation

    The second driver of growth is innovation, which is now, more than ever, the key to higher productivity. It is said that two thirds of new growth comes from innovation and it is our aim to ensure that British inventions are developed in Britain and manufactured in Britain, creating growth and jobs in Britain.

    The seedbed is basic science. So we are increasing spending on science by 5.4 per cent a year, including our one billion pound public private partnership with Wellcome to modernise science infrastructure; and to transform British inventions into British-made products, we announced a £60 million pounds University Challenge Fund.

    And to encourage an entrepreneurial culture in our universities and technology transfer from the science lab to the marketplace, we are setting up new Enterprise Centres – world class centres, both for fostering commercialisation of research and new ideas and for incorporating teaching of enterprise in science and engineering curricula. And I am pleased that Nottingham is one of the universities that has taken up this science enterprise challenge through the new Institute of Enterprise and Innovation.

    And through our higher education reach out funding we encouraging universities to forge links with local communities and to respond to the needs of business. And again universities here in the East Midlands have bid successfully for money from this fund – over one and a half million pounds for Nottingham university and 1.1 million for Loughborough University which I will be visiting later this morning.

    And to offer the best incentives for company research, we are consulting on an extension of our new research and development tax credit. Today it underwrites nearly a quarter of small business r&d costs even before a penny in profit is made. Some have suggested we extend this to larger companies and we are interested to hear your views.

    Skills

    The third driver of growth grows in importance every day: the skills of the people. And in each region we need nothing short of the long overdue revolution in education, skills and training. I thank companies for their support for the New Deal which has given a new start to 50 thousand young people in the region, 25 thousand of whom have moved into work. And here in Nottingham alone 6,000 of the long-term unemployed have participated in the New Deal.

    But because we recognise there are special labour market needs in individual towns and cities where we must match the skills employers need to the training of those who need skills we are developing through the Regional Development Agencies and other local and regional bodies, local employment plans – and looking at how to meet future skills and employment needs.

    There is also a local action team for jobs in Nottingham operated by Working Links and alliance between the Employment Service, Cap Gemini Ernst and you and Manpower plc, working in partnership with the city council to help people into work.

    But our economic future is born in the schools and universities and not only are we increasing spending on education by over five per cent a year in real terms over the next three years but we are investing in your world class universities here in the East Midlands.

    We want to make the most of all our nations potential and talent, investing not only in some of the potential of some of our young people, but investing to make the most of all of the potential of all of our young people.

    Here in the East Midlands the percentage of sixteen year olds in the East Midlands achieving five GCSEs at grade A-C is just 45 per cent, below the national average and the national target of fifty per cent by 2002. We must do more, so David Blunkett has set up 6 Education Action Zones in the region, partnerships between groups of schools, businesses, parents, and local education authorities. And the New Deal for schools has already helped 1,400 schools in the region. And over the next three years, schools in the East Midlands will receive around 250 million through the New Deal.

    And as we start the new millennium, we must equip all our companies and all our people for the newest and most decisive economic challenge of the 21st century – mastering information technologies, from the pc to the internet, from e-mail to e-commerce.

    Under our National Grid for Learning Standards Fund, Nottingham was allocated a million pounds this year to invest in information technology and next year spending will be £1.3 million.

    The proportion of businesses in the East Midlands region that either have a website or frequently use e-mail has increased significantly from 54 per cent in 1999 to 76 per cent last year.

    But further progress needs to be made Only 24 per cent of businesses are trading online. And in terms of increased access to the internet at home the region still lags behind with only 23 per cent of homes connected.

    So the region will benefit from our £1.7 billion plan for a computer learning centre in every community, 1,000 in all throughout Britain. And they will be in schools, colleges, libraries, in internet cafes and on the high street.

    In the first phase, 19 centres will be located in the region and run by numerous providers, including local community groups. And two of these are already open here in Nottingham.

    Our targets for the new economy are ambitious. Within three years, thousands more small businesses able to benefit from e-commerce. A whole new network of computer learning with one purpose only, that the whole region is equipped for the information age.

    Infrastructure And Transport

    The fourth driver of regional growth where we need to do more is improvements in infrastructure – tackling a long term under-investment by doubling transport investment immediately and then through a unique private public partnership investing £180 billion pounds over 10 years to improve motorways trunk roads, and rail services.

    The Private Finance Initiative is also helping to modernise public services in the East Midlands with over £76 million worth of PFI investment in the region – including a project worth £20 million at the Queen’s Medical Centre here in Nottingham – since 1997 and over 450 million more in procurement.

    Enterprise Culture

    Finally, let me turn to the other great driver of growth- the enterprise culture. Survey evidence published by the London Business School yesterday shows that while 1 in 10 people in the US are trying to start a new business, only 1 in 33 are in the UK. The gap in activity is particularly noticeable among women – currently under-represented in both self employment and business start-ups, particularly in comparison with the US: less than a third of those registered as self-employed in the UK are women and only 35 per cent of new enterprises are run by women. And again there is variation by region – in some areas fewer than 20 per cent of those who are self-employed people are female. Here in the East Midlands the figure is 29 per cent.

    Last year’s global entrepreneurship monitor found that UK start-ups would rise by fifty per cent if the start-up rate amongst women matched that of men.

    So that is why we must act to encourage more women to start and to grow their own businesses.

    Already there are innovative projects in place that we can build on and learn from-

    In Glasgow, the Wellpark Enterprise Centre, providing information, advice and business support to women either in business or wanting to go into business, as well as a resource centre and on-site nursery.

    In Norwich, the Women’s Employment, Enterprise and Training Unit – offering a range of services to keep women informed and to enable them to improve their prospects of finding employment including enterprise courses and access to loan funds.

    And WIN – Women In the Network, active in Scotland and the North East providing support, including on-line support for women starting and developing their own businesses.

    Among our measures to promote entrepreneurship amongst women is the £96 million pound Phoenix Fund which has already allocated a substantial amount of money to a number of projects aimed at helping women start up businesses, and we will build on this in the spring when the Small Business Service will be launching a new women’s online business centre.

    And let me turn specially to the challenge faced in some of our high unemployment areas where business creation has often run at one sixth of the wealthier cites and towns.

    In high unemployment areas economic prosperity will not come from a return to the old ways which have failed: neither an old style benefits approach which has ignored the causes of poverty and unemployment – and not invested in education, training, jobs and business development. Nor a bricks and mortar only approach which, with enterprise zones, targeted subsidies for property development at the expense of help for enterprising local people.

    To tackle the causes of unemployment and low economic activity, we need a radical new approach encouraging business development and an enterprise culture and I am pleased that with us today is Sir Ronald Cohen whose Social Investment Taskforce report on stimulating enterprise and investment in disadvantaged communities is the subject of my pre-Budget consultation.

    Instead of acquiescing in the old giro culture – simply paying benefits to compensate people for their social exclusion – we must back success rather than accept failure. And to do that we must extend fiscal and other financial incentives that open up economic and business opportunity in high unemployment areas, and encourage and reward new enterprise.

    Indeed, our old cities and estates should be seen as new markets with competitive advantages – their strategic locations, their often untapped retail markets, and the potential of their workforce.

    And so it is right to put in place the best possible incentive structure to stimulate business-led growth as well as much bigger flows of private investment.

    To spur economic activity, we are proposing a number of new incentives.

    First to secure development, we are proposing stamp duty exemption for all properties in our most disadvantaged communities;

    Accelerated tax relief for cleaning up contaminated land;
    Vat cuts to reduce the costs of residential property conversions;
    Tax relief to bring empty flats over shops back into use.
    And we said we would consult on:

    A further business rate relief for small business in assisted areas;
    And to secure new business development particularly by reducing the cost of raising money . We are discussing with the banks and considering a new and generous tax credit for community investment;
    And the creation of the first community development venture fund.
    And we are going beyond this: not just micro-finance for enterprises who cannot access mainstream sources of finance but advice and a national network of mentors to give entrepreneurs all the help and encouragement they need.

    Anyone anywhere who seriously wants to start a business will be able to get a free package of advice, information and access to mentoring through the Small Business Service, worth up to £500.

    And in the high unemployment areas of the country, we will support intensive programmes of pre-start training, advice and mentoring, with new incubator units in every region. A package worth up to £2000 for every start-up.

    The Regional Development Agencies and the local authorities can also make a vital contribution to fostering an entrepreneurial culture. And I pay tribute today to the work of Derek Mapp, an entrepreneur himself and the Chair of the East Midlands Regional Development Agency.

    As we enter this new generation of regional policies strengthening, within the regions the essential building blocks of self-generating growth, the capacity to innovate, invest, build skills, match the unemployed to jobs available, we are offering development agencies new flexibilities, but in return we are demanding strenuous targets be met in skills, innovation, business creation, new technology and employment. This is the new regional policy – locally sensitive and locally delivered, local people meeting local needs through local agencies.

    But changing our culture to one that favours enterprise in every area needs not just incentives but a real shift in attitudes too. And that will come about quickest if it starts, not in the boardroom, but in our schools.

    I know how many schools and businesses in this region are making headway in advancing the enterprise culture but I want every young person to hear about business and enterprise in school; every college student to be made aware of the opportunities in business; every teacher to be able to communicate the virtues and potential of business and enterprise. And I want businessmen and women to visit our schools and talk to their enterprise classes; I want every student to have a quality experience of working in a local business before they leave school. I want management training scholarships to be available even in the poorest areas and I want every community to see business leaders as role models.

    Conclusion

    So the 2001 Budget – and our future plans – will continue this Government’s policies to offer greater incentives to business, remove unacceptable barriers that prevent people with enterprise getting on and, from the classroom to the boardroom, widen and deepen the spirit of enterprise. We can and must do more. So in this and in other areas in this pre-Budget consultation we welcome your views

    I believe that out of our discussions will emerge an even stronger consensus on the need for both stability and for higher investment in skills innovation technology and our infrastructure. And on the need for a strong enterprise culture. Out of dialogue consensus, and out of dialogue and consensus, a stronger partnership, working together for our shared goal – a more prosperous East Midlands and a more prosperous Britain.

  • Gordon Brown – 2001 Speech at the Child Poverty Conference

    Gordon Brown – 2001 Speech at the Child Poverty Conference

    The speech made by Gordon Brown, the then Chancellor of the Exchequer, in London on 26 February 2001.

    1. Why children, why now?

    From here in London, Clare Short and I want to welcome and thank all of you who gather here today from every continent — leaders of global organizations and of Governments — each with your own proud history and traditions, each with your own unique record of service and commitment, who have come together because of :

    • our shared concern: for the many millions of the world’s children who live on the knife’s edge of bare existence;
    • our shared indignation: at the senseless tragedy of young lives lost to disease and despair
    • our shared belief: that the future we want for our own children is also what we want for all the world’s children;
    • and most of all because of our shared conviction that what can be achieved together by unity of purpose is far greater than what we can ever achieve acting on our own.

    It is by putting the needs of the young and the poor not only at the centre of social policy but at the centre of financial decision-making, economic policy  and international diplomatic action, we can ensure a better future – a future of health and hope – in which no child is left behind and every child, in every country, has the opportunity to make the very most of his or her abilities.

    Yet today we can predict with grim precision that as long as children’s needs are seen as incidental and not integral to what we as Governments do; as long as they are a part and not at the heart of all policy decisions we make; each and every day of this year 30,000 children will lose the fight they are waging for life.  Seven million children will perish before reaching their first birthday.  Over ten million will die before the age of five.

    And let us not equate mere survival with strength: in the developing world, 150 million children are underweight, at severe risk to their mental and physical development.  Worldwide, 120 million children go without even five years of schooling, their chances crippled by disease, natural disasters and war before life’s journey has even begun.

    This is the face of poverty today in the places and among the people left behind – staggering, disfiguring, galling, grinding poverty: the face of global poverty is the face of a young child.

    And it is an affront to our basic belief in the equal worth, and inherent potential, of every human life.  It is a challenge to the values at the core of our character.

    Those of us in the developed world, many of whom are enjoying unprecedented plenty, must regard poverty on this scale not only as an economic challenge, but also a moral imperative of the highest order.

    I agree with those who say that good times are as stern a test of character as bad times.  In this era of prosperity, more than ever, the world’s children must become our cause.

    In that spirit, let us start by paying tribute to the powerful example set by Nelson Mandela and Graca Machel.  No two individuals have done more to speak up for the future.  And when Nelson Mandela tells the children of the world —

    ‘If I could promise you every one of your days will be a day of leaning and growing, I would but I promise you what I know I can deliver: to work every day in every way to support you as you grow’;

    And when Graca Machel says —

    ‘I have seen how one year of school changes a child … I have seen a generation of children armed with education lift up a nation’;

    Then we know that, as we approach the UN Special Session on Children this September, these two leaders are inspiring – and Carol Bellamy and Unicef and UNDP are assembling – a new global partnership for children so wide, so powerful and so determined that no obstacle should be allowed to impede its    path of progress.

    For if this is a moment of urgency, it is also a moment of profound opportunity.

    Today we are also privileged to be hearing from Horst Kohler and James Wolfensohn, who have just returned from a pathbreaking trip to Africa…

    • who heard the clarion call of an extraordinary coalition of faith groups, NGOs and multilateral organisations…
    • who together brought the world’s richest nations to whom so much is given, and the world’s poorest nations whose needs are greatest, into a unique alliance to tackle debt and poverty – an alliance whose work, even as the first 22 countries secure debt relief, has only just begun.
    • leaders who because they recognise the need for  a virtuous circle of debt relief, poverty reduction and sustainable development, have, along with Kofi Annan, the United Nations, Unicef, and UNDP, committed themselves to an historic joint declaration from which there is no turning back.

    It is the first official joint declaration of the IMF, World Bank, OECD and UN that ‘poverty in all its forms is the greatest challenge to the international community.’

    It is a resolution to work together to meet the 2015 development targets, not least:

    • halving the number of people living in  poverty;
    • enrolling all children in primary school;
    • and reducing by two thirds infant and child mortality rates.

    and it is a partnership against poverty which to succeed will demand new and concrete commitments;

    and the purpose of this conference today is to examine the detailed means of reaching these goals.

    2.  The purpose of this conference – a call to action

    First, if we are to realize our shared goals we must embrace our shared responsibility – by setting out the practical steps each partner must take, for ends  will mean precious little without the means to achieve them.

    Too often, the world has set goals like the international development targets of 2015 and failed to meet them.  Too often, we have set targets, reset them, and reset them again, so that our ambitions, in the end, outdistance our achievements.

    Indeed, though our targets are achievable, we are already in danger of missing the mark.  Projecting forward, we can see our trajectory will fall far short on education, on health, on poverty.

    So it is not enough that we have made a pledge.  As Mr Mandela and Ms Machel have written: ‘please hold us to it.’  theirs is a simple and powerful plea for the accountability we all must demand of ourselves  and demand of one another.  For if the sum of our actions amounts to no more than its parts, we will be fated to ask ourselves, in the year 2015, ‘why did we fail?’

    If the worldwide debt campaign has taught us anything it is that we advance only if we advance as one.  For we are not powerless individuals, but together have power.  We are all rich and poor, old and young bound in one vast network of mutuality, across all the lines that might otherwise divide citizens of different countries, perhaps, operating from a thousand different centres of energy, conscience and conviction, but members of the same global community, the same moral universe.

    Because our shared responsibility does not diminish our individual accountability, our conference must have a second purpose.  We must not only set ourselves on a specific course of action, but each of us as partners must be prepared to make radical changes in the way we act so that the goals of 2015 can be achieved.

    Marching with us are not just the memories of those who lost out when we have failed in the past but the hopes and expectations, the dreams and ambitions, of millions of young people who look to us for the future.  And their voices must be heard too.

    And so as the UK Government we make this declaration: that as we discuss with all of you how to meet these 2015 goals, we will be ready to reshape our policies, adjust our expenditures, and refashion our priorities so that the actions of each of us make possible the attainment of the goals set by all of us.  And we ask all other participants to do likewise.

    Here in Tony Blair’s Government, Clare Short has been a true leader in changing the UK approach, crafting concrete, comprehensive policies for the problems of global poverty; increasing her aid budget by 2004 by 45 per cent in real terms, and untying all our development aid; ensuring that development assistance be directed to country-owned and community-driven poverty reduction strategies; renouncing Britain’s right to benefit from any of the highly indebted poor countries; bolstering conflict prevention with a new Africa fund and by banning for 62 countries export credits for unproductive expenditures; and because growth through trade is one of the best means of lifting people up, committing with all EU states to open our markets to all products made in the least developed countries, and to strengthen their voice in the WTO.

    And today we hope that in our declaration each of us can move forward –  making new commitments that ensure that the work of each institution enhances the work of the other, and that the whole of our actions becomes greater than the sum of our parts.

    Commitments from –

    • the IMF and World Bank: that the detailed commitments in the poverty reduction strategies, including targets to reduce child poverty, will be implemented in practice at the centre of economic and financial policy;
    • from the UN family: to support developing countries in making health and education a priority;
    • from developed countries: to increase and untie their aid commitment, and to open their markets;
    • from developing countries: to create community-driven poverty reduction strategies and make them the centre of economic policy;
    • and from NGOs and faith groups: to coordinate their efforts in giving voice to the voiceless and empowering the powerless.

    4. A call to action — to create the virtuous circle

    And today as we issue our call to action, a call that we hope will be heard   and heeded by all Governments, and resonate far beyond these walls and these borders, there are two areas on which action is imperative: education and health in the world’s poorest countries.

    First, we know that education is a precondition of progress personal and national – the very best anti-poverty strategy, the best economic development program.  There is simply no better means to empower the powerless, to put their future directly in their hands.  Education should be the birthright of every child.

    The case for investing in primary education is unanswerable and remains mostly unanswered.

    In the past decade, primary enrolments have increased at twice the rate of the 1980s.  Still, tragically, 130 million children do not attend primary school.  two-thirds of these are girls. Almost half of all African children and one-quarter of those in South and West Asia are being denied this fundamental right, this basic root of all opportunity.  It is little wonder, then, that 900 million people over the age of 15 are illiterate – one sixth of the world’s population.

    Public expenditure per pupil, in the 19 least developed countries, is less than $40 — compared to $200 per pupil in developing countries, and $5,300 in more advanced economies.

    So there is more we must do; and that approach must begin with aid.  Since 1997, the UK has increased its commitments on education by £500 million.

    But no aid budget, and no one nation, can achieve enough on its own.  And because multilateral action is essential, it is crucial that honoured in action is the commitment made by 180 countries at the World Forum on Education at Dakar to achieving quality basic education for all, with a special emphasis on education for girls.

    And we must build on that commitment, as Graca Machel agrees, extending into the refugee camps and even beyond the confines of the camps into the areas of conflict themselves, helping ensure that one day, not even war or its aftermath will be an excuse for denying a child his or her basic human right of a decent education.

    I know that with Prime Minister Amato addressing us by video link, and Finance Minister Visco speaking to our lunch, Italy, president of the G-7, has a new proposal for world wide action; and I am also pleased to announce that the British Government will create, in Her Majesty the Queen’s Jubilee Year, a fund to speed the introduction of universal primary education in the Commonwealth.  It is a fund to help the 75 million children in Commonwealth countries who lack a basic education, by building fair and effective education systems and creating new opportunity for girls and disadvantaged groups.  And we will call on business to support this effort.

    We must also act – every bit as swiftly and purposefully – on health.

    We know that the poorer the family, the less healthy the child. And we well know the cost, human and economic, of infectious disease in developing countries.  Diseases like malaria, tuberculosis and diarrhoeal diseases kill 8 million children a year.  In South Africa, Botswana and Zimbabwe, half of all 15-year olds are expected to die of aids.  In sub-Saharan Africa, where AIDS is the leading cause of death, AIDS will cut the GDP of some countries by 20 per cent.

    These are dread diseases. But let us not forget that they are also preventable.  This knowledge shames us even as it spurs us on:

    • as much as half of all malaria deaths could be prevented if people had access to diagnosis and drugs that cost no more than 12 cents;
    • a quarter of all child deaths could be prevented if children slept beneath $4 bed-nets.  In Africa, only one per cent of children do;
    • millions of lives could be saved by TB medicines, which are 95 per cent effective and cost as little as $10 for a six-month treatment;
    • and millions of cases of HIV could be prevented through well-targeted, low cost prevention and care strategies.

    Where these strategies have been implemented, they have brought results.  The latest UN figures show that however limited their resources, poor countries that make treatment and prevention a priority can stem the spread of HIV and AIDS as Uganda, Thailand and Senegal have, and cut TB deaths by 50 per cent, as China, India and Peru have.

    There is more that developing countries can do to reduce disease and despair; yet there is a natural limit imposed by their ailing economies.  The countries that most urgently need to devote more resources to health care are the countries that spend the least on health care.  For example, in 1999, per capita health spending in sub-Saharan Africa amounted to $86 — a mere fifth of the world average.

    So there is more we must do; and, again, we must do it together.  Ours should not be isolated interventions; everything we do must mesh with current efforts to improve health.  This government has today issued a paper on the merits of a comprehensive approach.

    And today, on behalf of the British Government, Clare and I are pleased to announce two new proposals to improve health in the countries hit hardest.

    First, where only 10 percent of all biomedical research is devoted to diseases that overwhelmingly affect the world’s poor, we will create new tax incentives to accelerate the research done on diseases like AIDS, TB and malaria.

    I am further prepared to match that tax credit for research done in the United Kingdom with a tax credit for research done elsewhere.  But such a proposal must be met by a corporate commitment to create new drugs and vaccines in ways that truly meet the needs of the poor and sick.

    And if the pharmaceutical companies were prepared to increase the availability of treatments on a pro bono basis – treatments that are genuinely needed – we would be prepared to match that commitment by considering it as a tax deduction.

    Second, a purchase fund – providing a credible commitment to create a market for current and future treatments in developing countries – would surely serve as a strong incentive to develop and deliver affordable treatments.

    That is why, in a joint effort with Italy, the President of the G-7, the UK proposes that a new global purchase fund for drugs and vaccines be created.  Both for treatments that do not yet exist but could be developed in time – for AIDS and malaria, for example – as well as for those that already exist and need to be purchased now.

    Again, I call on the pharmaceutical companies to join us.  I call on them to step up to their responsibility – to recognize the scale of the challenge we face and to respond on an equal scale, by developing and delivering affordable treatments for the world’s poor.  Because, quite simply, we cannot save lives and raise hopes without their commitment.

    Conclusion

    Our purpose, Nelson Mandela has said, ‘is to get specific commitments… and specific results.’  And if we can do this in the world of tomorrow, countries can be defined not by land mass or military might as in the past but by the health and the achievement of new generations: the truest test of our progress is that a mother in sub-Saharan Africa can give birth without fear; that a child in South Asia has sustenance and shelter; that a young man or woman possesses the tools and skills and education it will take not only to live, but to thrive, in the 21st century.

    And so here in 2001,

    • led in our efforts by Nelson Mandela and Graca Machel;
    • summoned to act by the cries of children;
    • indeed inspired by the children I have seen in Jakarta living above open sewers, yet with eyes still bright with expectation and hope;
    • moved to action by school-pupils in Uganda who we will hear about today, who because of debt relief will now see classrooms with roofs, schools with teachers , and school lessons with  books;
    • shocked into even greater action by aid worker after aid worker describing mothers fighting to save the lives of their newborn children and, in that struggle, losing their own lives too, avoidable tragedies multiplied a million times over;
    • encouraged by the new commitments by the IMF and World Bank and the UN family;
    • and inspired by charities, churches, and companies who are engaged as never before.

    We can see what the world – firm of heart and united in spirit – can do and will do – not as isolated acts of charity, but as wave upon wave of caring, collective endeavour, and compassion in action … flowing from this moment, and this year, to 2015 and well beyond.

    From London in February to Washington’s IMF and World Bank meetings in April, from Genoa’s G-7 meetings in July to New York’s UN Children’s Summit in September, at every moment, our thoughts are on and our inspiration drawn from the needs of children in Jakarta, Bangladesh, Uganda, and anywhere and everywhere that poverty and injustice exists, so that we will achieve our goal, the goal of decent minded people everywhere in the world, that no child is left behind.

  • Gordon Brown – 2001 Speech at the Launch of Ambition: IT

    Gordon Brown – 2001 Speech at the Launch of Ambition: IT

    The speech made by Gordon Brown, the then Chancellor of the Exchequer, on 26 March 2001.

    Today I am pleased to announce the starting project in the second stage of the new deal, the first sectoral employer-led new deal initiative: 5,000 new job opportunities in IT.  Companies that will lift unemployed men and women from the dole to jobs typically paying between fifteen and twenty thousand pounds a year.

    Today’s new ambition IT initiative, which will be followed by further employer-led sectoral jobs initiatives in coming weeks, involves our leading computer and IT companies: Cisco Systems, FI Group, IBM, Siemens, Consignia, Cap Gemini, Ernst and Young, Dixons, ICL, EDS, RM plc, Oracle, BT and Microsoft, and we are grateful to all of them for joining this new and exciting partnership for jobs.

    In total over 7500 New Deal recruits will benefit from training with these top computer companies in IT skills.  These will be primarily long term unemployed men and women, who have been out of work for 18 months, but they will also include young people unemployed for six months or more and lone parents seeking work, all now offered new, flexible IT training through the New Deal.

    Ambition:IT is the smart solution for business looking for skilled employees and for the country as a whole: it gives hope to the unemployed, tackles skills shortages and shows us preparing for the new economy.  In five years’ time, 90 per cent of jobs will need IT skills, compared with 70 per cent today and just 25 per cent in 1992.  So Ambition:IT matches unemployed men and women without jobs to the businesses that need skilled IT technicians, a demand that itself is set to increase by up to 25 per cent in the next three years.

    And there will be special emphasis  on lifting up high unemployment areas which exist  side by side with areas with IT vacancies in every part of the country. The 10 areas short listed for the pilots – from which five pilot areas will be chosen – are London, Manchester, Birmingham, Leeds, South Yorkshire, Liverpool, Tyneside, Cardiff, Glasgow and the Edinburgh and Forth area.

    In addition to Career Ambition – this three year pilot programme to help long-term unemployed people and lone parents to access technician jobs in the IT industry, First Ambition will provide greater opportunities for long-term unemployed and lone parents to take up ICT training – putting 15,000 people onto European Computer Driving Licence or equivalent courses in the first year of the programme  – and Challenge Ambition will allow New Deal providers to bid for resources to try out innovative ICT solutions.

    With Ambition:IT launching the second stage of the new deal and the new regime of new  rights and new responsibilities of ambition, we are investing – in total – 50 million pounds,  but based on our  ‘Employment first’ principle – from April 1st  tightening up sanctions so that  long term unemployed meet their obligations to seek work and in this way  move closer to our ambition of full employment, employment opportunity for all.

    So employment first means, for unemployed claimants, a new compulsory skills check up and a pilot project requiring skills training by the unemployed; for lone parents, new options including self employment backed by child care with all now  invited to a work based interview; and for the 140,000 long term unemployed over 25 and under 50, new opportunities in wider access to training and self employment as well as jobs, but  new  obligations with  sanctions that will now include the withdrawal of benefits for up to 26 weeks for  repeatedly refusing to respond to the new opportunities.

    In the next few weeks we will be launching further employer-led initiatives including in construction, hotels and hospitality and financial services. So having asked Tessa Jowell to speak, I will then pass to the employers at the centre of the initiatives – Sandy Leitch, chair of the New Deal Taskforce and Hilary Cropper of FI group who will chair the Ambition: IT steering group.

  • Andrew Smith – 2001 Speech at the Public Sector Expo

    Andrew Smith – 2001 Speech at the Public Sector Expo

    The speech made by Andrew Smith, the then Chief Secretary to the Treasury, in London on 3 April 2001.

    Good Morning everybody. Nice to welcome you all here today. Procurement isn’t always the most exciting aspect of the government’s work but the message today is that it is vitally important and good progress is being made. In the past I think too little attention has been paid to procurement both by policy-makers and by the public and when governments have paid attention to procurement they frankly haven’t always got it right, and that has proved a very costly mistake. Good procurement is essential to the success of the government’s programmes, it is a vital link between policy and delivery, ensuring that we are able to deliver the improvements to public services which we have promised. And getting procurement right is a greater priority now for government than it ever has been in the past.

    When we took office we faced chronic under-investment in public services and a £27 billion deficit on the public finances. So our first task was to create stability and sustainable public finances and we have delivered both – inflation on target and at its lowest for 30 years, the lowest long term interest rates for 35 years, the lowest unemployment since 1975 with more people in work than ever before and sound public finances. This government inherited debt at an unsustainable 44% of national income. Four years later we are making the biggest net cash repayment in one year ever by a British government – £34 billion – and we have reduced debt to below 32% of national income. Because we have cut debt and cut unemployment, and achieved higher growth and earnings, we are freeing up resources for priority areas in a sustainable way and by 2003/4 debt interest is forecast to be £6 billion a year lower than it was in 1997.

    And as the fundamentals of the economy are stronger, so we are able to make sustained investment in our public services. In the Spending Review last summer we announced an additional £4 billion of capital spending this year and the doubling of net investment by the public sector over the next three years to £19 billion in 2003/4. And so we are carrying forward the biggest hospital building programme in the history of the National Health Service, the 10 year modernisation of our transport infrastructure, the replacement or refurbishment of some 650 schools and we are making a massive investment in rebuilding public services more generally and we expect a return for that investment. The public deserves high quality services, delivered on time, and it is in everybody’s interest that they are delivered to the best value and to budget, because the quality of the services of course depends not just on how much government spends but on how effectively we spend it. So it is crucially important that we get procurement right. There is political will on this right at the top of government and the full commitment of all of the Permanent Secretaries to driving best practice forward in procurement to ensure the reliable delivery of projects.

    Now last April we set up the Office of Government Commerce to act as a catalyst for improving government procurement. One year on we can all see the impressive progress which OGC has made. It has demonstrated a clear vision of how to deliver our goal of £1 billion value for money improvement from a total central sole procurement budget of £13 billion a year. It has achieved many significant gains for the public sector already and has laid the framework and established the practices which will lead to even greater gains in the future. Better procurement is at the heart of our plans for improving public services, so the OGC has a very wide role – getting better value for money from government-wide contracts, ensuring the adoption of best practice in procuring major projects right across government and at the same time meeting other government objectives such as delivering services electronically and the greening government agenda.

    OGC is a valuable resource of expertise for government departments to draw on with dedicated and skilled professionals working to tested and effective commercial practices. It is working in partnerships with departments to help deliver their spending plans both by helping departments with their own projects and where a government-wide approach is needed it is managing commercial relationships on behalf of departments.

    OGC began to deliver real improvements very quickly. Last August they brokered a deal with Vodafone to supply the government with mobile phones which will save the government £38 million over the next two years and it is not often a government body can make savings on that scale in the first few months of its operation. The Watermark Project, which began in October, is another example of the savings which OGC can bring. The project will provide information on water use by public sector organisations and if that information is used effectively it has the potential to deliver savings of up to 10% of wider public spending on water, as much as £60 million a year, and of course at the same time reducing pressure on the environment.

    These are important gains for government and the Office of Government Commerce is continuing to deliver. The introduction of a new web-based electronic tendering system – Tendertrust – to replace the traditional paper tendering system in central government, is intended to produce savings for the taxpayer in the region of £13 million over four years. The system will deliver significant savings for both the public sector and our suppliers and will help the public sector advance our objectives for electronic service delivery, making the UK government a leader in the development of electronic tendering.

    And today I am delighted to announce the OGC’s latest achievement – a strategic partnership with Expotel that will drive down the cost to government of hotel accommodation by reductions in room rates, booked agency charges and the costs of online booking. We expect this to deliver savings of £18 million over the next three years and the scope for further savings still on conferences. There are clear benefits for government from entering strategic partnerships with major private sector providers of government services and products in this way and this agreement makes available Expotel’s best value for government, it makes that available to the whole of the public sector.

    So this latest quick win initiative for hotel accommodation is another example of the way OGC is making a real difference in the way government does business. The £18 million savings demonstrate what can be achieved by optimising the purchasing power of government.

    Negotiating government-wide contracts is only one of the ways the OGC is adding value. Its mission is to drive best practice in all forms of procurement to ensure the reliable and cost-effective delivery of major projects. The Gateway Review process, which was launched in February, is an independent authoritative review mechanism to improve the management of large complex and novel projects in IT, in construction and in property procurement. Gateway Review is proven in industry as a valuable tool in improving management of all aspects of projects, organisational, risk management, business case and technology. Projects will only pass through each gate when rigorous tests have been met, ensuring all aspects of the project are well structured. We now have a commercially-minded reliable measurement system that can be applied to every major government project to ensure that it is properly procured.

    We all know failure in big projects doesn’t come cheap and it is no longer a concept that the public is prepared to accept in the development and construction of major government projects. The Passport Agency – Episode – shows the overruns in both time and cost that can happen when we pay too little attention to procurement. The Gateway Review process would have prevented those overruns, releasing money which could otherwise be spent on fighting crime, on schools and hospitals, the other frontline priorities, and that is why the Gateway makes not only commercial common sense but common sense in terms of value for money and services for the citizen.

    But the Gateway isn’t just a way to prevent errors and overruns, it will add value to the many successful well procured projects which the government manages. Projects like the Passport Agency are exceptions. As a rule the public sector is a good procurer, but what we are saying here is there is further value that can be added.

    The Gateway process is not designed simply to rescue projects which are in difficulties. If we are to realise the full value of the process, the Gateway must be involved throughout the life of the project from the earliest stages to set projects on the right path and begin a cycle of success. And I have to say it is simple good sense to have a proper, trusted, commercially minded process for managing government procurement.

    The capacity for Gateway to add value is enormous. The Gateway Review has already been applied to 16 pilot projects worth a total of £3 billion and we are still seeing the results of these projects but they indicate that through using the Gateway process we can expect to see savings of 5% of procurement costs, or £150 million, on these pilot projects alone. The government-wide contracts and partnerships the OGC has negotiated will add nearly £90 million per year in savings to that total.

    The savings the OGC has delivered in its first year will be enough to build two new hospitals or more than 20 new secondary schools. The achievements the OGC have delivered are already therefore very significant indeed.

    And let me just stress, these aren’t savings which are clawed back to the Treasury, these are savings which are then available for expenditure elsewhere by departments and agencies on frontline services.

    In the long term, extending Gateway Reviews throughout government procurement, with the OGC involved from the start of projects, we would expect to see the level of savings we have made in the pilot projects extended to a wider range of projects. And that means the Gateway could save government £500 million a year, and as I say, every pound we save on procurement is a pound that can be invested in frontline public services, that is £500 million more per year that departments can spend on new schools, on new hospitals, on fighting crime and rebuilding our transport system.

    The OGC will be driving forward best practice in both conventional procurement and in public/private partnerships. PPP is delivering real benefits and is modernising the way government does its business. In the last four years the number of PPPs has been growing. Projects worth some £14 billion are in procurement and we expect to sign contracts worth £20 billion over the next three years. PPP is proving a very effective procurement tool but it is not some sort of easy way out for the public sector, we need to be an effective partner in these projects, we need to specify our requirements clearly and negotiate on equal terms to ensure best value for taxpayers and the best standards for the public. To build the capacity to negotiate good PFI and PPP deals for the public sector, we created Partnerships UK as a successor to the Treasury Task Force, combining private sector expertise with a strong public sector mission to work alongside public sector authorities and help them deliver better value for money PPPs. And yesterday we successfully completed the sale of 51% of Partnerships UK to the private sector, making it a PPP in its own right. And I am delighted I have to say at the signal this sends not only about Partnerships UK but about the future of PPP and PFI. The placement of shares was over-subscribed by nearly 30% and this represents a statement of confidence in Partnerships UK and I believe more widely in the whole PFI industry and wider markets initiative in which Partnerships UK is so centrally placed. We now look forward to their contribution towards our continuing programme of expansion in this market across government.

    Yesterday was also the date set for OGC to assume its new single identity incorporating the activities of the property advisers to the Civil Estate, the central computer communications agency and the buying agency, which has now become the OGC Trading Fund, OGCbuying.solutions, which you can find out more about from their stand in the centre of the exhibition. The new structure is designed to support the OGC’s key strategies, including building a more efficient and effective integrated organisation.

    So I think it is clear from the evidence I have referred to just how important the Office of Government Commerce is to delivering the government’s objectives. By improving procurement the OGC is not only helping to avoid costly mistakes of the past, ensuring that projects come in on time and to budget, it is adding real value to the investment we are making in public services and it is delivering significant savings, savings which we can redirect to frontline services.

    The OGC is already only one year old but is finding those real savings and making a real difference to the way we do business. The Gateway process pilot projects and the government-wide contracts the OGC have negotiated are delivering savings of over £200 million, and the work the OGC has done to produce best practice guidance and establish the Gateway process will deliver a step change in the effectiveness of public sector procurement more generally in the future.

    So the OGC is well on its way to meeting our goal of £1 billion value for money improvement and I would like to congratulate Peter Gershon and all of his team on the work that they have done. I look forward to seeing them build on their achievements further in the future.

    Prudent, targeted, long term public investment is not only a social good but in a changing and often insecure world it is an economic necessity. It is only by investment in our frontline public services and infrastructure that we can equip ourselves for future economic success and ensure that publicly funded universal services are available to all. The Office of Government Commerce is helping us to deliver that investment more effectively. That is good news for government, good news for the taxpayer and good news for the public and the services we thereby deliver.

  • Gordon Brown – 2001 Speech at the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development Conference

    Gordon Brown – 2001 Speech at the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development Conference

    The speech made by Gordon Brown, the then Chancellor of the Exchequer, in London on 24 April 2001.

    Here in London in 1991 – just two years after the fall of the Berlin Wall – representatives of countries from across the world met at a moment of great opportunity and profound challenge; conceived a plan to break down the barriers that had – for too long and at too great a cost – held back the countries of eastern and central Europe; and set out a bigger vision, that by ensuring the benefits of open markets, free trade, economic stability and sustained growth were shared not just by some of Europe but by all of Europe, they would end centuries of division and create one Europe.

    With the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development today playing a vital role in twenty six countries, and recently welcoming Yugoslavia as its twenty seventh country of operation, we can congratulate the staff on ten years of achievement, welcome our distinguished new President Jean Lemierre to his first Annual Conference as President and thank him for setting out his vision, and look back on the first stages of the task: on a decade which ended with, for the first time since the fall of the Berlin Wall, all countries of central and eastern Europe growing and has seen foreign direct investment rise to a record annual inflow of 21 billion dollars, bringing the total since 1989 invested in central and eastern Europe to almost 95 billion dollars.

    Greater stability, increased trade, higher investment and economic growth for many countries in eastern and central Europe.  But, because it has also been a decade of financial crises in Russia and declining output in the countries of the former Soviet Union, with millions suffering economic and social upheaval, we must now confront the challenges of the next decade and resolve here from London – on this tenth anniversary – that we will – not least by improving the transparency, effectiveness, and partnerships of the bank – step up reform, building strong financial sectors; promoting enterprise economies; investing in infrastructure and environmental improvements; building the clean modern transport and energy services that people and businesses need; and creating a culture that supports long term investment, through effective legal and regulatory frameworks, strong corporate governance, tackling corruption; and work with the World Bank and others to help those who have suffered social and economic upheaval.

    We meet today at a time of more challenging conditions in the global economy.

    With the United States today experiencing a necessary slowing, Japan barely growing, and some key emerging markets experiencing renewed instability, the growth rate in the world’s major economies this year is expected to halve while the world still faces volatile oil prices.

    We know that in today’s world of instantaneous global markets, instability anywhere has repercussions everywhere.  The faster the speed of international financial flows, the greater the need for international and national vigilance by each and every country.

    So I want to talk today about the action we are taking to steer a course of stability and sustained growth;  why I believe, at a time of slowing world economic growth, this is a moment not for retreating from global economic cooperation or losing faith in its efficacy and turning inwards, not to retreat into protectionism but a time for enhanced global cooperation and for recognising that while in recent years America has been the engine of growth in the world economy, Europe must also show a leadership role.

    I believe that as we meet together in Washington this weekend the approach of all of us should be forward looking and outward looking: all countries affirming they will take all the actions necessary to sustain growth.

    And I believe that all countries should commit to support the international action necessary for world growth – opening up trade, maintaining the momentum on reforms of the international architecture, and refusing to ignore the needs of developing countries and the benefits to all from their engagement in the global economy.

    This requires short term and long term action at both a national and international level.  But while we are better placed to face global risks than before, with generally low inflation – G7 inflation today averages 2.4 per cent, compared with 5 per cent in 1990 and 13 per cent approaching the downturn of the early eighties;  stronger public finances – despite Japan’s position G7 deficits are close to zero  where they were 3 per cent of GDP in 1990 and 4 per cent approaching the early 80s downturn.  I believe that it is the duty of each and every country to put in place clear and transparent frameworks for monetary and fiscal policy – frameworks that command market credibility and public trust, but allow the discretion and decisive action necessary for effective economic policy.

    In Britain we will remain vigilant and never be complacent, by standing firm in the face of short term global risks, to –  as I said in my Budget – steer a course of stability through the ups and downs of the economic cycle.  No country can ever insulate itself from world economic events but it is because of the tough and decisive action we have taken – introducing tough fiscal rules and reducing the national debt, making the Bank of England independent and its success in delivering the lowest inflation for 30 years – that British economic policy is much better placed than it has been in the past in the face of global instability and we are on course to continue to deliver stability and sustained growth.

    Where Foot and Mouth Disease has caused problems for the agriculture, rural and tourist sectors, the Government has acted decisively to offer support.

    It is an extremely difficult time for individuals and communities when jobs are lost as industries restructure in the face of change and it is even more frustrating – as today – when these losses arise because of global managerial decisions based on financial problems in one sector despite the high productivity performance of the British employees.

    For workers in Motorola and other companies we will make sure that for each and every employee there is direct and immediate government support to find jobs.

    And we will continue to steer a course for stability and growth in face of the short term global risks and by strengthening the New Deal and help with training build on the 1 million new jobs we have created since 1997.

    What we will not ever do is go back to the old days where there were inadequate  fiscal and monetary disciplines and public investment was cut back and stability put at risk by irresponsible tax cuts we could not afford.

    So in the UK we have stood firm, taking  tough and forward looking action on monetary policy and sticking to our long term spending and investment plans, and we will continue to act as necessary to promote domestic demand growth, open trade, investment and employment opportunity for all.

    Each continent has its role to play:

    • in Europe, Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors must work to ensure that the euro promotes stability and growth. And Europe must now implement reforms to its capital, labour and product markets;
    • in the United States, I know that the US Federal Reserve will continue to take the vigilant and decisive action it judges necessary, as growth slows, to sustain confidence and domestic demand growth;
    • in Japan, policy must be focussed on stimulating demand and the authorities must move ahead with reforms to strengthen the financial sector.

    Trade

    And every continent must play its part in extending trade, ensuring no return to protectionism.

    Europe accounts for sixteen per cent of world trade, more than the United States. We must use this position of strength to press for the further extension of trade. The path of open trade and open capital markets that we have travelled in the last 30 or 40 years has brought unprecedented growth and greater opportunity.

    Over the last thirty years, world trade has increased from around $300 billions to over $5000 billions, a 15 fold increase ; the amount of international capital from around $600 billion to over $8000 billion, a 13 fold increase. And foreign investment has increased from around $10 billions to over $600 billions, a fifty fold increase.

    This has been matched by a dramatic increase in world output – from $3000 billion to over $30,000 billion; average income has increased from $3,600 to $5,200 per head; and the proportion of people living in poverty has declined from 30 to 24 per cent in just the last ten years.

    So we reject those that point to the instability of recent years and argue we should turn our back on globalisation, in effect a return to the protectionism of the 1930s and tightly controlled capital markets of the 1940s; as I reject those that look at the expansion of private capital flows and argue there is no longer a need for the IMF and World Bank suggesting  we should return to the discredited laissez-faire of the 1930s.

    Instead we should through international cooperation press ahead for further trade liberalisation.

    But as DFID’s recent white paper sets out, globalisation must be made to work for the poor.  I therefore welcome the EU plan to eliminate all EU tariffs and quotas on imports from the 49 least developed countries through the ?everything but arms initiative?. But more progress needs to be made. It is time for the EU to call again and to work actively to support the launch of a comprehensive new trade round under the World Trade Organisation. The Uruguay Round brought global benefits of more than 200 billion dollars per year. And it is estimated that a new Round could deliver welfare gains twice that size.

    But we also recognise there can be no complacency. With many countries still excluded from the global economy and well over a billion people unnecessarily and unfairly trapped in extreme poverty – their lives today ruined by hunger and the constant struggle to survive – there is an urgent need for further reform.

    Two years ago the world came together in response to the international financial crises and agreed a far-reaching programme of reform. Today, as we face new challenges in the global economy, we must ensure we meet those high hopes of 1998. The Spring Meetings this week in Washington will be a critical test of our resolve.

    Helping each and every country put in clear and transparent frameworks to promote stability and strong public finances;

    • helping each and every country implement the structural reforms that are necessary to make markets work better and secure prosperity for all;

    putting in place new mechanisms for crisis prevention, to minimise the instability of the global economy and to ensure problems are tackled at an early stage;

    • building a new virtuous circle of poverty reduction and sustainable development, to ensure we meet our obligation to halve world poverty by 2015.

    Indeed our task is to put in place the new international framework for global stability, implement new rules of the game that effectively and fairly meet the demands of the new global market place – open not sheltered economies, international not national capital markets, global not local competition. This new framework must be grounded in new rights and responsibilities, enshrined in new disciplines and rules that are agreed nationally and applied internationally.

    Private sector involvement

    We have made real progress in finding ways to meet the demands of increasingly integrated capital markets. In place of the old approach which focussed on crisis resolution, whereby only crisis triggered intervention to tackle economic problems, we are putting in place a modern system of crisis prevention.

    We have sought a way between, on the one hand, encouraging moral hazard and uncertainty by allowing investors to expect an implicit guarantee for private investment, and, on the other hand, adopting an inflexible approach which could threaten investment and encourage the very instability we want to prevent.

    But moving from a world of ad-hoc crisis resolution to one of crisis prevention and containment demands that all actors play their part in maintaining stability. For the private and public sectors this means adopting new responsibilities, but responsibilities matched by new rights and expectations.

    For private investors, this means new responsibilities to stay engaged at times of crisis and a strong presumption that official support will be matched by a contribution from the private sector.

    But this responsibility to participate in maintaining a stable financial system also demands new actions and commitments from national governments and from the official sector as a whole to establish the presumption of private sector involvement in a fair and predictable manner.

    The responsibility of private investors to share fairly the burden with the official sector should be matched by the right to expect fair and consistent treatment by the official sector in times of crisis, and to be kept informed by national governments and through reliable, transparent and comprehensive surveillance from the IMF.

    The official sector has made progress in delivering greater clarity through a framework of principles and tools for involving the private sector in the orderly resolution of crises.

    We now need to reaffirm our commitment to continuing the development and implementation of that framework to deliver still greater clarity and predictability.

    The official sector has a responsibility to go further in reinforcing a clear set of presumptions that private sector involvement will be at the centre of crisis resolution, moving further away from the old ad-hoc model while retaining the flexibility needed to deal with individual cases. It is critical that we now agree to take decisions in a way which is consistent with the overall framework to ensure that we shape expectations and send the appropriate signals and so establish and operationalise the presumption of private sector involvement in crisis resolution.

    Codes of conduct and enhanced surveillance

    For national governments there are also new responsibilities to comply with internationally agreed best practice in policy-making – to put in place credible macroeconomic frameworks, robust financial systems and transparent procedures which can lead to more discerning flows.

    We have agreed a framework of codes and standards covering the key areas that all countries need to address if they are to achieve stability and participate in the international financial system – transparency in fiscal and monetary policy, financial supervision and corporate governance. And I hope at the Spring Meetings we can extend this framework to strengthen the fight against financial crime.

    But the codes of conduct will only work if the private sector is aware of them and the information they provide. This requires a transparent, effective and authoritative surveillance mechanism to monitor their implementation.

    The IMF and World Bank are making progress on the assessment of codes. The IMF has completed over 100 country reports on the observance of standards and codes, and will complete well over 100 more during the course of this financial year. I hope all countries can agree on the value of these assessments.

    For the new approach to be fully effective, there must also be a step change in the IMF’s Surveillance under Article IV.

    • It must become broader encompassing not just macro economic policy but the implementation of the codes and standards on which stability depends. It must also become inclusive, drawing on the work and expertise of the World Bank, and regular consultation with the standard-setting bodies.
    • It must also become transparent so that the public and the markets get the information they need and have confidence in the process which produces it. There must also be a step change in providing countries with the support they need to adopt codes and standards, and strengthen their financial sectors.

    Having worked to establish a framework of codes and standards, it is essential that we work closely with developing and lower income countries to help them meet these benchmarks and access international capital markets from solid foundations. Technical assistance and support is crucial to ensure that no country is left behind in our efforts to raise standards globally.

    The UK will soon announce the details of a multi-million pound facility for technical assistance to enable developing countries to meet these international standards. The assistance fund will be used to enable poorer countries to access technical advice and receive training in order to implement internationally-agreed standards in transparency, policy-making and financial sector supervision and management.

    I urge other members of the international community to take similar steps.

    Greater IMF and World Bank cooperation in tackling the barriers to stability and growth

    The new global economy demands new ways of working at the IMF and World Bank, to deliver both the macroeconomic and structural reforms on which stability and growth depend.

    We know that macroeconomic problems sometimes result from poor macroeconomic management or inappropriate exchange rate regimes. But we also know that to focus on good macroeconomic policy making is a necessary but not a sufficient condition for stability, and for sustainable growth.

    As we have learned in recent years, macro-economic imbalances are often a reflection or symptom of underlying structural problems, of weaknesses in financial supervision, poor fiscal management and fiscal control systems, low savings and investment and infrastructure, barriers to trade which depress growth and which deepen poverty.

    We need to ensure the conditions in IMF programmes are more effective. We recognise that programmes will be most effective if there is genuine country ownership. The IMF must not be seen to be micro-managing national economic policies. This requires that we streamline the conditions in programmes.

    But at the same time streamlining IMF programmes must not mean simply focusing on macroeconomic conditions. There is a vital need to address both structural and institutional conditions. It is not simply that macroeconomic and structural conditionality has to go hand in hand. It is that we often need to tackle structural problems in order to deliver sustainable macroeconomic outcomes. This means the IMF and World Bank must work together on the design of programmes.

    At the Spring Meetings, I will be urging the IMF and World Bank to develop together a set of principles which can guide our approach to streamlining programme conditions in the future. They should test these principles not only by looking at how they could be applied to current programme design, but also look at how they would have affected programmes in the past. The principles must ensure that programmes address long-term structural issues. They should underpin a new approach to programme design, based on much closer collaboration between the IMF and World Bank.

    Building the virtuous circle of debt relief, poverty reduction and sustainable development

    The need to develop a new approach is clearest for the poorest countries.

    To achieve our goal – halving by 2015 the proportion of people living in extreme poverty – we must break the vicious circle of debt, poverty and economic decline and create a virtuous circle of debt relief, poverty reduction and economic growth.

    Last year Horst Kohler and Jim Wolfensohn, along with the United Nations, UNICEF, and UNDP, committed themselves to an historic joint declaration from which there is no turning back.

    It is the first official joint declaration of the IMF, World Bank, OECD and UN that ‘poverty in all its forms is the greatest challenge to the international community.’

    It is a resolution to work together to meet the 2015 development targets, not least halving the number of people living in poverty, enrolling all children in primary school and reducing by two thirds infant and child mortality rates.

    And it is a partnership against poverty which to succeed will demand new and concrete commitments.

    Too often, the world has set goals like the international development targets of 2015 and failed to meet them. Indeed, though our targets are achievable, we are already in danger of missing the mark. Projecting forward, we can see our trajectory will fall far short on education, on health, on poverty.

    It for this reason that Clare Short and I hosted an international conference in London earlier this year, bringing together a unique assembly of key global actors – Finance Ministers and Heads of the international financial institutions meeting with Development Ministers, UN Agencies and representatives from developing countries and NGOs and Civil Society.

    At the conference we all acknowledged the urgent need for action and for collective effort. What emerged from the meeting was the realisation that we must all – – individual governments, multilateral institutions, the private sector, and non governmental organisations – be prepared to make radical changes in the way we act so that the goals of 2015 can be achieved. All groups need to work together in a new way, each individually accountable for what they can do to tackle poverty.

    First we need to deliver the enhanced debt relief. Last year we implemented a major reform to the HIPC initiative to deliver wider, deeper, faster debt relief. We succeeded in getting 22 countries through the HIPC decision point. However there can be no complacency. We must ensure that this relief provides countries with a lasting and sustainable exit from the burden of debt and releases adequate resources for poverty alleviation. So we are very concerned that the recent IMF and World Bank Report on Debt sustainability shows this may not be the case for some countries, and we will be addressing this vital issue at the spring meetings.

    Second, we need to build the link between debt relief and poverty reduction strategies. In recent years we have seen a decisive shift away from the old consensus towards a new approach at the IMF and World Bank – demonstrated by Horst Kohler and Jim Wolfensohn’s presence at the recent London conference – in which anti-poverty policy and economic policy will in future go hand in hand, recognising that social justice and economic growth are not at odds with one another, but intertwined.

    With Clare Short leading the way it is now widely agreed that anti-poverty strategies should not only be country-driven and geared to the 2015 development targets, but community owned – developed transparently with broad participation of civil society, key donors and regional institutions. And that Poverty Reduction Strategies (PRSPs) reflect the new approach. And thus that the Bank and Fund’s programmes and conditionality must support the PRSPs designed by the countries.

    Third, we need to create the new conditions for permanent reductions in poverty and sustained economic development. There are two areas on which action is imperative: education and health in the world’s poorest countries.

    We know that education is a precondition of progress personal and national – the very best anti-poverty strategy, the best economic development program.

    The case for investing in primary education is unanswerable and remains mostly unanswered. Still, tragically, 130 million children do not attend primary school. 900 million people over the age of 15 are illiterate – one sixth of the world’s population. Public expenditure per pupil, in the 19 least developed countries, is less than $40 – compared to $200 per pupil in developing countries, and $5,300 in more advanced economies.

    We must all act, individually and together. At the level of each country we can increase the resources that go to priority areas – and I am pleased to say that in the UK we have increased by £500m the amount of aid going to education.

    No aid budget, and no one nation, can achieve enough on its own. And because multilateral action is essential, it is critical that we honour in action the commitment made by 180 countries at the World Forum on Education at Dakar to achieving quality basic education for all, with a special emphasis on education for girls.

    And as we must act at all levels in education, we must act nationally and internationally on health.

    We all know the cost, human and economic, of infectious diseases in developing countries. Diseases like AIDS, TB, and malaria each year kill eight million people, including three million children in our poorest countries: these are deaths that in many cases are avoidable, diseases that in many places are preventable.

    We have a capacity to help and a moral duty to act. The pharmaceutical companies have chosen to work together with the South African Government on delivering the medicines South Africa needs, rather than confrontation in the courts. I hope this can lead to cooperation with other poor countries.

    The following issues must be addressed:

    • when only 10 percent of all biomedical research is devoted to 90 per cent of global disease – the diseases that overwhelmingly affect the world’s poor – we need more research and development;
    • when those countries most in need are those with the least resources, we need more action to make drugs affordable;
    • when the people hit hardest by disease are the people who are hardest to reach, we need to ensure drugs are distributed more effectively.

    I believe this will require a new global partnership based on swift and purposeful action by governments, medical foundations, the international institutions, and developing countries themselves.

    Together, strengthened by our shared commitment and resolve, we must urge the pharmaceutical companies to do more by supporting research and development and making drugs available to the poorest countries at affordable prices.

    Conclusion

    So in conclusion we must not only support the forward looking approach to monetary policy we have already seen by letting the automatic stabilisers operate within our fiscal rules but should renounce any resort  to protectionism by promoting new trade talks.

    We must show that instead of pausing on reform we are all modernising for productivity growth in the new economy and we agree we will press ahead with  the economic reforms in Europe and Japan to which we are committed and move forward with enlargement of the EU.  And to support macroeconomic policy we should press ahead with our international financial architecture reform programme and refuse to see a downturn as an excuse for ignoring the needs of the developing countries.

    Global cooperation is the answer to those who criticise globalisation today; that in a slowdown we do not turn our back on the open markets and global cooperation which have served us well; that under pressure we do not yield to the false view that international cooperation cannot yield benefits.

    Indeed in answer to both those who would go it alone because of dogma and those who would attack global cooperation because they have lost faith in global institutions, we reaffirm the high ideals of 1945: a joint commitment to high levels of growth and employment and to cooperation to achieve it, an understanding that global prosperity is indivisible and conclude that it is by strengthening not weakening the institutions of global cooperation that we will best steer a course of stability, and move faster in eradicating poverty and  delivering growth and opportunity to all.

  • Gordon Brown – 2001 Statement at Press Launch of the Saving and Assets for All Consultation

    Gordon Brown – 2001 Statement at Press Launch of the Saving and Assets for All Consultation

    The statement made by Gordon Brown, the then Chancellor of the Exchequer, on 26 April 2001.

    While this is a Treasury consultation document, I want to thank David Blunkett and Alistair Darling for their major and detailed contributions to this new plan. And I can announce that having taken 1.2 million children out of poverty the Government now propose in the next Parliament not only to take the second million children out of poverty as we proceed with our plan to abolish child poverty in a generation but now with these measures we plan to give every child the best start in life.

    And today, building on the new Integrated Child Credit we plan for 2003, which will improve  weekly family incomes, the Sure Start programme and the new Children’s Fund which improve family services,  we announce two measures rooted in a new regime of  opportunities and responsibilities that improve not just family income but family wealth, giving every child a better start in life – and opening saving and wealth ownership to all.

    Today 16 million people have no financial savings at all and a further 12 million have less than 1,500 pounds in savings. Indeed half of families on 15,000 pounds a year or less have no savings to their name.

    To break Britain’s long term cycle of disadvantage – where children grow up poor, enter and spend their adulthood income – and asset-poor and then see their own children grow up in poverty as well –  we propose a detailed consultation on the new Child Trust Fund. The illustrative proposal is a trust fund starting at birth of 250 pounds for all children, with up to 500 for the poorest families, with further investments at 5, 11 and 16, making a minimum of 400 pounds and a maximum of 800.

    With compound interest alone and modest parental contributions of 5 pounds a month, a child from a lower income family would have over 3,000 pounds in their account by age 18.

    Our second proposal, a new Savings Gateway, will entrench a regime of rights matched by responsibilities:  not only interest payments on savings tax free, but a guarantee to match the savings that individuals themselves make  with matching funds coming from Government, with one proposal for consultation a pound paid for every pound saved, so making savings pay and helping those who find it hard to get on to the ladder of saving to do so and then, if they want, to move into ISAs, Stakeholder Pensions and employee share ownership, or invest in their children’s trust fund,  thus creating a democracy  where wealth ownership is genuinely open to all.

    In fact, as the document illustrates, if that low income family invests some of the assets they build up from the Saving Gateway into the Child Trust Fund, they could then, with additional family contributions, produce a lump sum at maturity of over £5,000.

    It is on the detailed issues of starting amounts, new  tax incentives, the uses of the trust funds, and further allowances that might be considered for example for community service  that we will now consult.

    Child poverty is a scar on the soul of Britain and it is because our five year olds are our future doctors, nurses, teachers, engineers and workforce  that, for reasons not just of social justice but also of economic efficiency, we should invest in not just – as in the past – some of the potential of some of our children but invest, as we propose today, in all of the potential of all of our children.

  • Gordon Brown – 2000 Speech to the UK-US Enterprise Conference

    Gordon Brown – 2000 Speech to the UK-US Enterprise Conference

    The speech made by Gordon Brown, the then Chancellor of the Exchequer, on 5 July 2000.

    Mr Ambassador, distinguished guests.

    In welcoming all of you, distinguished business leaders from both sides of the Atlantic, and in thanking especially our American friends for travelling to be with us at this unique transatlantic conference here in London today, let me begin by affirming what all my experience in Government demonstrates … that relations between the UK and the USA have never been stronger, never been as extensive as they are today, and never more cordial.

    And for this we owe a great debt to Ambassador Lader not only for his sterling work over months in organising this conference but for his inspiration and commitment over his years of ambassadorial office in promoting the strongest links between Britain and the United States.

    Ambassador – yesterday we were all celebrating with you your independence from us. Today we are recognising and indeed celebrating the interdependence that has not only ecome the hallmark of our own special relationship, but is indeed becoming the essence of the global economy of the twenty first century.

    It is my belief that the United Kingdom and the United States cannot only celebrate together the experience of a shared history, but also celebrate something even more profound – shared values which bind us together: a commitment to liberty; a belief in hard work and enterprise; and a history and culture that make us not isolationist and protectionist but all of us ambassadors for openness, internationalism and an outward-looking approach to the global economy.

    Britain is well placed as a bridge between America and mainland Europe, helping to bring Europe and America closer together. And we in Britain are learning from you in the USA … that it is by ensuring economic opportunity for all that we build both a successful economy and a cohesive society.

    And I tell you that it is my ambition to create in Britain an economy in which all our citizens share the vision of a future in which they know there is real opportunity for all, that if they work hard they can work their way up, start a business or become self employed and rise as far as their talents and potential can take them … a Britain where people see that the enterprise culture is no longer confined to a closed circle of the few but where the opportunity for enterprise is genuinely open to all.

    So my theme today is enterprise open to all.

    And our efforts to operate the best environment for entrepreneurship are supported by welcome new decisions by leading American companies from hypermarkets to high tech innovators and to stock exchanges themselves to locate in Britain and by today’s welcome announcement that Britain has enjoyed more inward investment in 1999.

    Stability

    Now we know that to achieve high rates of productivity growth in the new global marketplace, national economies must be founded on the rock of monetary and fiscal stability.

    That required all of us in the 1990’s to break with the old failed monetary and fiscal policies of the past and the over-rigid monetary targets of the 1980’s, and pursue anti-inflation policies each characterised by the discipline of clear policy objectives, sound procedural rules and a greater openness and accountability than ever before.

    It is why in the US the independence and credibility of your Federal Reserve Bank has been so vitally important to your success and why in the early 1990’s the reduction of your deficit was such a priority.

    It is why here in Britain in 1997, immediately on coming to office, we made the Bank of England independent and set about reducing our fiscal deficit. And it is why in the euro area, with the new European central bank and the stability and growth pact, our European neighbours are also seeking to entrench monetary and fiscal stability. And as I said in my Mansion House speech last month, in principle we see benefits from the euro and have set five economic tests for membership that will be rigorously assessed early in the next Parliament, and if met put to a referendum of the British people.

    But my message today is that to ensure world class rates of productivity growth we in Britain, Europe and America must not only have the strength to take tough decisions to create monetary and fiscal stability, but also the strength to take the tough action to reform labour, capital and product markets and to make our economy more pro-competition, pro-innovation, pro-enterprise than ever.

    If we had been meeting in a conference at almost any time in the first 80 or 90 years of the last century, we would still have been thinking of how to do well in distinct national economies with our own national capital markets and our national business champions.

    Now in this new century where we are so obviously in an age of global not national competition, open and worldwide not sheltered or protected capital markets, global not national champions, an age where almost every good and every service is now exposed to worldwide competition, the challenge to all of us is clear.

    In an era when continuous and rapid change in our technologies compels unprecedented flexibility and adaptability in skills and knowledge, and where change will be greater in the next 20 years than in the last 200 years, the challenge is how we can set aside the old sterile arguments and conflicts of the past – between public and private sectors, between management and workforces, between state and market – and whether we will have the courage together to remove all the unnecessary barriers to trade – not least with a new successful round – the barriers to competition, innovation and enterprise where we have much here in Britain to learn from the USA.

    Let me give one example where we are removing these barriers.

    Here in Britain, we pride ourselves – as you do – in great companies, some world class sectors, some global champions whose performance we praise, but we know that there is a productivity gap with our competitors that requires us to raise our game.

    And we cannot assume that the new information technologies will automatically bring the higher productivity growth now seen in the United States.

    When we came into Government and cut the long-term rate of capital gains tax for business assets held for ten years or more, capital gains has been fixed at 40 per cent for almost ten year.

    Amidst all the other priorities we decided that long term investment and enterprise would benefit from a radical tax cut.

    So from this April we cut capital gains rates for business assets from 40 per cent to 10 per cent after four years.

    Having made these decisions I also looked at what I could do to recognise the importance of investors in small and medium sized companies, business angels and employee shareholders … and to the growing numbers of Britain’s unquoted companies. Now they will benefit after four years from a cut from 40p to 10p.

    But just as we have reformed and cut capital gains tax we have reformed and cut the main rate of corporation tax from 33p to 30p, making ours the lowest rate in the history of UK corporation tax, the lowest of all major industrialised countries.

    And we have introduced the most generous tax advantaged employee share ownership scheme this country has seen, our aim for employees everywhere to have a real stake in the business success of our country.

    Now the sharpest spur to enterprise is competition. Competition at home leads to competitiveness abroad and not only is it the best guarantee that innovation can flourish, hard work be rewarded and new entrants compete on fair terms, but it offers the best prospect of a best deal for consumers.

    So just as we make our monetary authority independent, we are now making our competition authority independent, free of political influence, opening up the utilities, consumer goods and financial services to even greater competition.

    The days of picking winners, uneconomic state subsidies and corporate fixes are over and cannot return. Wherever there are barriers to competition we will tackle them.

    Our new Competition Act for the first time prohibits all anti-competitive practices, gives the Office of Fair Trading a pro-active remit and now extra resources to root out cartels and restrictive behaviour, gives the competition authorities the power to fine up to 10 per cent of company turnover and imposes not just civil but criminal penalties for those who try to obstruct their investigations.

    For the professions, our Office of Fair Trading is now examining how best to ensure that the rules of professional bodies do not unnecessarily restrict or distort competition.

    To ensure that they are promoting – not impeding – new entrants and competitive forces,we are now scrutinizing existing and proposed regulations and our regulatory bodies generally.

    To facilitate the formation of hi-tech clusters – and to foster dynamic new businesses – we are introducing a series of changes in planning guidelines that moves our planning regulations beyond the assumptions of the past that all industries are smokestack industries.

    And in Europe, in the interests of all who want to trade and compete within a European single market of 375 million people, we are challenging the old claim made by some that tax harmonisation and a federal superstate run by the European Commission are the next stage after monetary union. We are putting the case for tax competition and against tax harmonisation, for the mutual recognition of nationally determined standards, and calling for timetables that would open up the single market in aviation, telecommunications, utilities, energy and financial services.

    In sum, Britain and Europe open to competition, and at the leading edge of change.

    More than ever innovation is the key to higher productivity.

    We seek a Britain that is not only open to competition and thus the best environment for investment from overseas but a Britain also that becomes the best environment for innovation – where from the university laboratory to the science park we convert our ideas into businesses and jobs.

    So today with my colleagues Stephen Byers and David Blunkett I want to announce a major investment in twenty first century science … combining new Government investment to be detailed in our spending review and a public private partnership with the Wellcome Trust whom we thank for their contribution … a one billion pound investment in the refurbishment of our science laboratories, in science facilities and equipment.

    And to further boost science and engineering research in our universities, the new investment will be accompanied by a 23 per cent rise over three years in postgraduate science and engineering grants, rising to £9,000 in 2003.

    Upgrading our science facilities is our starting point as we complete the path that takes inventions from the science lab through to high tech venture capital and then to the national and global marketplace:

    – to provide seedcorn finance to commercialise inventions, our university challenge fund;

    – to transfer technology from the science lab to the marketplace, new centres of enterprise in every region;

    – to offer the best incentives for company research in the industrialised world, a new research and development tax credit which underwrites nearly a quarter of small business R&D costs even before a penny in profit is made;

    – to provide investment capital for innovative businesses, our new high technology venture capital fund and from this April new tax incentives for corporate venturing;

    – to encourage transatlantic and trans-continental alliances in research and management training I am pleased to announce that today we are signing a new agreement between MIT and Cambridge.

    And I want this to be the first of a series of trans-continental alliances involving universities round Britain with universities and research centres from round the world.

    Removing the barriers to competition, innovation and now also we must remove the barriers to enterprise.

    According to one study, at any point in time 8.5 per cent of the US adult population is trying to start new businesses.

    The rate of business start ups in the UK is 3.3 per cent.

    And in the UK only 16 per cent believe opportunities exist for new start ups, and only one third think that if good opportunities exist they would start businesses.

    Research by the London Business School suggests that with US rates of entrepreneurship we would create another 250,000 small businesses a year.

    Stability is critically important. The recession of the early nineties not only destroyed existing businesses but discouraged new businesses

    But in Britain today there are now 100,000 more small businesses employing people than when we came to power, a rise of nearly 10 per cent.

    And our enterprise agenda has led us to cut small business corporation tax from 23p to 20p, with a new small business starting rate of 10 per cent. Overall since 1997 an average tax cut of almost 25 per cent for small companies.

    I will be very interested to hear the conclusions of the working groups in this session, as you look at some of the central issues that affect the British economy: how our venture capital industry can encourage more hi-tech start ups; how our stock exchanges can ensure the flow of investment funds to new and existing businesses; how through technology transfer universities can help businesses and how the large firm can help the small firm move forward; and how we can build on our Enterprise Management Incentive scheme to create the best regime of incentives for both management and workforces.

    Our aim is in every area of the country an enterprise culture – one that is founded on opportunities for all, a culture that starts in the classroom, and with our Small Business Service, modelled on the US Small Business Administration, offers help for training and start ups and for investment.

    In the high unemployment areas of the country, we will support intensive programmes of pre-start training, advice and mentoring, with new incubator units in every region. A package worth up to £2000 for every start-up.

    We will work together with schools and businesses to ensure that:

    – schools and businesses work together, with business people going into school and taking part in enterprise classes;

    – every student has a quality experience of working in a local business before they leave school;

    – more enterprise courses are available to students and more quality business placements are available to teachers.

    All our new measures – not just new incentives for businesses starting up, employing, investing, taking equity, and exporting, but help for the unemployed to become self employed, enterprise courses in our schools, the new National Campaign for Enterprise – are based on the proposition that enterprise does not stop at the entrance to a high unemployment area, but that we make the enterprise culture work for people and places too often forgotten.

    And finally, we need a national effort to meet our biggest economic challenge of all – mastering the skills of the future and the new information technologies – and maximising the potential of computers, the internet and electronic commerce.

    While at present Britain lags behind America, I want Britain to lead with judicious investment that puts Britain at the forefront of the new information technologies:

    – delivering lower cost internet access with the aim that the cost of using the internet in the UK will by the end of 2002 be as low as in the USA;

    – a single electronic gateway for the public and business to deal with Government including reductions in tax for those who pay tax through the internet;

    – by 2002, all schools connected to the internet, and most if not all teachers computer-trained;

    – a national network of 1,000 computer learning centres in schools, colleges, libraries, internet cafes and on the high street.

    All measures with one purpose only, that the whole of Britain is fully equipped for the new information age.

    Conclusion

    So the Britain that led in the industrial revolution can be one of the leaders in this new dynamic age of enterprise.

    Churchill said that those who build the present only in the image of the past will miss out entirely on the challenges of the future.

    I believe that our two countries, learning from each other, can meet the great challenges of change. Not by protectionism, but by openness and internationalism. Not by resisting change but by equipping people to cope with change, not by standing still, but by radical economic reform that builds from a platform of stability and opens up innovation, competition, enterprise and opportunity to all, never standing still, but facing change and mastering it, we can with confidence face the future, and we can do it best – as this unique transatlantic conference today shows – by working together.

  • Gordon Brown – 2000 Speech to the Royal Economic Society

    Gordon Brown – 2000 Speech to the Royal Economic Society

    The speech made by Gordon Brown, the then Chancellor of the Exchequer, on 13 July 2000.

    Introduction

    First let me thank the Royal Economic Society and the Scottish Economic Society for inviting me to speak today.

    And let me also say what a pleasure it is to be here in St Andrews this morning, to be here with the Royal Economic Society and the Scottish Economic Society and to be able to express my appreciation of the leading role that British economists, the Royal Economic Society and the Scottish Economic Society in particular have played over the years in the development of economic theory and practice.

    Today I want to talk about the conditions for stability and growth in the national and global economy, to discuss the new policies, indeed the new approaches, being pursued in Britain and Europe to make stability the platform for high and stable levels of growth and employment; and to say something about the reforms we are making to the international financial architecture to improve the prospects worldwide for prosperity and growth.

    But in case a discussion of the conditions for stability and growth may be seen as a retreat into treating economics as a dismal science, let me begin by affirming the high ideals and public purpose which ushered in the post war economic era and which, for economic policy makers, characterised the creation of the IMF and World Bank, as well as the domestic ambitions of post-1945 Governments, and these ideals underlie our Governments aims for British economic policy .

    Indeed when the Bretton Woods conference met in 1945 it defined a new public purpose characterised by high ideals. Economics was about more than exchange rates, the mechanics of financial arrangements or even new institutions.

    At the very start of the opening session, the American Secretary of State said that:

    “Prosperity like peace is indivisible. We cannot afford to have it scattered here or there amongst the fortunate or enjoy it at the expense of others …… prosperity has no fixed limits it is not a finite substance to be diminished by division. On the contrary the more of it that other nations enjoy the more each nation will have for itself …..”

    And the post-war arrangements were founded on the belief that public action on a new and wider stage could advance a new and worldwide public purpose of high ideals rooted in social justice: to achieve prosperity for all by each co-operating with every other: new international rules of the game that involved a commitment to high levels of growth and employment. In short, the job of every economy was to create jobs for all.

    If we are to seek in our generation , as I believe we should, those high ideals of the 1940’s, then I believe that there are four conditions for high levels of growth and employment that must be met:

    – first: stability – a pro-active monetary policy and prudent fiscal policy to deliver the necessary platform of stability;

    – second: high productivity – through a shared commitment to enterprise, competition and high quality long term investment in science and innovation, new technology and skills;

    – third: employability – a strengthening of programmes to ensure all have the opportunity of work;

    – fourth: international engagement – an agreement to new international rules of the game, backed by improved economic cooperation.

    Stability

    First, the search for stability as a precondition for growth in Britain and Europe

    And it is undeniable that in the late 1990’s major monetary and fiscal reforms – in Britain Bank of England independence and the new fiscal rules, and in Europe monetary union and the new growth and stability pact – have ushered in a new era of monetary and fiscal policy.

    What lies behind these major reforms in Britain and in the euro area? I want to suggest that these new economic approaches have sought to learn from past errors, are designed to make sense of the new world of liberalised financial markets, are founded on the recognition that monetary and fiscal stability is the only sure foundation for growth, and, while often characterised as simply monetary independence, are built upon four lessons we have learned :

    first, because there is no long-term trade off between inflation and unemployment, demand management alone cannot deliver high and stable levels of employment;

    second, in an open economy rigid monetary rules that assume a fixed relationship between money and inflation do not produce reliable targets for policy;

    third, the discretion necessary for effective economic policy is possible only within an institutional framework that commands market credibility and public trust;

    fourth, that credibility depends upon clearly defined long-term policy objectives, maximum openness and transparency, and clear and accountable divisions of responsibility.

    Keynes wrote of the “animal spirit” that in a world of imperfect information and incomplete markets could lead us into short-termism where there is no confidence to plan for the future and from which we all lose. This was the insight that was at the heart of his approach to political economy.

    As he wrote:

    “If animal spirits are dimmed and the spontaneous optimism falters leaving us to depend on nothing but a mathematical expectation enterprise will fade and die, though fears of loss may have a basis no more reasonable than hopes of profit.”

    While for him short-termism was the product of imperfect information and incomplete markets, he also said that we can shape expectations about the future, that “animal spirits” can be encouraged to think for the long term. But they must have confidence Governments will deliver. In the 1930’s, Roosevelt said that America had nothing to fear but fear itself. Keynes might have added that in Britain confidence about the future is necessary for confidence about the present. And our four lessons on how to create stability and growth seek to ensure markets work in the public interest and build that confidence.

    Let me review these four conditions for stability one by one.

    Because there is no long-term trade off between inflation and unemployment, demand management alone cannot deliver high and stable levels of employment.

    A few decades ago many economists believed that tolerating higher inflation would allow higher long-term growth and employment.

    Indeed, for a time after 1945, it did – as I have said – appear possible to “fine-tune” in this way – to trade a little more inflation for a little less unemployment – exploiting the Phillips curve.

    But the immediate post-war period presented a very special case – an economy recovering from war that was experiencing rapid growth within a rigid system of price and capital controls. We now know that even at this time ‘fine tuning’ merely suppressed inflationary pressures by causing balance of payments deficits.

    And by the 1960’s and 1970’s, when Governments tried to lower unemployment by stimulating demand, they faced not only balance of payments crises but stagflation as both inflation and unemployment rose together.

    Milton Friedman argued in his 1968 American Economic Association presidential lecture that the long-term effect of trying to buy less unemployment with more inflation is simply to ratchet up both .

    And here in Britain conclusive evidence for this proposition came in the 1980’s experience of high inflation and high unemployment occurring together.

    It was a lesson learned painfully throughout Europe as well as in America in this period.

    Friedman was right in this part of his diagnosis: we have to reject short-termist dashes for growth. But the experience of these years also points to the solution.

    Because there is no long-term trade off between inflation and unemployment, delivering full employment requires a focus on not just one but on all the levers of economic policy.

    The second lesson in the new post-monetarist economics is that applying rigid monetary targets in a world of open and liberalised financial markets cannot secure stability.

    Here experience shows that while Friedman’s diagnosis was right his prescription was wrong.

    Fixed intermediate monetary targets assume a stable demand for money and therefore a predictable relationship between money and inflation.

    But since the 1970’s, global capital flows, financial deregulation and changing technology have brought such volatility in the demand for money that across the world, as the Federal Reserve would agree, fixed monetary regimes have proved unworkable.

    So why, even as monetary targets failed, did Governments such as those in Britain persist in pursuing them? Why even as they failed was their answer more of the same?

    The answer is that they felt the only way to be credible was by tying themselves to fixed monetary rules.

    And when one target failed they chose not to question the idea of intermediate targeting but to find a new variable to target, hence the bewildering succession of monetary targets from £m3 to m0, then shadowing the Deutschmark, then the Exchange Rate Mechanism as the chosen instrument for monetary control.

    As with fine tuning, the rigid application of fixed monetary targets was based on the experience of sheltered national economies and on apparently stable and predictable relationships which have broken down in modern liberalised global markets.

    And yet the more they failed, the more policymakers felt they had to tie their hands, first by adding even more monetary targets and then by switching to exchange rate targets. But having staked their anti-inflationary credentials on following these rules, the Government – and the economy – paid a heavy price. The price was recession, unemployment – and increasing public mistrust in the capacity of British institutions to deliver the goals they set.

    What conclusion was drawn from all this in Britain and in fact also in Europe?

    Governments are in theory free to run the economy as they see fit. They have, in theory, unfettered discretion.

    And it is not only the fact that they have this unfettered discretion but the suspicion they might abuse it that leads to market distrust and thus to higher long-term interest rates.

    That is why Governments have sought to limit their discretion through rules.

    The monetarist error was to tie policy to flawed intermediate policy rules governing the relationship between money demand and inflation.

    But the alternative should not be a return to discretion without rules, to a crude version of ‘ fine tuning’.

    The answer is not no rules, but the right rules.

    The post-monetarist path to stability lies not in a free for all but in the discipline of a long-term institutional framework. Precisely the point Keynes made when he sought a framework within which there was not short-termism but confidence to plan for the future.

    So my second lesson – that in a world of open capital markets fixed monetary targets buy neither credibility nor stability – leads directly to my third.

    The third lesson is that in this open economy the discretion necessary for effective economic policy is possible only within a framework that guarantees the public interest is met, one that commands public trust and market credibility.

    Let me explain what I mean when I talk of the new monetary discipline: in the new open economy subject to instantaneous and massive flows of capital the penalties for failure are ever more heavy and the rewards for success are even greater.

    Governments which lack credibility – which are pursuing policies which are not seen to be sustainable – are punished not only more swiftly than in the past but more severely and at a greater cost to their future credibility.

    The British experience of the 1990’s is a case in point. It shows that once targets are breached it is hard to rebuild credibility by setting new targets.

    Credibility, once lost, is hard to regain.

    The economy then pays the price in higher long-term interest rates and slower growth.

    On the other hand Governments which pursue, and are judged by the markets to be pursuing sound monetary and fiscal policies, can attract inflows of investment capital more quickly, in greater volume and at a lower cost than even ten years ago.

    The gain is even greater than that. If Governments are judged to be pursuing sound long-term policies, then they will also be trusted to do what is essential- to respond flexibly to the unexpected economic events that inevitably arise in an increasingly integrated but more volatile global economy.

    So in the era of global capital markets, it is only within a credible framework that Governments will command the trust they need to exercise the flexibility they require.

    This leads to my fourth proposition – a credible framework means working within clearly defined long-term policy objectives, maximum openness and transparency, and clear and accountable divisions of responsibility.

    It is essential that Governments set objectives that are clearly defined and against which their performance can be judged.

    That is why we have in the euro area the growth and stability pact and the rules of the ECB.

    That is why in Britain we have introduced clear fiscal rules, defined explicitly for the economic cycle.

    And why, also, we have a clearly defined and symmetrical inflation target. Just as there is no gain in attempting to trade higher inflation for higher employment, so there is no advantage in aiming for ever lower inflation if it is at the expense of growth and jobs.

    That is why too there are procedures which are settled and well understood – with Bank of England independence and a symmetrical inflation target which is pro-growth and prevents a deflationary bias in monetary policy making.

    And of course fiscal procedures – for the first time legally enshrined in the code for fiscal stability.

    Indeed it is only by meeting our tough fiscal rules that we will be able to deliver both stable growth and investment in public services, and avoid making the mistakes of the past where Governments started by being profligate and ended up having to cut back.

    The same toughness and discipline we have shown in the last three years will continue in the coming years.

    And we will continue to meet the fiscal rules. The figures I announced in the Budget mean that we will meet our fiscal rules over the cycle – indeed that we will meet our fiscal rules even in the most cautious case, on the most cautious assumptions, including the most cautious view of trend growth at 2.25 per cent.

    And we will stick to the envelope we announced in the Budget for public spending and investment. Some have said we should use the capital from the spectrum auction for current spending or even for tax cuts. But I refuse to make the mistakes of the past .

    When in the 1980’s and 1990’s capital from privatisations – as from North Sea oil – was used for current spending and then for short-term tax cuts, it did nothing for meeting our country’s long term investment needs or for long term stability, leaving interest rates higher than they should have been.

    In April of this year the Government raised £22 billion through the auction of spectrum for the third generation of mobile phones. In the autumn, we will be auctioning the first of a number of additional economically significant parts of the spectrum which will be used for local broadband fixed wireless access and are expected to raise further hundreds of millions of pounds. And the right thing to do for both monetary and fiscal policy is to use the proceeds from the spectrum auctions to reduce our national debt.

    By cutting debt we cut debt interest payments — releasing money for public services not just for one short year but year on year and in a sustained way.

    By the end of this spending period the first spectrum sale alone will lower debt interest payments by over one billion pounds a year.

    Together with further savings from cutting unemployment and tackling benefit fraud, this allows us, while meeting our Budget spending limits, to release more than expected from debt interest payments and unemployment and devote more to the country’s priorities, the vital public services: spending on education, health, transport and policing which this Government is committed to delivering. Extra public investment which comes not at the expense of prudence, but because of our prudence.

    The monetary and fiscal framework must not only work to clear objectives and well-understood procedures but also be open, transparent and accountable.

    The greater the degree of secrecy the greater the suspicion that the truth is being obscured and the books cooked.

    But the greater the degree of transparency – the more information that is published on why decisions are made and the more the safeguards against the manipulation of information – the less likely is it that investors will be suspicious of the Government’s intentions.

    That openness needs to be underpinned by accountability and responsibility.

    So public trust and indeed stability requires not mechanistic responses, but judgements made within a disciplined framework. Stability should be built on a foundation of credible objectives rather than fixed relationships, and on well-understood procedures within which judgements can be made and be openly explained, rather than relying on decisions made behind closed doors.

    In the euro area, there is a similar recognition that the old fine-tuning cannot work, a similar understanding that in liberalised markets rigid monetary targets cannot, on their own, deliver stability, a similar insight that the discretion necessary for effective economic policy is possible only within a framework that commands market credibility and public trust; and growing agreement that credibility depends upon clearly defined long-term policy objectives.

    Hence in the euro area the pre-commitment to low inflation and fiscal discipline where inflation has been effectively brought down in the 1990’s from 4.4 per cent to 1.3 per cent and borrowing successfully cut from 5.5 per cent of national income to 1.2 per cent.

    Hence also Central Bank independence and the terms of the stability and growth pact; and hence too the growth of an open process of multilateral surveillance within Europe involving peer review.

    As I said to the House of Lords Select Committee in January last year “the issues of transparency in decision making, which we dealt with in our reform of the Bank of England, and the symmetry of the inflation target, which have proved to be central to the success of the United Kingdom’s new monetary framework, will also be issues for future debate in Europe.”

    So both in the euro area and in Britain, Governments are pursuing with equal determination the new route to stability that exists for the modern world.

    I said in October 1997 that in principle “the potential benefits of a successful single currency are obvious – in terms of trade, transparency of costs and currency stability.”

    The 1997 statement also set five economic tests which are the necessary economic pre-requisites for membership of a successful currency union.

    As I said in my Mansion House speech last month, we are committed early in the next Parliament to making an economic assessment of the case for British membership, based on these tests, and if the tests are met putting it to a referendum of the British people.

    Productivity

    Stability is a necessary pre-condition to deliver our objectives of high growth and employment. But it is not sufficient. We recognise that an economy cannot fly on only one wing. In Britain and in Europe supply side or microeconomic reform is also essential.

    We must have the strength not only to take the tough decisions to create monetary and fiscal stability but also to take the tough action to reform labour, capital and product markets.

    Now in the 1980’s the previous Government went further than simply arguing that ‘fine tuning ‘ was the problem. For them, Government was the problem.

    As they stated, their policies reflected a neo-liberal view of the state, not just the application of rigid monetary targets to control inflation but a belief in deregulation in labour markets, capital markets and product markets as the route to higher productivity, a philosophy of “the best Government as the least Government”.

    The clearest intellectual statement of the new position was Nigel Lawson’s Mais lecture in 1984. Its central thesis was that the proper role of macro-economic and micro-economic policy “is precisely the opposite of that assigned to it by the conventional postwar wisdom”.

    The conquest of inflation, not the pursuit of unemployment, should be the objective of macro-economic policy. The creation of conditions conducive to growth and employment, not the suppression of price rises, should be the objective of micro-economic policy.

    On one point, arguing against a crude version of the 1944 policy – using macro policy to expand demand and micro policy to control inflation – Lawson drew the right lessons from the failures of previous decades, of policies that claimed to be Keynesian while misunderstanding Keynes’ basic insight .

    But far from tackling the boom-bust cycle endemic to the British economy, the early 1980’s and 90’s saw two of the deepest recessions since 1945. And even at the peak of growth in 1988, unemployment was still over 2 million. Before it rose again to 3 million in 1993.

    As the late eighties boom showed, the Government of the day eventually relapsed into the very short-termism they had come into Government to reverse. Just as the fine tuners had in the 1970’s given way to the monetarists, so now monetarism lapsed into fine tuning.

    But more important, deregulation in itself was not enough to tackle the underlying weaknesses of the British economy – inadequate investment, low productivity, unreformed labour markets and at root short-termism.

    Lawson’s failure was that having rejected the crude Keynesianism of the 70’s he rejected Keynes approach altogether when, instead, the real challenge was to interpret Keynes’s important insights for the modern world.

    The stop-go policies which were wrongly said to be Keynesian attempted to tackle high unemployment and slow growth by pulling the macroeconomic levers but reflected an approach Keynes thought appropriate for depression bound economies where the confidence of the ‘animal spirits’ was low. The mistake was to try to apply this prescription universally especially to inflation prone economies where the problem was not a lack of demand – Keynes’ special case – but low productivity, inadequate levels of investment, unreformed labour markets, and generally short-termism, historically Britain’s underlying problem.

    So just as there could be a low-demand, high-unemployment equilibrium for an economy – which required Government action through macroeconomic policy to restore high and stable levels of growth and employment – so too the economy could become stuck in a low productivity, low-investment, short-termist equilibrium which requires Government action on the supply side to tackle imperfect information and market failure and in doing so restore high and stable levels of growth and employment.

    So the role of a macro economic policy is more than bearing down on inflation, it is to create a platform of stability that will promote growth and employment. And an active supply side policy is necessary not only to sustain low inflation but to improve productivity and employment.

    In other words, macroeconomic and microeconomic policies are both essential – working together – to growth and employment. So it is this Government that, rejecting the short-termism – not least the crude ‘Keynesianism’ of past economic approaches – is seeking to draw on the best of Keynes’ insights about political economy and put a modern Keynesian approach into practice.

    This leads to our second condition for growth and employment: only with rising productivity can we meet people’s long-term expectations for rising standards of living without causing inflation or unemployment. And to achieve that productivity, we need more than deregulation: we need radical labour capital and product market reform.

    It is important to be clear about the relationship between productivity, employment and living standards.

    Low productivity can exist side by side with low unemployment if people accept that living standards are not going to rise – as happened to the United States in the 1980s.

    But rising productivity can exist side by side with high unemployment if we pay ourselves more than the economy can afford.

    If people demand short-term rewards which cannot be justified by economy-wide productivity growth, the result is first inflation and then the loss of jobs. That has been the historic British problem – repeated bouts of wage inflation unmatched by productivity growth leading in the end to higher unemployment.

    Indeed between 1950 and 1996 productivity growth in Britain was only 2.6 per cent a year compared to 3.7 per cent and 3.9 per cent in France and Germany.

    But if we can now achieve rising productivity, bridging the gap with our competitors, high levels of employment and rising living standards can go together.

    Britain and Europe cannot assume that the new information technologies will automatically bring the higher productivity growth now seen in the United States. So we must work through a new agenda that involves a shared national effort to raise our game.

    While 30 years ago Governments responded to the productivity challenge with top-down plans, and grant aid primarily for physical investment, today the productivity agenda is more complex and more challenging. So we are developing new and radical policies for the modernisation of capital and product markets, the encouragement of innovation and an enterprise culture open to all, as well as the building of a modern skills base.

    And in Europe, in the interests of all who want to trade and compete within a European single market of 375 million people, we are challenging the old claim made by some that tax harmonisation and a federal superstate run by the European Commission are the next stage after monetary union. We are putting the case for tax competition and against tax harmonisation, for the mutual recognition of nationally determined standards, and calling for timetables that would open up the single market in aviation, telecommunications, utilities, energy and financial services.

    This commitment to productivity in Britain and Europe must be backed by responsibility – a willingness to put the long term above the short-term, to build a shared common purpose.

    The more that we are all persuaded to take a long-term view of what the economy can afford, the more jobs we will create, the more we can keep inflation under control so interest rates can be as low as possible.

    And responsibility means not just responsibility in pay but building a shared commitment to achieve all the conditions necessary for growth and full employment – in other words to work together to promote stability, employability and higher productivity too .

    Employability

    Our third condition for high growth and employment is an active labour market policy matching rights and responsibilities.

    The idea of a fixed natural rate of unemployment consistent with stable inflation was discredited by the evidence of the 1980’s.

    For even when the economy was growing at an unsustainable pace – above 5 per cent in 1988 – in all regions of the country there were high levels of vacancies including vacancies for the unskilled alongside high unemployment.

    How did this happen? Part of the explanation was the ‘scarring’ effect on skills and employability inflicted by the deep and long recession of the 80’s.

    Partly also the mismatch between the skills and expectations of redundant manufacturing workers – and the new jobs in service industries.

    Partly the failure to reform the welfare state especially its unemployment and poverty traps which, for many, meant work did not pay.

    So there was a rise in what, in the 1980’s, economists termed ‘the non accelerating inflation rate of unemployment’ or the NAIRU.

    Whether measured by the relationship between wage inflation and unemployment – as Phillips stressed in the 1950’s – or vacancies and unemployment as Beveridge had highlighted in the 1940’s – Britain had clearly seen a dramatic structural deterioration in the UK labour market, the same level of wage pressure or vacancies existed alongside much higher levels of unemployment than in the past.

    So the new Government has taken a decisively different approach to employment policy over the past three years aimed at reducing the NAIRU.

    All our reforms – the New Deal – and today we can report one million extra jobs and youth unemployment cut by over two thirds, the lowest unemployment for 20 years – the Working Families Tax Credit, skills training – are designed for the modern dynamic labour market, now being transformed by the new information technologies. We recognise that people will have to change jobs more often, that skills are at a premium and that reform was needed in the 1980’s to create more flexibility.

    The more our welfare to work reforms allow the long-term unemployed to re-enter the active labour market, the more it will be possible to reduce unemployment without increasing inflationary pressures. And the more our tax and benefit reforms remove unnecessary barriers to work, and the more our structural reforms promote the skills for work, the more it is possible to envisage long-term increases in employment, without the fuelling of inflationary pressures. And while this lesson has already been learned in many European countries it is now being learned in those high unemployment members of the European Union.

    The international framework

    So reforms in Britain and Europe are built on the new realities of the global economy – open not sheltered economies, international not national capital markets, global not local competition.

    The challenge for each country – and this is the fourth condition for growth and employment – is to ensure we have an international economic system that recognises these new realities. It must be one, as Keynes recognised in the 1940’s, built on a credible institutional framework, one that captures the full benefits of global markets and capital flows, minimises the risk of disruption, maximises opportunity for all and lifts up the most vulnerable.

    Some look at the instability of recent years and argue we should retreat from globalisation – in effect a return to the protectionism of the 1930’s and tightly controlled capital markets of the 1940’s.

    Yet over the last thirty years, world trade has increased from around $300 billions to over $5000 billions, a 15 fold increase ; the amount of international capital from around $600 billion to over $8000 billion, a 13 fold increase. And foreign investment has increased from around $10 billions to over $600 billions, a fifty fold increase

    This has been matched by a dramatic increase in world output – from $3000 billion to over $30,000 billion; average income has increased from $3,600 to $5,200 per head; and the proportion of people living in poverty has declined from 30 to 24 per cent in just the last ten years. Take East Asia where over ten years the numbers in poverty have been almost halved.

    There are others who look at the expansion of private capital flows and argue there is no longer any need for the international financial institutions – the IMF and the World Bank – that we should retreat from global economic cooperation and in effect return to the discredited policies of laissez faire.

    I want to argue that not just for Britain and Europe, but also for the poorest countries the way forward is not to retreat from globalisation – into either protectionism or old national barriers – or to turn the clock back to a failed laissez-faire. The way forward is an engagement with the global economy, agreeing to new international rules of the game that every country can accept, backed up by improved international economic co-operation – so that even the poorest countries can enjoy the benefits of global commerce.

    As I have said in my discussion of Britain and Europe, no country can secure the investment funds it needs without showing it is pursuing policies for monetary and fiscal stability. And to achieve the openness and transparency that has hitherto been lacking, each and every country, rich and poor, developed and developing, should adopt and apply codes of conduct for monetary and fiscal policy, and for the supervision of their financial sectors and corporate governance. These are the new rules of the game for the world of global capital flows.

    Over the past two years the international community has made great progress in agreeing a framework of codes and standards covering the key areas – fiscal and monetary policy, financial supervision and corporate governance.

    The codes require accurate reporting to the international community by each national economy of all relevant information, for example the size of a budget deficit, the state of official and bank reserves and the level of currency liabilities. And they require not only a flow of information but the adherence to agreed timetables and to proper standards and procedures for disclosure and policy making.

    By making sure that economic facts cannot be manipulated and underlying problems cannot be hidden, citizens will know their country’s real problems and prospects. So the codes will deter corruption, restore public confidence and build public support for the sometimes painful reforms that are essential to long-term economic growth and prosperity. And this is critical for investor confidence in the wake of the asian crisis and for the prevention of contagion. Without transparency and the proper procedures that the codes of conduct will require, investors may not reinvest on the long-term scale necessary for jobs, growth and social progress.

    In addition, sound economies, as many now acknowledge, depend not simply on robust and transparent economic and financial systems, but on welfare and social systems that build social cohesion and trust and civil society takes ownership of policies. So in addition to the code of good practices in fiscal, financial and monetary policy, the World Bank and UN are developing principles of good practice in social policy.

    We should not be so complacent as to assume that codes of conduct are needed only in other countries and not our own. We need tougher standards and requirements for disclosure all round.

    These new rules of the game are not incidental to the financial architecture for the new global economy: they are the financial architecture for the new global economy. This is the way in which we can deliver global financial stability in a way consistent with national sovereignty.

    But the codes of conduct will only work if there is an effective and authoritative surveillance mechanism, to monitor their implementation, so that the public have confidence in the transparency on which stability depends.

    This requires an enhanced surveillance mechanism, based on international cooperation. The building block is already present in the IMF’s Article IV process, to which all IMF member states are committed by their treaty obligations.

    The new international architecture however requires a step change in the IMF’s surveillance under Article IV. It must become broader encompassing not just macro economic policy but the implementation of the codes and standards on which stability depends. It must become inclusive, drawing on the work and expertise of the World Bank and other bodies to deliver broader surveillance under the Article IV umbrella. It must become transparent so that the public and the markets get the information they need and have confidence in the process which produces it. And, crucially, it must be authoritative, independent and of the highest quality. The body which produces it must be, and must be seen to be, free from political interference and conflicts of interests.

    We have made much progress since the financial crises of the 1990’s. The importance of an internationally agreed framework of codes and standards is now accepted by the international community. So increasingly, is the role of the IMF at its centre. The IMF has begun to work with other institutions to deliver broader surveillance. More surveillance information is published than ever before. The Fund and other institutions have become more transparent about themselves – a necessary condition for an independent and authoritative surveillance process. The recent agreement that the Fund should establish an independent evaluation unit to monitor and assess its own activities is a crucial step.

    But we need to go further. The Fund has many roles and responsibilities – as well as surveillance, it is both the advisor and lender to countries. To deliver the new surveillance on which stability depends the Fund will need to find ways to further reinforce the credibility and independence of its surveillance.

    This is one of the greatest challenges which the Fund now faces. For in the new architecture, we must move from the old model of the IMF simply as a fire fighter. With the implementation of internationally agreed codes and standards, with countries required to report all the relevant information, and with strengthened surveillance, the IMF’s most important role and responsibility will be to identify potential difficulties before they become major problems. And there can be no doubt that in this new era of openness, transparency and accountability, if there are problems in the future, the IMF will be asked to explain why it failed to spot them earlier.

    So in place of the old approach to crisis resolution, whereby crisis triggered intervention, we are putting in place a modern mechanism which can identify potential problems at a stage where preventative action can be effective – one rooted in transparency and reliable surveillance.

    In setting up this new mechanism, we must ensure that all the main participants, public and private, in the international financial system accept their responsibilities and play their part in maintaining its stability.

    Economies must forge regular contacts and lasting relationships with their private investors, based on open and honest dialogue: modern investor networks that every country should form and every creditor should join.

    And with a right to a greater flow of information, comes greater responsibility for the private sector. When trouble hits an economy, the private sector must be prepared to do more than simply pull money out and accelerate the panic.

    However successful we aim to be at avoiding crises, we should recognise that shocks will occur. There will continue to be a role for the official sector, particularly the Fund, in resolving them. But we need also to recognise that the way we resolve crises may have significant implications for the behaviour of public and private sectors in the future. And following the events of 1997 and 1998, the G7 have now agreed a new framework for private sector involvement in crisis resolution. The handling of a number of recent cases has demonstrated the ways in which the private sector can be involved. But we need to make more progress on implementing the framework.

    With the three changes we have agreed – transparency, improved surveillance and enhanced involvement of private sector creditors – we can establish a markedly lower threshold for effective response than the old ad hoc crisis-triggered system.

    In the new framework it should be the duty of countries to inform, the duty of the international financial institutions to monitor and make public, and the duty of the private sector and the official community to engage. In this way, we have a real opportunity to move the emphasis of international financial governance from one of crisis resolution to one of crisis prevention and crisis containment.

    Effective IMF and World Bank cooperation

    As we build a platform of stability, we must ensure that more countries share the benefits of the global economy and break the chains of debt, poverty and under-development.

    For many emerging market countries, the key to long term growth will be access to international investment and private capital flows. We need to help these countries stage by stage get access to private capital.

    There are some who argue against countries opening up their economies to capital flows – that instability is the inevitable result. But countries cannot afford to simply turn their backs on the global financial and economic system and be permanently excluded from the prospect of prosperity that requires access to capital, skills and technology.

    It is true, as we saw in recent years, that short-term capital flows can be destabilising when investors are insufficiently informed and when countries lack open and transparent policy making procedures, strong financial systems, and the necessary institutional capacity.

    Countries need to move forward carefully, with support and advice from the international financial community. We need to provide countries with road-maps for opening up their capital accounts – guidance on the speed and desirability of capital account liberalisation, and on attracting more stable direct investment not just portfolio flows.

    The road maps would provide advice, for example, on the reforms that are required to strengthen the financial sector, including banking supervision, bankruptcy laws, property rights and an independent judicial system; and on creating infrastructure and conditions to enable investment and using private sector finance and skills.

    The need to develop a new approach is clearest for the poorest countries in order to break the vicious circle of debt, poverty and economic decline and create a virtuous circle of debt relief, poverty reduction and economic growth.

    In this area as in many others, we need close cooperation between the IMF and World Bank.

    There are some who say there should be a clearer separation between the IMF and World Bank – that the IMF should focus only on emerging market countries; and that the World Bank should focus only on the poorest countries. I disagree.

    The focus of the World Bank is poverty reduction and social development. Yet this matters not only in the poorest countries. As the crises of the 1990’s have demonstrated, it is important to put in place strong social systems and mechanisms for helping the most vulnerable in all countries participating in the international financial system.

    The IMF’s prime responsibility is stability and surveillance. But stability and surveillance matter in all countries – not only emerging market counties. Indeed it is the precondition for achieving poverty reduction and sustainable growth in the poorest nations. As I have emphasised throughout this lecture, in a global economy, no country can secure the funds it needs without showing it is pursuing policies for monetary and fiscal stability. And this requires a greater openness and transparency, backed by independent surveillance.

    And the Asian financial crisis has shown that structural problems – in financial sector supervision, in corporate governance, in insolvency procedures – can lead to financial and macroeconomic instability. In many countries the interests and activities of the IMF and World Bank are interdependent. They both have vital roles to play in surveillance and lending in emerging market and developing countries alike.

    So what is needed is a step by step approach to integrating countries in capital markets, moving forward in a coherent and prudent way. There is a clear role for both conditional IMF and World Bank programmes to help countries make the transition – programmes which provide support, but which also provide the right incentives to seek private capital flows and to secure the potential benefits of global capital markets when appropriate.

    And as we develop a new consensus, with a new and broader emphasis on the conditions for high and stable levels of growth and employment, we must develop a vision of the IMF and World Bank working together – ensuring countries have in place the macroeconomic, financial, structural and social preconditions for long term success in the global economy.

    Conclusion

    So in Britain, Europe and the international community the same lessons are being learned.

    We know that in a global marketplace with its increased insecurities and often its volatility, national economic stability is at a premium – the precondition for all we can achieve. No nation can secure high levels of sustainable investment without both monetary and fiscal stability together.

    Stability is the necessary precondition for all we do, but it is not sufficient. Microeconomic and supply side reform is also essential.

    We must build a new consensus, with a new and broader emphasis on the conditions for high and stable levels of growth and employment, ensuring countries have in place the macroeconomic, financial, structural and social policies for long-term success in the global economy.

    And we are committed to an active leadership role, whether the issue is new competitive markets at home; new and essential reforms in Europe; a new strategy at the IMF and World Bank to secure international financial stability and reduce Third World poverty.

    Increased global competition and ever more rapid technological change means that, not since Bretton Woods and the time of Keynes has a generation had so broad a challenge in the global economy – and so profound a responsibility. It is a major challenge for the economics profession as a whole. Government and academic economists, working together and learning from each other, have a decisive role to play. Working in partnership, we can and must build a global stability and prosperity that will deliver high and sustainable levels of growth and employment for all.