Tag: Ed Balls

  • Balls, Ed – 2014 Speech on Taxation

    balls

    Below is the text of the speech made by Ed Balls, the Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer, at the Fabian Society Annual Conference on 25th January 2014.

    Can Labour Change Britain?

    Thanks Jessica.

    And thanks to all of you for giving up your Saturday to be here today.

    The title of today’s conference is ‘Can Labour Change Britain?’

    And with the next General Election in sight, I want to set out today how this Labour generation can rise to the challenge.

    Jessica, I first started attending these Fabian New Year conferences over 25 years ago.

    I remember hearing the then Shadow Foreign Secretary Gerald Kaufman debating the pros and cons of unilateral nuclear disarmament and a young rising star called Tony Blair, who had just written an article for a fashionable magazine of the day, called Marxism Today.

    How times changed!

    When I first started coming to these conferences, the fight to rid Labour of Militant was won, and Labour was finally putting the corrosive internal party division of past decades behind us.

    But even as Neil Kinnock fought valiantly for sanity, and even as the Tory government of the day cut taxes for the wealthy, while child poverty rose and long-term unemployment became entrenched we had still not yet re-established ourselves as a credible voice for the hopes and aspirations of working people.

    Already out of power for a decade, a return to government was still a long way off.

    So I am proud that today, under Ed Miliband’s leadership, this Labour generation has learned from that long and bleak period in opposition.

    Just over three and a half years after a General Election defeat, this Labour movement is more united, more in touch and more determined than ever.

    Yes, we once again we have a Tory government cutting taxes for the rich, while over 900,000 young people are struggling to find work and child poverty is forecast to rise.

    But this time Ed Miliband and Labour are leading the debate, setting the agenda and speaking up for working people – middle and lower income Britain – facing a cost of living crisis.

    As Ed Miliband said in his speech last week:

    “This cost-of-living crisis is about the pound in people’s pocket today. But it is not just about that. It reaches deeply into people’s lives. Deeply into the way our country is run. Deeply into who our country is run for. And because the problems are deep, the solutions need to be too. ”

    Ed is right.

    This is no time for steady as she goes.

    No time for propping up the status quo.

    Our country is crying out for real and lasting change.

    And it is this new Labour generation – from the leadership out across our party – that is now preparing a credible and radical programme for government that I believe can win public trust.

    WHY UNCHANGED TORIES CAN’T CHANGE BRITAIN

    So Labour has changed over the past twenty five years.

    But as for the Tories – divided on Europe, stigmatising the vulnerable, dismantling the NHS – they haven’t changed at all.

    And there is a reason why we are all expecting a nasty, vicious, negative and backward-looking election campaign.

    Because if this election is about credible change and a positive vision for the future, then the Tories will lose.

    David Cameron had his chance to stand for change in 2010.

    After the global financial crisis and with the MPs’ expenses scandal fresh in everyone’s minds, people wanted change then too.

    But David Cameron failed to win public support or articulate a vision.

    He failed to win a majority.

    He failed to convince the country that the Conservative Party had changed and had earned the right to change Britain.

    And as the last three years have shown, the country was right not to trust the Conservatives.

    But to fully understand this Tory failure, and the challenge ahead for Labour, we need to be clear about what’s gone wrong and what needs to change.

    Living standards

    Ed Miliband has been right to argue that the cost of living crisis is undermining support for a Tory-led government that promised to make people better off.

    This government promised strong and balanced growth, rising living standards and the budget deficit gone by 2015.

    The Tories and their supporters are now working hard to persuade the public that any growth in our economy is a vindication of their economic policies and disproves our critique that the Budget and Spending Reviews of 2010 choked off the recovery and flat-lined the economy.

    But the Tories have delivered the slowest recovery for over 100 years, real wages down by an average of £1600 a year for working people, and painful public spending cuts extended well into the next parliament because three years of flatlining means that government borrowing has been £200bn higher than planned.

    Simply to catch up all the lost ground since 2010 we need 1.5 per cent growth each quarter between now and the general election.

    And Tory claims their plan is working are not going to wash with working people who are seeing their living standards falling and for whom this is no recovery at all.

    Because the current cost-of-living crisis is not just about people on tax credits, zero-hours contracts and the minimum wage. It’s also about millions of middle-class families who never thought that life would be such a struggle.

    And in the last 24 hours David Cameron has gone from not wanting to talk about the cost-of-living crisis to effectively telling people they’ve never had it so good.

    A desperate attempt to use highly misleading and selective statistics to tell people they are better off when they feel worse off. It makes the Tories look even more out of touch than before.

    As the IFS has made clear, household incomes will be substantially lower in 2015 than in 2010. No amount of smoke-and-mirrors can allow David Cameron to wriggle out of this basic fact: hard working people are worse off under the Tories.

    David Cameron’s and George Osborne’s plan may have worked for a privileged few at the top.

    But for the million young people trapped out of work…

    For millions of ordinary families, worried about how to make ends meet when wages are falling, and prices are going up…

    For the young couples struggling to get on the housing ladder while the chronic shortage of homes forces up prices…

    For the aspirational majority who work hard, pay their taxes, who want to get on and not just get by, but who are working harder for less as the cost of living keeps on rising this Tory plan isn’t working.

    And people feel betrayed.

    Fairness

    But we know there is a deeper reason why the Tories are failing.

    The deeper public concern is one of fairness.

    A view that David Cameron’s Britain does not reward the majority who work hard and save but instead serves the ‘wrong people’ – the rich and the powerful.

    That view was already around in 2010 – and directed at all political parties.

    But the view that this Tory-led government is standing up for the wrong people has become deeply entrenched.

    As the latest Ashcroft polls have shown – just 21 per cent of people think the Conservative party stands for fairness.

    Because on energy bills, zero-hours contracts and excessive bank bonuses, the Tories aren’t representing the views of the majority, the hard-working people of Britain.

    How often have you heard these words on the doorstep:

    – I’m worse off;

    – The Government is doing nothing about it;

    – They stand up for the rich and powerful, but they don’t seem to care about people like me.

    And by cutting the top rate of income tax for people earning over £150,000 and choosing to introduce the unfair and perverse bedroom tax, David Cameron and George Osborne have shown us just how out of touch they really are.

    NO TIME FOR COMPLACENCY

    On the cost of living and the condition of Britain, under Ed Miliband’s leadership, Labour is winning the argument.

    Today, twice as many people think that Labour wants to help ordinary people get on in life as the Tories.

    More than half of voters think that Labour is the party which will best tackle the cost of living crisis and improve living standards for people like them

    But this is no time for complacency.

    Because David Cameron’s failure to win public trust also reflects a deeper mistrust of politics more widely.

    When the question is “Can politicians make things better?” the danger is, for too many people, the answer is ‘no’.

    And Lord Ashcroft’s recent polling report on the state of Tory support in marginal Tory seats makes clear that the rise of the UK Independence Party is a direct reaction to the failure of the Tory party to deliver change, combined with a general anti-politics mood. Anti-politics, anti-business, anti-European too.

    LABOUR – THE ECONOMIC CHALLENGE OF CHANGE

    So we cannot assume that Tory failure will simply translate into Labour success.

    Our task is to show to a sceptical electorate that Labour has learnt from its mistakes and that we have the values, the ideas and the credibility to deliver the change Britain needs.

    And to do so, in my view, we have to stand back and reappraise what has been happening in our economy over the last forty years.

    Over the course of my lifetime, the global economy has fundamentally changed – and changed for the better.

    As communism collapsed and countries gradually liberalised their economies, rapid reductions in poverty and increases in living standards have taken place in China, across Asia, in South America and Eastern Europe with growth now increasingly taking off in Africa.

    Meanwhile, rapid changes in information and communications technology have transformed the way we live our lives and brought the world closer together. It is staggering to think that there is more computing power in my Blackberry than in the Apollo rocket that landed on the moon in 1969.

    And as this pace has accelerated, global trade has increased as never before with new market opportunities opening up not just for us but also for rapidly growing middle income countries from Brazil to Indonesia.

    But these changes have created big challenges too.

    Trade and technology have combined to place a premium on higher levels of skills and qualifications, and reduced routine jobs which can be more easily done by robots or workers in poorer countries.

    Changes in the structure of labour markets – often caused by the strains of global competition and including the fall in trade union membership – have also had a knock on effect on wages.

    And as a result, labour markets are polarising with jobs growth happening primarily at the bottom and top of the income distribution.

    Good jobs in the middle of the distribution have been far harder to come by. And in recent years, except at the very top, wages have stagnated. While, as resources like food, fuel and water have become scarcer, rising prices have put pressure on the cost of living.

    These powerful trends were under way well before the global financial crisis. And while that crisis, and the failure of bank regulation which drove it, was not inevitable, there is a remorseless logic which connects the structural revolution of globalisation with the financial crisis that followed.

    Global imbalances built up as cash-rich countries benefiting from export-led growth, like China, supported rising trade deficits and consumer debt in many developed countries. The financial services sector aided and abetted this process by misallocating capital and underestimating risks.

    And when the global financial crisis caused huge collapses in economic output, those with bigger banking sectors, like Britain, were hardest hit.

    So our generation now faces a twin task.

    Dealing with the aftermath of the financial crisis.

    And resolving the underlying tensions of globalisation and technological change which have not gone away.

    For Britain, with the Eurozone in crisis, businesses very cautious and our banks still fragile, this was always going to be a long and hard adjustment.

    Like many economists, I argued strongly that George Osborne’s decision to accelerate premature tax rises and spending cuts would hit confidence, choke off our economic recovery and make it harder to get the balanced and investment-led recovery we need and to get the deficit down. So it has proved.

    And with the global financial system still very vulnerable, the Eurozone moving from crisis to stagnation, and the Chinese economy slowing down, the world economy is certainly not yet out of the woods.

    Here in Britain we have had the slowest recovery for 100 years but recently we have seen a long overdue return to growth

    After three damaging years of flatlining, any growth is welcome.

    But as we debate how to secure a stronger investment-led recovery, our task is also to look beyond the immediate challenge of economic and fiscal adjustment.

    We have to ask a bigger question –– how do we create a stronger and fairer economic model for the future where the many benefit from rising prosperity and not just the few?

    Some on the right argue for a return to free-market, trickle-down economics – cutting taxes at the top, stripping out regulation and making deep cuts to public services.

    Others say if the problem is that rapid globalisation and technological change have undermined the pay and prospects of working people, then the simplest thing to do is to turn our back on those economic forces.

    To put up trade barriers.

    Or to leave the European Union.

    I know, as an MP who had, until recently, the largest BNP membership of any constituency in the country, how some on the extremes of left and right see the solution to be isolationism, turning inwards, setting their face against the rest of the world and the global economy.

    And it would be a mistake to believe that the frustration with the status quo in Brussels is confined to UKIP voters, any more than is scepticism about our open trading relationships with the rest of the world.

    But I say that both these arguments are the road to economic ruin.

    In my view, Britain has always succeeded – and can only succeed in the future – as an open and internationalist and outward-facing trading nation, with enterprise, risk and innovation valued and rewarded.

    Backing entrepreneurs and wealth creation, generating the profits to finance investment and winning the confidence of investors from round the world.

    But we cannot succeed the Tory way through a race to the bottom – with British companies simply trying to compete on cost as people see their job security eroded and living standards decline.

    We can only succeed through a race to the top – investing in the skills of all as we make our economy more dynamic and competitive, and earn our way to higher living standards for everyone.

    That is why Labour is today the party of radical economic change

    I know some in the business community believe that Labour’s focus on living standards, fairness, transparency and competition is anti-business.

    But we will only win support for an open and dynamic market economy if we show that it can work for all, and not just some.

    Without an active industrial policy to manage these powerful forces of globalisation and technological change, inequalities will continue to widen and, for many, precarious low skilled work will increasingly become the norm.

    At a time when politicians and business leaders often seem to compete with each other for bad headlines, none of us can afford to bury our heads in the sand and ignore the concerns of the majority of people across our country that our economy is not currently working for them and their families.

    That is why it is so vital that Labour shows we can succeed where the Tories have failed, working with business to shape the economic policies that can change Britain and earn our way to rising living standards for all.

    And that is the agenda that Ed Milliband, my Shadow Cabinet colleagues and I have been setting out in recent weeks – not anti-business, but anti-business as usual.

    To support good jobs and higher skills for all, we will:

    – Expand free childcare for working parents to 25 hours a week to help make work pay.

    – Introduce a compulsory job for the long-term unemployed and every young person under the age of 25 out of work for more than a year – paid for by repeating the successful tax on bank bonuses and restricting pensions tax relief for the very highest earners – a job they would have to take up or lose benefits.

    – Introduce a new ‘gold standard’ vocational qualification and, as Rachel Reeves set out this week, require compulsory basic skills tests for anyone claiming Jobseekers Allowance.

    – Increase support for high-end apprenticeships, including in companies seeking to bring in more skilled migrants.

    – And combine tougher immigration controls and fair labour market rules which can get the benefits of migration while commanding public trust.

    To ensure markets work in the public interest and for the long-term, we will:

    – Legislate for more competition and tougher regulation in energy and banking to make sure these markets serve the public interest.

    – Support new rules on takeovers and executive pay, following the Kay and Cox Reviews, so that corporations focus on long-term value rather than short-term returns.

    – And Chuka Umunna, Lord Adonis and I will also explore reforms to ensure workers benefit from increased productivity through greater profit-sharing and employee share ownership, not the Tory plan to trade away rights for shares, but looking at the case for a new national, tax-advantaged profit-sharing scheme.

    To deliver an investment-led recovery, we will:

    – Set up a British Investment Bank to support small business, as we cut and then freeze their business rates.

    – Back a new 2030 low carbon target to stimulate long-term investment in renewable, nuclear and clean gas and coal.

    – Invest in science and R&D, with strengthened collaboration between universities and businesses, to support innovation and nurture new ideas and new companies.

    – And commit to building 200,000 new homes a year by 2020, with reforms to our planning system and a new long-term Infrastructure Commission as proposed bygf Sir John Armitt.

    And to ensure this long-term prosperity is shared around Britain, we will devolve economic power to innovative cities and regions and investment in our high technology and manufacturing supply chains.

    These are the clear and detailed and deliverable policies we need to change Britain and persuade a sceptical public.

    Radical – but not utopian.

    Visionary – but evidence-based.

    Egalitarian – but honest and realistic.

    You could even call it a Fabian approach to managing economic change.

    LABOUR – THE FISCAL CHALLENGE OF CHANGE

    But there is a further challenge we face in winning public trust to deliver change.

    After three years of economic stagnation and with the sustainability of the recovery still uncertain, we stand to inherit a very difficult fiscal situation in 2015.

    As Ed Miliband said last week, deficit reduction alone does not make for a successful economic policy.

    But both of us know it is a necessary and important part of it.

    With the deficit we inherit currently set to be nearly £80 billion and the national debt still rising, it will be up to the next Labour government to finish the job.

    This means that delivering change – on living standards, on skills and innovation and on jobs for young people, while safeguarding our NHS and vital public services – will be more difficult than at any time in living memory.

    Certainly more difficult than at any time since the post-war Labour government of 1945.

    So let me be clear.

    We are determined to deliver the change we need to make our economy work over the long-term and to build a fairer society that rewards hard work and protects the vulnerable.

    But we must make sure the sums add up.

    We cannot and will not duck the hard choices ahead.

    Without fiscal discipline and a credible commitment to eliminate the deficit, we cannot achieve the stability we need.

    But without action to deliver investment-led growth and fairer choices about how to get the national debt down while protecting vital public services, then fiscal discipline cannot be delivered by a Labour government – or, in my view, by any government

    It is these three objectives – fiscal discipline, growth and fairness – which will guide our approach.

    Let me take them in turn.

    Fiscal Discipline

    First, fiscal discipline.

    Last year, I set out how we will deal with the very difficult fiscal situation we will inherit in 2015.

    We won’t be able to reverse all the spending cuts and tax rises that the Tories have pushed through.

    We will have to govern with less money, which means the next Labour government will have to make cuts too.

    No responsible Opposition can make detailed commitments and difficult judgments about what will happen in two or three years time without knowing the state of the economy and public finances that we will inherit.

    But we know we will face difficult choices.

    The government’s day-to-day spending totals for 2015/16 will be our starting point.

    There will be no more borrowing for day-to-day spending.

    Any changes to the current spending plans for that year will be fully-funded and set out in advance in our manifesto.

    And we will insist that all the proceeds from the sale of our stakes in Lloyds and RBS are used to repay the national debt.

    Alongside these commitments, Chris Leslie, the Shadow Chief Secretary to the Treasury, has already begun our zero-based review of public spending.

    By examining every pound spent by government from the bottom up, we will root out waste and inefficiency.

    And we will look at new ways of delivering public services suited to tougher times – while ensuring that they continue to make a huge contribution to the strength of our economy and the fairness and stability of our society.

    Even those departments or areas of government spending which we chose to ring-fence will still be subject to this review because it is vital that we get maximum value for money for every pound spent.

    So we have already gone further than any Opposition has at this stage in setting out a clear and disciplined approach.

    But I want to go further still.

    So I am today announcing a binding fiscal commitment.

    The next Labour government will balance the books and deliver a surplus on the current budget and falling national debt in the next Parliament.

    So my message to my party and the country is this:

    Where this government has failed, we will finish the job.

    We will abolish the discredited idea of rolling five year targets and legislate for our tough fiscal rules within 12 months of the general election.

    Tough fiscal rules which will be independently audited by the Office for Budget Responsibility.

    We will get the current budget into surplus as soon as possible in the next Parliament.

    How fast we can go will depend on the state of the economy and the public finances we inherit.

    And because we will need an iron commitment to fiscal discipline, I have also asked the Office for Budget Responsibility to independently audit the costing of every individual spending and tax measure in Labour’s manifesto.

    I urge the Chancellor to work with us to make this happen ahead of the next general election.

    This would be the first time this kind of independent audit has ever happened – and I believe it is essential to restore public trust in politics and improve the nature of the political debate.

    Growth

    Second, alongside fiscal discipline, the reforms I set out earlier to get people back young people back to work and earn our way to long-term economic growth and prosperity are also vital to deficit reduction.

    We can only reduce the fiscal deficit if our recovery is balanced, long-term and doesn’t sow the seeds of problems ahead.

    The challenge is to deliver stronger, investment-led growth which helps reduce the deficit in a sustainable way.

    And with business investment still weak, housing demand once again outstripping housing supply and the IMF forecasting that UK growth will slow down again next year, it’s clear that this is not yet a recovery that is built to last.

    On housing, we support Help to Buy.

    But we have called on the government to allow the Bank of England to urgently review how the scheme is working and to target its impact.

    As we have said before, it cannot make sense for taxpayers to guarantee mortgages on homes worth as much £600,000.

    And we have consistently warned, as have the CBI and the IMF, that action to support housing demand must be matched by action to increase housing supply.

    But none of these things have happened.

    So I say George Osborne must listen to the CBI and the IMF and act in the Budget to bring forward housing investment.

    We need Help to Build, not just Help to Buy.

    This would help people aspiring to own their own home, create thousands of jobs and apprenticeships and ensure we have a recovery that is built to last.

    And it is why housing investment will be a central priority for the next Labour government.

    Of course, there is a careful fiscal judgement to be made.

    I have said that there will be no more borrowing for day to day spending in 2015-16.

    But consistent with our tough fiscal rules, we will assess the case for extra capital spending to boost growth and jobs and make our economy stronger for the long-term.

    Because the longer it takes to deliver the long-term policies that will transform our economy and earn our way to higher living standards, the harder it will be and the longer it will take to get the deficit down.

    Fairness

    Third, Labour will combine iron discipline on spending control and action on growth with a fairer approach to deficit reduction.

    That means facing up to the tough choices that are necessary if we are to take a fairer approach to deficit reduction.

    As I said at this Conference two years ago, fair pay restraint in the public sector in this parliament would have been necessary whoever was in government.

    And at a time when the public services that pensioners rely on are under such pressure, the next Labour government will not continue paying the winter fuel allowance to the richest five per cent of pensioners.

    We won’t be able to reverse the Government’s cuts to child benefit for the highest earners.

    We will keep the benefits cap, but make sure it properly reflects local housing costs.

    We will cap structural social security spending.

    And yes, over the long-term, as our population ages, there will need to be increases in the retirement age too.

    And we will make changes to create a fairer tax system.

    So we will crack down on tax avoidance, scrap the shares for rights scheme and reverse the tax cut for hedge funds.

    We want a lower 10p starting rate of tax, which would help make work pay and cut taxes for 24 million people on middle and lower incomes.

    And today I want to go further, to ensure that those with the broadest shoulders bear a fairer share of the burden.

    The latest figures show that those earning over £150,000 paid almost £10 billion more in tax in the three years when the 50p top rate of tax was in place than when the government conducted its assessment of the tax back in 2012.

    And when the deficit is still high, when tough times are now set to last well into the next parliament, when for ordinary families their real incomes are falling and taxes have risen it cannot be right for David Cameron and George Osborne to have chosen to give the richest people in the country a huge tax cut.

    That’s why, for the next parliament, the next Labour government will reverse this government’s top rate tax cut so we can finish the job of getting the deficit down and do it fairly.

    For the next Parliament, we will restore the 50p top rate of tax for those earning over £150,000.

    Reversing this unfair tax cut for the richest one per cent of people in the country.

    And cutting the deficit in a fairer way.

    CONCLUSION – CHANGED LABOUR CHANGING BRITAIN

    So, can Labour change Britain?

    My answer is a resounding Yes.

    By setting tough and credible fiscal rules.

    By supporting the long-term growth that will earn our way to higher living standards and help reduce the deficit.

    By rooting out waste in public spending.

    By making fairer choices on tax and benefit reform.

    By pursuing radical reforms to tackle the cost of living crisis and build an economy that works for working people.

    Yes, under Ed Miliband’s leadership, Labour can change Britain.

    And less than four years after our general election defeat, we are also showing that Labour has changed

    Working with business to make our economy more dynamic – but challenging business to support difficult reforms which promote competition and long-term value.

    Recognising the role that trade unions play in our economy – but challenging them to change as we reform our party for a new century.

    Supporting the most vulnerable and abolishing the bedroom tax – but proposing tough reforms to put work first.

    Pro-European – but not ducking the big reforms we need.

    Open to the outside world – but refusing to accept a race to the bottom where low-skilled, low-paid work becomes the norm.

    Celebrating wealth creation and entrepreneurs – but clear that the richest must bear their fair share of the burden.

    Yes, Labour has changed.

    So let us now win the trust of the British people.

    And together let us deliver the change Britain needs.

    Thank you.

  • Ed Balls – 2013 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    balls

    Below is the text of the speech made by Ed Balls, the Shadow Chancellor, to the 2013 Labour Party conference in Brighton.

     

    Conference, we meet here in Brighton.

    With the General Election now just nineteen months away

    Determined to defeat this out of touch Tory-led Government.

    Knowing that we have more work to do to win back the trust of the British people.

    And fully aware that no party since the 1920s has gone from losing office to a working majority at the next general election.

    So Conference, this is our task.

    To show we are ready for the great challenges we will face on spending control and the deficit.

    To set out Labour’s alternative plan to create jobs, make work pay and tackle the rising cost of living.

    And to secure a mandate to build a One Nation Britain:

    A strong recovery that is built to last.

    An economy that works for the many and not just a few at the top.

    Conference, not just for the few, but for all working families in every part of Britain.

    And Conference, three and a half years after the General Election defeat, we have learned from that experience and our time in government. And where we got things wrong – on immigration control, bank regulation and the 10p tax rate – the next Labour government will be different from the last.

    And where change is needed in our party, we will reconnect with our members and working people across the country.

    But Conference, let us also be proud of what the last Labour government achieved.

    The national minimum wage.

    Our schools and hospitals rebuilt.

    NHS waiting times down from 18 months to 18 weeks.

    More apprenticeships.

    Bank of England independence.

    Not joining the Euro.

    1 million more small businesses.

    Crime down.

    Child poverty down.

    And 3,500 Sure Start children’s centres – one of the most important reforms any Labour government has ever delivered.

    And Conference, replacing the Tory abomination that was Section 28 with civil partnerships.

    Paving the way for a landmark reform, something which would not have happened without Labour votes in Parliament, the progressive triumph of gay marriage.

    And Conference, as we look forward to the General Election to come, determined to win a Labour majority, I want you all to know:

    As the Labour and Co-operative MP for Morley & Outwood – majority just one thousand, one hundred and one – the seat David Cameron needed to win to get a Tory majority in 2010 and, because of our hard work and determination, the seat he failed to win… Conference, I am up for the battle to come.

    And as Chair of our Economic Policy Commission, I know this whole party is up for the battle to come. And Conference, please join me in thanking my co-Chair, Margaret Beckett, for her continuing hard work and service to this party not just over the past year but over four decades in Parliament.

    And Conference, as a proud member of the Unite and Unison trade unions, I know this whole movement is up for the battle to come.

    So in the coming months let us lay the foundations for the General Election.

    Selecting the best Parliamentary Candidates we have ever had, with more women candidates in key seats than ever before.

    Winning council seats and by-elections up and down the country with the toughest and best generation of local government leaders we have ever had.

    Winning more seats in the European elections. And let us end the stain on our country’s reputation by kicking the BNP out of the European Parliament.

    And Conference, in next September’s Scottish referendum.

    With Alistair Darling, Johann Lamont and Margaret Curran now showing so powerfully that the arguments for separation are falling apart.

    With Alex Salmond in a state of total confusion on the single most important economic decision a country can take – which currency to have: first he wanted the Euro – saying sterling was a “millstone around our neck” and now he wants independence but to keep the pound all the same.

    Let us win the argument that we are Better Together in next year’s Scottish referendum.

    Demonstrating, as Carwyn Jones and Welsh Labour have done so brilliantly, that it is our Labour values of co-operation, solidarity and social justice that best secure our union.

    And Conference, it is Labour whose leader is facing up to the need for reform in our party and in our country.

    Leading from the front – on phone-hacking, banking reform, putting the crisis of the ‘squeezed middle’ on the political agenda before anyone else.

    And who on Syria had the courage to stand up and say that if the case was sound and the United Nations was properly engaged, Labour would support military action, but that Labour would not support a gung-ho Prime Minister, putting decision before evidence in a reckless dash to conflict.

    Conference, Ed was right – and he prevailed. My friend, our leader, Britain’s next Prime Minister, Ed Miliband.

    And Conference, when David Cameron and William Hague now have the nerve to go round saying that Parliament’s refusal to be bounced into military action in Syria has ‘diminished’ Britain, let us reply: no Labour government will ever stand aside when terrible atrocities are committed and international law is broken.

    But Conference, we know what has diminished Britain.

    Flouncing out of a European summit, leaving Britain isolated and without influence. That’s what has diminished Britain.

    Absurdly comparing Britain to Greece and choking off business confidence and our recovery as a result. That’s what has diminished Britain.

    Stigmatising the unemployed and the low paid and calling them shirkers, driving vans round out streets telling immigrants to ‘go home’, attacking our police and teachers and social workers, peddling the lie that ‘Britain is broken’. That’s what has diminished Britain.

    Conference, we know who diminishes Britain.

    David Cameron has diminished Britain.

    Conference, we all remember what David Cameron and George Osborne said three years ago on the economy.

    They claimed in 2010 that faster tax rises and deeper spending cuts would secure the economic recovery and make it stronger…

    They said their plan would make people better off and get the deficit down.

    And on every test they set themselves, this Prime Minister and Chancellor have failed.

    They didn’t secure the recovery, they choked it off – as we warned – and flatlined our economy for three wasted and damaging years.

    They claimed living standards would rise – but they’ve fallen year on year.

    They made the number one test of their economic credibility keeping the triple A credit rating – but on their watch Britain has been downgraded, not once but twice.

    They promised to balance the books in 2015 – but the deficit is now set to be over £90 billion.

    And now after three wasted years, David Cameron and George Osborne now try to claim their plan has worked after all.

    Worked? It may have worked for a privileged few at the top, but for the million young people trapped out of work, this Tory plan isn’t working.

    For millions of ordinary families, worried about how to make ends meet when wages are falling, and prices are going up

    For the young couples struggling to get on the housing ladder because the chronic shortage of homes is forcing up prices

    For ordinary working families – the aspirational majority – who work hard, pay their taxes, who want to get on and not just get by, but who are working harder for less as the cost of living keeps on rising

    This Tory plan isn’t working.

    And for the 400,000 disabled adults forced to pay the Government’s perverse and deeply unfair bedroom tax, this Tory plan has failed them absolutely. And that is why in our first Budget the next Labour government will repeal the bedroom tax.

    So when David Cameron and George Osborne say that everything that is happening in the economy is down to them.

    Let us remind them:

    – Prices rising faster than wages for 38 out of the 39 months since David Cameron entered Downing Street

    – 3 years of flatlining

    – The slowest recovery for over 100 years

    – A million young people out of work

    – Welfare spending soaring

    – More borrowing to pay for their economic failure

    That is their economic record. And we will not let them forget it.

    I say to David Cameron and George Osborne: you can’t just air-brush away three wasted years, you can’t just air-brush away your economic failure.

    And as for their claim that “we’re all in this together’, we don’t hear that line much anymore.

    Conference, with the deficit still high and ordinary families struggling with a cost of living crisis, how can it be right or fair for David Cameron and George Osborne to have chosen this year to give the richest people in the country, earning over £150,000 a year, a £3 billion tax cut?

    And isn’t it now clear whose side David Cameron and George Osborne are really on?

    Cutting taxes for hedge funds.

    Trying to bribe working people to give up their rights.

    Country suppers at Chequers for Tory party fund-raising.

    Protecting the privileges of the few, while the many work hard and don’t see the benefit.

    For all their claims to be modernisers, with Cameron and Osborne, it’s not been “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?” it’s “Who Wants to Help a Millionaire?”

    Not “phone a friend”, but “cut taxes for your friends.”

    Not “50-50” but “winner takes all”.

    Conference, isn’t it about time they “asked the audience”?

    Because we know the truth. The country knows the truth.

    David Cameron and George Osborne.

    For the few, not the many.

    More of the same, from the same old Tories.

    Conference, after three years of stagnation, it’s good news that our economy has finally started to grow again.

    It was growing three years ago before they choked it off.

    So don’t listen to the Tory propaganda that says Labour doesn’t want the economy to grow.

    What nonsense. Because when the economy is in recession we know which communities lose out. When unemployment becomes entrenched, we know which constituencies suffer most. When the cost of living is rising, we know which families are hardest hit.

    We know that three years of flat lining – far longer than any of us expected – have caused long-term damage: businesses bankrupt, investment and capacity lost, long-term unemployment entrenched.

    And now even as growth finally returns, with prices still rising faster than wages, with business investment still weak, with unemployment still rising in half the country, with bank lending to business still falling, we can’t be satisfied.

    For millions of families this is no recovery at all.

    And when around the world emerging markets are jittery, China is slowing, oil prices are rising and the Eurozone is still stuck with chronic low growth, I say this is no time for complacency, to sit back with fingers crossed.

    And that is why we have urged George Osborne to act to secure a strong recovery.

    Because what Britain needs is strong enough growth so that we can catch up the ground we have lost and so that everyone can feel the benefit.

    Not a recovery that only works for some, not early hikes in interest and mortgage rates as a weak British economy hits the inflationary buffers, but a recovery that works for all and is built to last.

    That is why, along with voices from the Bank of England and the IMF, we are right to be concerned that the Government is boosting housing demand – with a taxpayer mortgage guarantee on houses of up to £600,000 – while doing nothing about the supply of housing which has fallen to its lowest level since the 1920s.

    George, it’s basic economics. If you push up housing demand, but don’t act to boost housing supply, all that happens is that you push house prices up and up. And the end result is that the very people your policy should be helping – young first time buyers – will find it even harder to get on the housing ladder.

    And Conference, I have to ask, when we need to secure stronger growth and invest for the future, how can it make sense for George Osborne to be planning to cut infrastructure investment in 2015?

    That is why we have consistently said, it is why the IMF have said, bring forward £10 billion of infrastructure investment right now, build 400,000 affordable houses over the next two years, create half a million jobs and thousands of apprenticeships. That is the way to secure an economy that works for all and is built to last.

    But Conference, we can’t rely on George Osborne to do the right thing.

    And we stand to inherit a very difficult situation.

    After three wasted years of lost growth, far from balancing the books, in 2015 there is now set to be a deficit of over £90 billion.

    David Cameron and George Osborne’s failure on the economy has led to their failure to get the deficit down, and it will be up to the next Labour government to finish the job.

    And I need to be straight with this Conference and the country about what that means.

    The government’s day to day spending totals for 2015/16 will have to be our starting point. Any changes to the current spending plans for that year will be fully funded and set out in advance in our manifesto. There will be no more borrowing for day to day spending. And we will set out tough fiscal rules – to balance the current budget and get the national debt on a downward path.

    Of course Labour will always make different choices.

    We will combine iron discipline on spending control with a fairer approach to deficit reduction.

    And with our zero-based review – a review of every pound spent by government from the bottom up – Rachel Reeves and my Shadow Cabinet colleagues have begun the work of identifying savings so that we can switch resources to Labour’s priorities.

    But we won’t be able to reverse all the spending cuts and tax rises the Tories have pushed through.

    And we will have to govern with less money around. The next Labour government will have to make cuts too. Because while jobs and growth are vital to getting the deficit down – something this government has never understood – they cannot magic the whole deficit away at a stroke.

    So delivering our Labour goals will be harder than at any time in living memory.

    But it can be done – if we get people back to work and strengthen our economy, cut out waste and focus relentlessly on our priorities, and make sure difficult choices are not ducked, but are rooted in our values, in fairness and in common sense.

    So Conference, at a time when the public services that pensioners rely on are under such pressure, we cannot continue paying the winter fuel allowance to the richest five per cent of pensioners.

    We won’t be able to reverse the Government’s cuts to child benefit for the highest earners.

    We will keep the benefits cap, but make sure it properly reflects local housing costs.

    We will have a cap on structural social security spending.

    And yes, over the long-term, as our population ages, there will need to be increases in the retirement age.

    But a fairer approach to deficit reduction means we will also crack down on tax avoidance, scrap the shares for rights scheme and reverse the tax cut for hedge funds.

    And we will insist that all the proceeds from the sale of our stakes in Lloyds and RBS are used not for a one-off pre-election tax giveaway – but instead every penny of profit used to repay the national debt.

    Conference, fiscal responsibility in the national interest.

    And with our zero-based review, we will make different choices.

    So we will ask: can we improve care and save money, as Andy Burnham has proposed, by pooling health and social care as a single service, with a single budget and joint management?

    And Conference, we will repeal the damaging and costly Tory privatisation of the NHS.

    And we will ask: does it really make sense to have separate costly management and bureaucracy for so many separate government departments, agencies, fire services and police forces?

    And Conference, we won’t pay for new free schools in areas where there are excess school places, while parents in other areas are struggling to get their children into a local school,

    And on infrastructure, we need more long-term investment – and we will assess the case for capital investment as we prepare our Manifesto – but we must also set the right priorities and get value for money.

    Conference, we support investment in better transport links for the future. And we continue to back the idea of a new North-South rail link.

    But under this government the High Speed 2 project has been totally mismanaged and the costs have shot up to £50 billion.

    David Cameron and George Osborne have made clear they will go full steam ahead with this project – no matter how much the costs spiral up and up. They seem willing to put their own pride and vanity above best value for money for the taxpayer.

    Labour will not take this irresponsible approach. So let me be clear, in tough times – when there is less money around and a big deficit to get down – there will be no blank cheque from me as a Labour Chancellor for this project or for any project.

    Because the question is – not just whether a new High Speed line is a good idea or a bad idea, but whether it is the best way to spend £50 billion for the future of our country.

    And Conference, in tough times it’s even more important that all our policies and commitments are properly costed and funded.

    The British people rightly want to know that the sums add up.

    So we will go one step further and ask the independent Office for Budget Responsibility – the watchdog set up by this government – to independently audit the costings of every individual spending and tax measure in Labour’s manifesto at the next election.

    This is the first time a Shadow Chancellor – the first time any political party in Britain – has ever said it wants this kind of independent audit.

    It’s a radical change from what’s gone before, but the right thing to do to help restore trust in politics.

    Conference, you know we need economic responsibility and fiscal rigour.

    And we can’t write all the details of our first Budget today – when we don’t know the state of the economy and public finances that we will inherit.

    But after three wasted years of Tory failure, people are rightly now asking what will Labour do differently.

    So now, with nineteen months to go to the election, this week is the right time to begin setting out Labour ‘s alternative.

    Conference, as Liam Byrne has said, Labour won’t stand aside when there are almost one million young people out of work, and when long-term unemployment is so high.

    And we know we can’t make our economy grow more strongly, get the costs of welfare down and deal with the deficit if we are squandering the talents of so many.

    So building on the success of Labour’s Future Jobs Fund – so short-sightedly scrapped by this government – we will introduce a Compulsory Jobs Guarantee for young people and the long-term unemployed.

    We will fund this by a repeat of the tax on bank bonuses and by restricting pension tax relief for the very highest earners to the same rate as the average taxpayer.

    And we will work with employers to make sure there will be a paid job for all young people out of work for more than 12 months and adults out of work for two years or more, which people will have to take up or lose benefits.

    That is welfare reform that works.

    Matching rights with responsibilities.

    Getting young people into work and ending the scourge of long-term unemployment once and for all.

    Conference, when people get into work they should always be better off – it should always pay more to be in work than on benefits.

    So we must do more to make work pay.

    The national minimum wage is one of Labour’s proudest achievements.

    It was opposed by the Tories every step of the way.

    Even now some Conservatives say the minimum wage should be suspended.

    And its value has fallen by 5 per cent in real terms since 2010.

    So Labour must now fight to protect and strengthen the national minimum wage.

    Increasing the fines for those who exploit workers.

    Strengthening the national minimum wage, restoring its value and catching up the ground lost over the last three years.

    And encouraging employers to go further and pay the Living Wage.

    And Conference, to move Labour on from the past and put Labour where it should always be – on the side of working people – we will introduce a lower 10p starting rate of tax.

    Conference, a tax cut for 25 million hard-working people on middle and lower incomes.

    And we will pay for it by introducing a mansion tax on properties worth over £2m, introduced in a fair way, so that foreign investors who buy up property in London to make a profit will finally pay a proper tax contribution to our country.

    But for many families high child care costs are a real problem and can mean that it doesn’t even add up to go to work.

    Childcare is a vital part of our economic infrastructure that, alongside family support and flexible working, should give parents the choice to stay at home with their children when they are very small and to balance work and family as they grow older.

    So to make work pay for families, we must act.

    Stephen Twigg set out yesterday how we will guarantee childcare available for all primary school children from 8am to 6pm.

    But we need to do more for families with nursery age children too.

    Conference, after the financial crisis, it is right that the banks make a greater contribution.

    And here is how we can.

    In the last financial year, the banks paid a staggering £2.7bn less in overall tax than they did in 2010.

    Over the last two years the government’s bank levy has raised £1.6 billion less than even they said it would.

    At a time when resources are tight and families are under pressure that cannot be right.

    So I can announce today, the next Labour government will increase the bank levy rate to raise an extra £800m a year.

    And we will use the money, for families where all parents are in work, to increase free childcare places for 3 and 4 years olds from 15 hours to 25 hours a week.

    For the first time, parents will be able to work part-time without having to worry about the cost of childcare.

    Making work pay.

    Tackling the cost of living crisis.

    A radical transformation in the provision of childcare in our country.

    And we need a radical transformation in our economy too.

    Because in the twenty-first century, the companies and countries that will succeed will be those who can exploit the huge opportunities the new digital age and the era of big data are bringing – in high-value manufacturing, digital media, education and medical technology.

    And the question is whether we will seize this opportunity or squander it?

    Because we and British business know we have no future trying to undercut emerging market economies like India, China and Brazil on cost and wages.

    And that is why so many companies look at this Government’s record on industrial policy with increasing dismay:

    The RDAs abolished.

    The Heseltine growth review neutered.

    The Business Bank a damp squib.

    Apprenticeships for young people falling.

    Energy policy in chaos.

    Borrowing powers for the Green Investment Bank postponed.

    And on infrastructure, dither, delay and inaction.

    Conference, we cannot succeed as a country with this ‘race to the bottom’, deregulation, laissez-faire and old-style ‘trickle-down economics’.

    It’s a narrow and defeatist vision.

    Doomed to fail.

    And we have seen it fail before.

    Just look at the British car industry in the 1970s and 1980s. Trying to compete on cost. Cutting back on innovation, quality and skills. Plagued by terrible industrial relations.

    And now look at the renaissance of Jaguar Land Rover – creating thousands more jobs and exporting round the world.

    Not by cutting corners, but based on world-class, long-term investment in innovation, skills and supply-chains.

    Chuka Umunna and I are determined to learn from this success. And I can announce that Mike Wright, Executive Director at Jaguar Land Rover, will now lead a review for us on how we can help strengthen our manufacturing supply-chains and deliver the skills and innovation Britain needs to succeed.

    Following Sir George Cox’s review on short-termism, we will change takeover rules, and corporate incentives and reform our tax system to stop short-term asset-stripping and support long-term investment.

    And why not use any revenues from the planned increase in the licence fees for the mobile phone spectrum, expected to be over £1billion in the next parliament, to capitalise the British Investment Bank so that, region by region, we can get small and growing businesses the finance they need to grow and create jobs?

    And Conference, we will set up an the independent Infrastructure Commission, as recommended to us by the Chair of the Olympic Delivery Authority, Sir John Armitt, to end dither and delay in infrastructure planning.

    We will legislate for a statutory banking code of conduct and demand real reform and cultural change from the banks.

    We will legislate for a decarbonisation target for 2030 and unlock billions of pounds in new investment in renewables, nuclear and clean gas and coal technology.

    And we will give the Green Investment Bank the borrowing powers it needs to do its job.

    Conference, that is what the next Labour government will do.

    So Conference, even in difficult times, even as we face a huge deficit, we will rise to the challenge and build an economy that works for the many and not just a few at the top.

    And we know it can be done.

    Because we have done it before.

    Conference, we are not the first Labour generation to face a huge deficit and the need for spending restraint and a country crying out for change.

    We are not the first generation to be awed by the scale of what needs to be done to transform our country.

    And as we prepare for the 2015 General Election, to be held in the seventieth anniversary year of the end of the second world war, let us take our inspiration from the great reforming Labour government of 1945.

    That past Labour generation faced huge economic and fiscal challenges. But they did not flinch. And they built lasting change: new homes for returning heroes, a universal welfare state, and a National Health Service which, sixty-five years on, is still a beacon of British values, Labour values – for all and not just a privileged few.

    So Conference let us not be the Labour generation that flinched in the face of hardship.

    Let us show we will not duck the great challenges we will face on spending and the deficit.

    And let us build an economy that works for all working families in every part of Britain.

    So in the coming weeks and months, when people ask what would a Labour government do, let’s go out and tell them:

    Jobs for young people guaranteed.

    Expanding free childcare.

    A British Investment Bank.

    Infrastructure delivered.

    Green investment unlocked.

    The deficit down fairly.

    Tax cuts for millions – not millionaires.

    Reforming our banks.

    The minimum wage raised.

    Our NHS saved.

    Tackling tax avoidance.

    Rail fares capped.

    The bedroom tax scrapped.

    Building the homes we need.

    This what a Labour government could do.

    Let us together make it happen.

    Thank you.

  • Ed Balls – 2013 Speech to National House-Building Council

    balls

    Below is the text of the speech made by Ed Balls to the National House-Building Council lunch in 2013.

     

    Thank you Isabel and to the National House-Building Council for inviting me to speak to your prestigious and superbly attended annual lunch, now in its 77th year.

    Over that time, this Council’s mission to ensure quality and high standards in house-building has been copied around the world.

    Founded to ensure that high standards were sustained during the house building surge of the 1930s, you repeated that task as government and the house building industry came together to build homes for returning heroes after the second world war.

    And my message today is that the work of this Council and a strong partnership between government and this industry will be essential over the next decade as we move into what I believe must a new era of house-building.

    It will be difficult, but I believe we can forge a consensus across parties and across our country that Britain simply won’t be able to tackle the cost-of-living crisis that we currently face – or build the strong economy that we need to take us to a more prosperous future – unless we build more homes.

    So as Shadow Chancellor, and with our new Shadow Housing Minister, Emma Reynolds, I am delighted to be here today to discuss with you why we believe housing must be at the centre of Britain’s economic policy.

    Recovery

    We meet here today with economic recovery finally getting going again after a long and damaging period of stagnation, and that return to growth is something to celebrate and nurture.

    But with business investment still on hold, bank lending to SMEs still contracting, youth unemployment still very high, house completions still historically very low and living standards still falling for millions – meaning that for most people there is so far no recovery at all – this is no time for complacency.

    Because there is no quick fix. We have to earn our way to rising prosperity. But we will not succeed unless we use the talents of all and ensure that everyone can benefit from economic recovery and not just a few.

    That is why we believe it is so vital that government works closely with all businesses – large and small: to promote open markets, competition and long-term wealth creation; and to reform our economy so that, by using and investing in the talents of all, we can deliver rising living standards not just for a few but for everyone in every part of the country.

    And building more homes will be central to that vision.

    Of course, you might say that Labour did not move early enough to put house building at the centre of our economic policy when we were in power.

    You’d be right to say so.

    When we came into office in 1997, our priority was to tackle the huge backlog in housing repairs.

    Improving the housing stock we had was important, but the housing studies that you contributed to, which were hugely influential when we made the decision rightly not to join the euro, also highlighted the vital importance of boosting housing supply.

    Kate Barker’s subsequent review of housing supply, which we commissioned when I was at the Treasury in 2003, is rightly seen as a landmark document for the industry.

    And when we did put in place the investment, planning reforms and leadership, we together accelerated the rate of house-building to its highest level since 1989.

    Successive governments could – and should – have done more to build homes. The last Labour Government didn’t do enough at the beginning, but we did champion house-building – not just before the financial crisis but once it had begun too – because we recognised the importance of the long-term investment and jobs that it brings.

    And as a result of the work we did together to launch the ‘zero carbon homes’ strategy, this industry has shown a commitment to innovation and design to cut carbon emissions that has surpassed many other sectors – despite the current Government’s less than enthusiastic commitment.

    In recent years, your sector has been one of those worst hit by the recession, with 18,000 jobs lost in construction since the General Election. But after a long and protracted period of stagnation, in which in this industry capacity and skills have gone to waste and permanent damage has been done, the economic recovery does appear to be getting going.

    And there are early signs that house-building is starting to see a modest recovery.

    Today’s increase in home starts is welcome but the number of homes built over the past year is down eight per cent compared with the year before and the supply of affordable homes is at a near 10-year low.

    And at a time when rising life expectancy means increasingly families now have four generations and not three, new homes are currently being built at less than half the level that our country needs and it is the youngest generation that is set to lose out.

    Under this Government house building is at its lowest peacetime level since the 1920s. And by 2020, we are on course to have a shortfall of over 2 million homes.

    In my community, the weakening of the ‘brownfield first’ presumption is undermining sustainable development in an area where viable brownfield sites are widely available.

    And across the country, the combination of lower government financial support and planning changes have contributed to a falling share for affordable homes within overall housing starts, with affordable housing starts down over a quarter in the last year.

    So there is also still a huge amount of ground to be made up, and damage to be undone, before we get close to returning to pre-downturn levels.

    I believe that there are two central challenges for economic policy in the Autumn Statement and the coming months: how do we secure a strong balanced recovery which can deliver rising living standards for all and not just a few; and how do we ensure it is built to last and supports long-term investment.

    Both of these challenges require us to put house-building centre stage.

    That is what the Government must do.

    It is what we will do.

    Let me take each one in turn.

    Who is benefiting from this recovery?

    First, falling living standards mean that, on average, working people are now over £1,600 a year worse off than they were at the last General Election.

    And there is a very important housing market dimension to the cost of living crisis.

    Many people today can’t access mortgages because of the difficulty of saving up for a deposit.

    In 1997, it took an average family just three years to save for a deposit on a home. Today, it takes an average of 22 years.

    But the cost-of-living challenge is about much more than mortgage availability – it’s about mortgage affordability too.

    Soaring house prices mean it’s simply too expensive for many people to get onto the housing ladder.

    You just have to look at house prices relative to earnings. Today, the average house costs ten times the average wage, compared to 5 times the average wage twenty years ago. And the fact is that this house price-earnings gap is continuing to widen.

    Much of the debate recently has been around Help to Buy. I will return to this in a moment.

    But Shelter estimate that high house prices mean first-time buyers on average earnings can afford to use the scheme in just 16 per cent of the country.

    Unless we build more affordable homes, house prices relative to earnings will remain high, houses will remain unaffordable, and many people will never realize their dream of owning their own home.

    And high house prices and the shortage of affordable housing directly impacts on rent affordability too.

    With more people now renting in the private sector than the social sector for the first time in decades, the cost of renting in the private rented sector has increased by twice as much as the rate of wages since the General Election.

    And the high cost of the private rented sector is not only bad news for families; it also hits the public finances hard too.

    As our previous Shadow Housing Minister, Jack Dromey, reminded me regularly, thirty years ago, around 80 per cent of public spending on housing was spent on building houses for people. Today, 95 per cent of total housing spending goes on housing benefit to subsidise high and unaffordable rents.

    Any sensible and sustainable attempt to cap structural social security spending and get the housing benefit bill down simply has to involve expanding the supply of more housing.

    Is this recovery built to last?

    Building more homes is essential to tackling the cost-of-living crisis. But house-building must also be at the centre of an economic plan to build a strong and sustained and balanced recovery.

    So far this year, the recovery has not been based on creating a significantly greater supply of new homes; instead, it has been built on generating greater demand when we already face a critical shortage.

    We have and continue to support ‘Help to Buy’ as one element in a balanced housing plan to secure economic recovery. It is vital that we give those with some savings who want to buy a home access to the housing market.

    The first phase, targeted at first time buyers in new build properties, was slow to get going but, alongside Funding for Lending, it has helped to unlock finance from a dysfunctional lending market.

    But the Government’s second phase of Help to Buy, with taxpayer-guaranteed 95% mortgages available to purchased existing properties, has been widely criticized, including by the former Governor of the Bank of England, the Institute of Directors and the IMF who warned:

    “in the absence of an adequate supply response, the result would ultimately be mostly house price increases that would work against the aim of boosting access to housing”.

    Commentators are right to question why the Chancellor has decided that a policy, which should be about helping first time buyers, is available for homes worth all the way up £600,000 and why this policy will allow existing mortgage holders to re-mortgage their current property with a taxpayer-backed mortgages.

    The Chancellor has said he will ask the Bank of England to review the details of the scheme in a year’s time.

    We believe a year is too long to wait.

    So I propose the details of the scheme should be reviewed now and then every six months thereafter, to make sure that is contributing to a balanced recovery that is built to last.

    But the fundamental flaw in the Chancellor’s current plan is to rely on securing lasting recovery by boosting housing demand, while failing to take any action to boost housing supply.

    If Help to Buy merely boosts demand for housing without being matched by action to increase housing supply, then house prices will rise and rise.

    The danger with this kind of unbalanced approach is that home ownership will be pushed even further out of reach for the aspiring first time buyers that Help to Buy should be helping.

    And at the same time, boosting demand without building more homes risks delivering an unbalanced recovery that will only make the economy more vulnerable in the future.

    When what this industry and our country needs is long-term certainty about rising housing supply so that you can plan ahead with confidence.

    Building more homes

    That is why I believe the challenge for the Autumn Statement, and the next Labour Government, is to match support for first time buyers with action now to boost housing supply.

    We have to be more ambitious.

    That is why, a year ago, Shadow Communities Secretary Hilary Benn, Jack Dromey and I urged the Chancellor to use the revenues from the sale of the 4G mobile spectrum to build 100,000 new affordable homes over the next two years.

    It is why we continue to support the IMF in urging the Government to bring forward £10 billion of infrastructure investment this year and next year.

    And it is why at our conference in September, Ed Miliband set out our commitment to build at least 200,000 new homes a year by 2020 – through a roadmap to support the private sector in building more homes, including more affordable homes, and a planning system that helps, not hinders, house-building.

    In setting out our ambition, we have asked Sir Michael Lyons to lead a new housing commission to advise us on what needs to be done to achieve our goal.

    The Independent Lyons commission will look at:

    – How we can get much more residential land to market;

    – What flexibilities could be granted to local authorities to they can build more affordable homes;

    – How we can ensure that communities that want to expand but do not have the land on which to grant planning permission can do so;

    – Whether the current planning gain system is fit for purpose;

    – And whether land made available for development is being land-banked in a damaging way and how this can be prevented.

    We will certainly want to hear your views on all of these issues.

    Because history shows us that developers, communities, local councils and national government all need to work together effectively to create homes people want to live in and towns that can become economically independent, are well connected to the regional economy, and generate local jobs.

    What we need to achieve requires a scale of ambition not seen for many decades.

    And I am not blind to the scale of the challenge and the difficulties that lie ahead.

    Nor do I expect you to overlook the fact that I am not the first politician to come to an event like this and promise change.

    But I have a very clear message.

    A Labour Treasury will make house-building a priority and play its full part in delivering the scale of change we need.

    And because of the scale of the deficit we can now expect to inherit in 2015, we will need to find innovative ways of supporting private sector investment to deliver that priority.

    If we are to meet that target of at least 200,000 new homes a year by the end of the next parliament, while protecting communities, preserving valuable green belt land, avoiding haphazard urban sprawl and encouraging quality housing in sustainable communities , then every community will need to play its part and plan for the next generation.

    But we are also clear that we cannot deliver this ambition unless we build new towns.

    Our priority will be to create ways in which a local authority or groups of authorities are incentivised to come forward to identify locations capable of sustaining large scale sites for New Towns and Garden Cities.

    With the Lyons Commission we will examine whether and how to give new town development corporations the right to:

    – keep increased revenue from business rates as a revenue stream to finance investment – and to use the increased value of land to generate further capital for investment;

    – acquire and assemble land;

    – and plan and develop the infrastructure needed, bringing together the agencies and utilities who will need to participate in that process to deliver it.

    We should draw on the lessons from the past of how the New Towns were developed after the Second World War by Development Corporations, which had the powers to acquire, own, manage and dispose of land and property; undertake building operation; provide public utilities; and do anything else necessary to develop the New Town.

    But as we concluded when considering this issue in Government, these powers alone are not enough.

    These Corporations generated revenue by selling land and housing, receiving rental income and receiving commercial income.

    However, they needed up front funding to build the infrastructure and housing which could later be sold at a profit.

    George Osborne has shown himself willing to use the Government’s balance sheet to guarantee some house building – but in particular demand through guaranteeing household mortgages.

    And yet we read that the New Towns which you heard about a year ago have stalled.

    The Government is providing guarantees of up to £12 billion for Help to Buy. He should now step up to the plate to back the supply of new houses in New Towns.

    Providing guarantees to Development Corporations could be essential to provide backing for a large-scale growth programme to provide confidence, reduce risk and give credibility to the development.

    We cannot afford to dither any longer – and I cannot see a stronger case for the full throated backing of the Chancellor than a step change in housing supply.

    To do that we will need the full backing of the Labour Government, including the Treasury, for new towns – willing to devolve the powers, determined to provide the resources, and showing the leadership and vision that is sadly lacking in Government at the moment.

    Infrastructure

    And to make this work, working with communities, we also need to make sure we deliver the infrastructure that allows towns to become thriving communities.

    For decades, successive governments have too often ducked and delayed the vital decisions we need to make on Britain’s long-term infrastructure.

    We are determined to change that. And that was why we asked Sir John Armitt, Chair of the Olympic Delivery Authority, to look at how we can better identify, plan and deliver infrastructure for future generations.

    We cannot simply wait until the next general election to implement his proposals in statute.

    So I have today written to Sir John asking him to:

    – Produce a draft white paper based on his report, which sets out in detail the policy, administrative and legislative steps necessary to establish and operate a National Infrastructure Commission;

    – Explore the advisory input needed in order to deliver a successful Infrastructure Commission;

    – And prepare draft legislation to establish the National Infrastructure Commission.

    This landmark reform is vital. And we are determined to work with you – on infrastructure, as well as on skills, planning and housing finance – to build a recovery that is built to last and ensure that more people can own their home and share in rising prosperity.

    Conclusion

    Let me end by saying this.

    We know that house-building can transform our country’s future prospects.

    Because we have seen it before.

    The next General Election will mark the seventieth anniversary of the end of the Second World War.

    Back then, our country faced huge economic and fiscal challenges.

    But the Government of the day, in partnership with this industry, succeed in achieving lasting change.

    And at the heart of it was a bold and radical plan to build more homes.

    As a result, London was reborn as the vibrant, thriving capital city that we know today.

    And a series of successful, economically independent new towns emerged around it.

    We need the same kind of ambition today to solve our housing crisis.

    The only way to achieve the lasting change we need is by working with you to create greater supply of new houses.

    So the next Labour government is committed to:

    – building at least 200,000 new homes a year by 2020;

    – maintaining high standards across the sector;

    – reforming the planning system;

    – and investing in the infrastructure and skills we will need.

    This is the best way to help secure a strong, balanced recovery that everyone can benefit from and that is built to last.

    And I look forward to continuing to work with you in the months and years to come.

  • Ed Balls – 2013 Speech at Thomson Reuters

    balls

    Below is the text of the speech made by Ed Balls, the Shadow Chancellor, to Thomson Reuters on 3rd June 2013.

     

    INTRODUCTION

    Three years into this coalition government, and three weeks before the Chancellor completes his much-trailed Spending Review for 2015/16, it makes sense now to set out Labour’s approach.

    In my speech today, I want to make three central arguments.

    First, that this Spending Review is a sign not of strength but of weakness. It is happening because the Chancellor’s economic policies have failed catastrophically – on living standards, economic growth and on deficit reduction too. It is this economic failure that is the background to this month’s Spending Review.

    Second, the Prime Minister and the Chancellor are making a terrible mistake in ploughing on with their failing plan: increasing the price the British people will pay now and in the future for this failure. Action for growth this year, next year and the years after should instead be the purpose of any spending review this summer.

    And third, the next Labour government must start planning now for what will be a very difficult inheritance. We can now expect to inherit an economy with families under real financial pressure, businesses that have lost vital opportunities to invest, and public finances in poor shape, despite deep cuts to vital public services. This bleak inheritance is now more likely because of the missed opportunity of this Spending Review.

    My message to David Cameron, George Osborne and the Tory-led coalition is this:

    Our country should not be forced to put up with two more years of your failing plan.

    Your experiment with austerity economics has failed on living standards, jobs and growth and on deficit reduction too – and the British people are paying the price for this failure.

    Your doctrine of so-called ‘expansionary fiscal contraction’ – that the faster you cut public spending, the greater the boost to private investment and growth – has been exposed as intellectually bankrupt. Even the IMF now says your plans are ‘a drag on growth’.

    And your fixation on unbalanced, old-style ‘trickle-down economics’ – the belief that cutting taxes only for the highest earners will lead to more investment and growth, with wage rises trickling down for everyone else – has been equally discredited.

    Because while the highest earners have got their tax cut, everyone else is seeing prices rising faster than wages – which are falling in real terms.

    Where the Conservatives have failed, our task is to strike the right balance for the British economy:

    – between living standards, growth and deficit reduction;

    – about where the burden falls between the wealthy and everyone else;

    – and between short-term priorities and the vital long-term investments we must make now to safeguard future generations.

    But I have an equally tough message for my Labour colleagues.

    The situation we will inherit will require a very different kind of Labour government to those which have gone before.

    We can expect to inherit plans for further deep cuts to departmental budgets at a time when the deficit will still be very large and the national debt rising.

    At the time of the 2010 Spending Review, the Office for Budget Responsibility forecast that the deficit would fall to £18bn in 2015-16.

    It is now forecast to be £96bn – that’s £78bn higher, even with the further deep cuts in public spending which the Chancellor has programmed in for 2015-16.

    And this means that, because this Government’s austerity economics has failed, we will have to govern in a very different way and in circumstances very different to what we have known for many years. We will inherit a substantial deficit. We will have to govern with much less money around. We will need to show an iron discipline.

    Delivering our Labour goals – supporting families and communities, tackling disadvantage, spreading educational opportunity, safeguarding our NHS, investing for the future – will be more difficult than at any time in our living memory, certainly since the post-war Labour government of 1945. But it can be done.

    And it will make our economic task – to raise living standards, increase growth and wealth creation by building a reformed One Nation economy where we use, and invest in, the talents and industry of all and not just some – even more vital.

    Today is the right time to start the discussion about how we should prepare for the difficult decisions we will face in 2015 – our different priorities for Britain, the plans we must make, the strength of our resolve and the trust we must win.

    A FAILED ECONOMIC PLAN 

    First, this summer’s Spending Review is happening now because the Chancellor’s economic plan has failed.

    Following the global financial crisis, any Government would have been cutting spending and raising taxes in this Parliament. Family budgets would be under pressure, and protecting jobs would have had to come before pay rises in the public sector.

    The challenge was to strike the right balance between economic growth and deficit reduction, and to do so in a fair way so that middle and lower income families did not bear the whole burden and those on higher incomes pulled their weight.

    But instead the Conservative-led coalition gambled on getting the pain over quickly – early tax rises, including the VAT rise they ruled out pre-election, alongside faster and deeper spending cuts – on a political timetable to create room for pre-election giveaways.

    A further round of deep spending cuts after 2015 was certainly not part of the plan.

    At the last Spending Review, George Osborne attacked those who urged a more balanced plan and a greater focus on supporting economic growth, saying this alternative course:

    “envisaged the Chancellor of the Exchequer standing here in 2014 and presenting a spending review that still had years of cutting public spending ahead of it.”

    Which is exactly what he is now preparing to do.

    In Budget 2011, he said:

    “We have had to undertake difficult measures. But we have already asked the British people for what is needed, and.. we do not need to ask for more.”

    Now the Chancellor says he has no choice but to come back for more – more cuts in 2015/16.

    And the reason is simple – the 2010 Budget and Spending Review, which were supposed to make things better, have in fact made things much worse – choking off the recovery, crushing living standards and flatlining the economy.

    At a time when confidence was fragile, living standards falling, interest rates already at record lows, banks weak and inward-looking and when our main trading partner was in crisis…

    … trying, at that very time, to have the fastest fiscal tightening in our post-war history – too far, too fast – was a reckless gamble.

    And George Osborne’s austerity plan has not worked.

    A fortnight ago the International Monetary Fund, which once backed the Chancellor’s plan, called for a change of course – proposing “near-term support for the economy” – an immediate £10 billion boost to infrastructure investment to support growth.

    They changed their mind because they concluded that the impact of tax rises and spending cuts on economic growth – the fabled ‘fiscal multipliers’ – has turned out to be a much bigger drag on growth than they, the Government or the OBR originally thought.

    At the time of the 2010 Spending Review, the Government forecast that it would have grown by a healthy 6 per cent by now.

    Since 2010, we have seen growth of just 1.1 per cent in Britain – the slowest UK economic recovery for 100 years – compared to 2.9 per cent in Germany and 4.9 per cent in America.

    The Government tries to blame global forces – Euro zone weakness, and the impact of higher oil and food prices worldwide. But higher world prices cannot explain why over the last three years the UK has had a higher inflation rate than every other G7 country. Or why we have had the slowest growth of any G20 country other than Italy and Japan and actually lost export market share.

    As the Bank of England has pointed out, higher VAT, higher tuition fees and the sharp fall in the value of sterling since 2010 have driven up inflation and reduced the living standards of British families.

    It was the decision to try to accelerate fiscal tightening in 2010 that has proved, in the words of Financial Times commentator Martin Wolf, to be ‘a spectacular own goal.’

    An own goal because falling living standards, low growth and higher inflation – at a very high personal cost to communities and people – has also been toxic for the public finances and thrown deficit reduction wildly off course.

    The Government is now planning to borrow £245bn more than it planned up to 2015.

    And this has not happened because they have failed to cut departmental spending.

    This rise in borrowing has been almost entirely caused by a drastic fall in tax receipts compared to the Government’s 2010 plans, even after all the tax rises introduced in their first Budget.

    The impact of the failure to get growth could not be clearer.

    Tax receipts over this parliament are now set to be £274 billion lower than forecast in 2010. And while a small portion of this fall reflects discretionary policy decisions, such as cuts in corporation tax rates, the vast bulk – 95% – are non-discretionary forecast revisions.

    Which in the real world reflects squeezed families and companies that are earning less, making lower profits and paying less tax as a result of flatlining growth.

    The Government likes to boast that it has reduced the deficit by a third.

    But that reduction happened before their economic policies choked off the recovery.

    Since then, the collapse in tax revenues means that deficit reduction in this Parliament has now stalled.

    As the head of the OBR said in March:

    “We expect the underlying deficit to be stable at around £120 billion last year, this year and next year…”

    Which means that both of the Chancellor’s fiscal rules, as set in 2010, have been broken.

    In 2010 he said his first fiscal rule required the structural deficit, adjusted for the economic cycle, and excluding investment spending, to be in balance by 2015-16.

    The structural deficit is now forecast to be not a surplus of 0.9 per cent of GDP but a deficit of 1.2 per cent of GDP in 2015-16 – breaking that objective by a wide margin, even with the extra spending cuts that have now been programmed in for that year.

    And the second fiscal rule – to get the national debt falling by 2015 – has also been broken.

    The national debt is now set to be not 67.2 per cent in 2015-16 but 85.1 per cent of GDP, and it is now expected to rise until 2016-17 when it is forecast to peak at 85.6 per cent – a full £309 billion more debt than planned in 2010.

    This is the real background to this summer’s Spending Review – living standards falling, growth flatlining, a deficit reduction plan wildly off track and a coalition forced to extend cuts to public services into the next parliament.

    THE ECONOMIC IMPERATIVE 

    Of course, what matters now is not the bad choices that the Government has made, but what their policies promise for the future.

    Which is why the most worrying finding in the IMF report is that they believe the UK economy today is still ‘a long way from a strong and sustainable recovery’ and that ‘the risks are on the downside’.

    We know that the coalition is determined to stick with George Osborne’s austerity economics. We now know what the consequences are likely to be – squeezed living standards, sluggish growth and, despite all the pain, the deficit still high.

    But politics aside, there is no operational need for the Chancellor to set budgets now for 2015-16.

    It makes no economic sense for this Spending Review to ignore what is happening now in our economy, and focus only on departmental spending in 2015-16 – the first ‘one year only’ spending review since the mid-1990s.

    If he followed the pattern of 2010, he could wait until the autumn of 2014 before he sets them.

    Which takes me to my second central argument: this summer’s review of spending and the economy should be about action now to boost living standards, growth and long-term investment – this year and for future years.

    We need to shift now to a balanced plan – focusing on rising living standards and growth, maintaining a commitment to reduce deficits and spending, and making sure the burden is fairly shared.

    Given the Government’s failure so far, there are going to be big and painful choices on spending in 2015-16 and beyond.

    But those choices in the next Parliament will be hugely shaped by what happens in this.

    After nearly three years of flatlining, the Chancellor says any growth is better than no growth at all.

    Of course that’s true. But slow growth is nowhere near good enough.

    It won’t make up the ground we have lost over the last few years as other countries have raced ahead.

    Nor will it get long-term unemployment down, boost living standards, recoup lost business investment or generate the tax revenues we need to get the deficit down.

    Our analysis shows that to get the economy back to where it was forecast to be in 2015-16, the government now needs growth of 5.3 per cent a year, 1.3 per cent a quarter, over the next two years.

    But over that period the OBR currently expects average growth of just 1.7 per cent a year – 0.4 per cent a quarter – which means lower living standards, less tax, less investment and many billions less deficit reduction too.

    I fear, too, that if the world economy were to take another turn for the worst over the next few years – a second demand shock following the global financial crisis – this time the UK will be in a very much weakened position to deal with the consequences because of the stagnation of the last three years.

    The IMF said last month that the UK economy continuing to bump along the bottom “could permanently damage medium-term growth prospects” – compounding mistakes, not correcting them.

    Because the longer it takes to get the recovery moving, investment flowing and long-term unemployment down, the greater the damage to the underlying strength of the economy.

    If the fiscal multipliers are indeed higher, as the IMF now believes, then a balanced plan can do now to boost growth and job creation this year, next year and the year after will have a significantly larger impact on the public finances than the OBR estimates.

    But unless something is done in this spending review to get our economy growing sustainably faster this year and next, and so deliver higher tax revenues and lower spending on unemployment, then the prospects for departmental spending and public services in the next parliament will be much tougher than necessary.

    WHAT THE SPENDING REVIEW SHOULD DO NOW 

    That is why any spending review this summer should take immediate action to get the economy growing, invest in our long-term future and reform social security.

    Over the past two years, when the economy was totally stagnant, and when our economy has needed a quick and fast-acting shot in the arm, we have advocated a temporary VAT cut – alongside infrastructure spending, action on youth unemployment and targeted tax measures for business as part of our five point plan for growth.

    Today, with growth prospects still very uncertain and interest rates too low to be of use, a temporary VAT cut now is still the right prescription before extra capital spending can come on stream – although any immediate tax cut which helps middle and lower income families is better than nothing.

    But over the coming year if, as we all hope, some kind of recovery does take hold, then the balance of advantage will shift from temporary tax cuts to long-term capital investment.

    So we support the IMF’s call, consistent with medium-term fiscal consolidation, for the Government to act to boost capital spending over the next two years – financed by a temporary rise in borrowing as Labour has also urged – to build our way to a stronger recovery.

    With thousands of construction workers out of work and interest rates at record lows, there is a growing consensus that investing now in improving our infrastructure, particularly housing, would give an immediate boost to the economy, encourage more private sector investment, and give us a long-term return as we strengthen our economy for the future.

    If the entire infrastructure boost recommended by the IMF was spent on housing over the next two years, we calculate that it would allow the building of around 400,000 affordable homes across the country, and support over 600,000 new jobs in construction, including 10,000 apprenticeships…

    … supporting small businesses, helping people aspiring to buy their own home, reducing waiting lists, and easing upward pressure on rents and housing benefit bills.

    So to the Treasury and the Chief Secretary I say this: there is no point in vague promises about more capital spending in 2017 or 2020. We need action now. To secure the recovery and get tax revenues coming in, we need that capital spending boost brought forward – and invested this year and next year.

    The spending review also needs to end the current dither and delay on industrial policy and put in place long-term reforms to build a One Nation economy for the future.

    On long-term infrastructure, not only has the government invested billions less than the plans they inherited, but major projects are beset by dithering and delay.

    This is why we have called for the Davies Commission on aviation to report before the General Election; and why Ed Miliband and I have asked the chair of the Olympic Delivery Authority, Sir John Armitt, to examine how our country can have a process to take long term infrastructure decisions in a better way – across Parliaments and across the Parliamentary divide. Ministers should act on Armitt’s recommendations when he reports later this year.

    On energy, chronic policy uncertainty and the absence of any agreed plan across government means, as Caroline Flint has highlighted, vital investments and the opportunity to create green jobs are being lost. The government should be legislating now in the Energy Bill for a decarbonisation target for 2030 in order to give a framework for those seeking to invest in renewable, nuclear, and clean gas and coal technology.

    Labour, business and environmental groups are united on the urgency of acting now. But Ministers have shown an abdication of leadership by choosing to wait until 2016 before even making a decision. We will vote on Tuesday to make this happen – and, while the Conservative leadership has now set its face against action, I call on every Liberal Democrat who supports a low carbon future to join us and vote with us to make this change happen.

    On banking reform, the same pattern of fudge and delay is now characterising the government’s approach where the Chancellor is rejecting the recommendations of the Parliamentary Commission he set up. We need a back-stop power to break up the big banks if we don’t see real reform and cultural change.

    And, as Shadow Business Secretary Chuka Umunna has argued, a modern industrial policy also requires a proper British Investment Bank, support for vocational education and action on Sir George Cox’s recommendations on over-coming short-termism within British business.

    A Spending Review this summer also needs to make a start on long-term social security reform which rewards work.

    The fact is, for all the tough and divisive rhetoric, the benefits bill it is still rising, as Liam Byrne has exposed – revised up by over £20 billion since the 2010 spending review – the direct consequence of George Osborne’s austerity economics.

    The Conservative approach to welfare has simply been to slash tax credits and benefits across the board – regardless of who they hit. Millions of working people, redundant nurses desperately looking for work, disabled people in homes that Ministers have decided contain a ‘spare room’ – all hit just at the time when prices are rising faster than wages and unemployment is rising.

    Labour proposes serious policy action to tackle the underlying drivers of rising working-age benefits, with:

    – A compulsory jobs guarantee – a paid job for every young person out of work for 12 months or more and over 25 unemployed for over two years – which they will be obliged to take or face losing benefits;

    – A fair cap on household benefits – not one that costs more than it saves, and which takes account of housing costs in different parts of the country – with an independent body, like the Low Pay Commission, advising on whether the cap should be higher in high-cost housing areas like London, but potentially lower in other parts of the country;

    – And housing benefit reform which tackles high rents and addresses the shortage of affordable housing.

    These are issues which Ed Miliband will return to later this week.

    LABOUR’S FISCAL RULES 

    These are the actions a responsible spending review should take this summer.

    Because action now on growth is the best way to mitigate the scale of the cuts the Government says it has to make to public services in 2015-16 and beyond.

    But, as the Chancellor’s response to the IMF report shows, we cannot rely on the coalition government to see sense and act responsibly.

    Which brings me to my third argument today.

    Where this government’s failure on growth and jobs has led to their failure on the deficit, the next Labour government will rise to the challenge: action to strengthen the recovery and our economy for the long-term; alongside a tough deficit reduction plan.

    But with the Chancellor refusing to change course, Labour must start planning now for what will be a very tough inheritance in 2015. It will require us to govern in a very different way with much less money around. We will need an iron discipline and a relentless focus on our priorities.

    We cannot write our first Budget today – two years ahead when we do not know the state of the economy and public finances that we will inherit.

    Instead, Labour will set out, in our general election manifesto, tough fiscal rules that the next Labour government will have to stick to – to get our country’s current budget back to balance and national debt on a downward path.

    Tough rules, which will be independently monitored by the Office for Budget Responsibility.

    A clear and balanced plan to support growth, alongside a clear timetable to get the deficit and the debt down – finishing the job where this Government has failed.

    That is why we have said every penny of windfall from the sale of the government’s stakes in the banks must be used to repay the national debt – not for a politically timed pre-election giveaway at the expense of taxpayers and the economy.

    But given how catastrophically off track the government’s plans have gone in the last three years, it would be irresponsible to set out those fiscal rules two years in advance, banking on things turning out in line with government forecasts. We will not make promises we cannot keep.

    So today I am going to have to disappoint my opponents and my colleagues.

    I am going to disappoint the Tories – we will not set out our plans for 2015-16 this year, however much you want us to, in order to divert political attention from your own abject economic failure.

    We all know why the Chancellor is focussing now on spending cuts in 2015-16, when he does not know the economic circumstances he will face in two years time. Once again, he is trying to turn his economic failure into some kind of short-term political advantage.

    No-one should be surprised. After all, this is the Chancellor who claimed for three years that he had to stick to his plan or the UK would be downgraded by the credit rating agencies; and then when he lost the UK’s AAA rating, said this meant he had no choice but to stick to his plan.

    The same Chancellor who still tries to claim that a global financial and banking crisis, which began in the USA and echoed round the world, was somehow caused by or made worse by levels of public spending here in Britain – when as Shadow Chancellor, before the crash, he had pledged to match Labour’s spending plans.

    And you can see the new political game – to set out deep cuts to policing, defence, local government, social care or early years funding or in support for children and the disabled – all for after the General Election – and challenge Labour to make a decision now to reject his plans two years ahead.

    We will not play that game – when we do not know the economic circumstances two months ahead, let alone two years.

    But that also means I am going to disappoint my Labour colleagues too.

    Because for the same reason, we cannot plan now on the basis that our inheritance in 2015 will be better than currently forecast.

    We cannot decide now to spend money that we do not know, and do not expect, will be there.

    Even if the Government were to implement Labour’s growth plan now, given the failure of the last three years it would not avoid the need for cuts in departmental spending in the next Parliament.

    It will take years to sort out George Osborne’s fiscal mess

    And the longer the government carries on with these failing policies, the bigger the challenge will be for the next Labour government.

    Jobs and growth are vital to getting the deficit down – but they cannot magic the whole deficit away at a stroke.

    Nor can we rely on tackling tax avoidance to avoid difficult decisions.

    We are determined to crack down on irresponsible tax practices. Our recent multinational tax reform document sets out the way ahead. We need international action, and Britain must take the lead and act if others will not. So we will continue to say more in this area.

    But this is not some easy pot of gold. Tax avoidance has to be tackled billion by billion. Given the global complexity of this problem, the suggestion that any individual government can easily find billions more in unpaid tax simply through one Budget speech or a Finance Bill clause is not realistic.

    So this is the hard reality.

    The last Labour government was able to plan its 1997 manifesto on the basis of rising departmental spending in the first years after the election.

    The next Labour government will have to plan on the basis of falling departmental spending.

    Ed Miliband and I know that, and my shadow cabinet colleagues know that too.

    So my message to the country is this:

    My job is to make sure that we have a plan to grow the economy and get the deficit down.

    With tough decisions and by investing in the future we can do this.

    And set the country in a different direction from this government.

    – not giving the banks a tax cut, but putting a tax on bankers bonuses to get young people back to work;

    – not attacking those who cannot find work, but making sure the long-term jobless are given a guaranteed job which they will have to take up or face losing benefits;

    – not giving tax cuts to the richest, but keeping the 50p tax rate now and supporting working families by not going ahead this year with real terms cut to tax credits;

    – and not wasting money fragmenting the NHS, and other services, or on vanity schools projects, but focusing on the real needs in adult social care and primary school places – and bringing public services together to save money and improve services.

    But my message to my shadow cabinet colleagues is this.

    To serve the country and win its trust:

    We must work together to find efficiency savings and switch resources to Labour’s priorities; but you cannot prepare now on any basis other than that you will inherit very tough spending plans from this year’s Spending review. They will be our starting point.

    We know these plans for current spending in 2015-16 are likely to place a very significant burden on public services.

    But because of the overall financial situation we inherit, and the need to look ruthlessly at every pound we spend, the relentless focus of my Shadow Cabinet colleagues must be on how to re-prioritise money within and between budgets for current spending, rather than coming to me with proposals for any additional spending.

    Any changes to spending plans for 2015/16 must be fully funded, agreed with Ed Miliband and myself, and set out in advance in our manifesto.

    As far as capital spending is concerned, it certainly does make economic sense now, as the IMF has urged, to bring forward capital spending to support growth and invest in our long-term infrastructure – creating jobs now, bringing long-term returns and taking advantage of very low interest rates.

    And for the future, we need to invest in the homes, transport and infrastructure Britain needs and ensure a recovery made by the many. Of course, here too we will only set our plans for investing in Britain’s future in the light of the economic circumstances at the time, and the needs of economic growth, informed by the findings of the Armitt review into Britain’s long-term infrastructure needs.

    So we will match an iron discipline on spending control with a fairer approach to deficit reduction.

    Which will mean asking important questions for our manifesto:

    – With primary school places in short supply in many parts of the country, and parents struggling to get their children into a local school, can it really be a priority to open more free schools in 2015 and 2016 in areas with excess secondary school places?

    – When we are losing thousands of police officers and police staff, how have we ended up spending more on police commissioners than the old police authorities, with more elections currently timetabled for 2016?

    – With family budgets under such pressure and living standards falling, surely it makes sense to introduce a mansion tax on properties worth over £2m to pay for a lower 10p starting rate of tax?

    – And when our NHS and social care system is under such pressure, can it really remain a priority to pay the Winter Fuel Allowance – a vital support for middle and low income pensioners – to the richest 5% of pensioners, those with incomes high enough to pay the higher or top rates of tax?

    We believe the winter fuel allowance provides vital support for pensioners on middle and low incomes to combat fuel poverty. That’s why we introduced it in the first place. At that time, and when the pattern of pensioner incomes was different to today, we paid pay it to all pensioners.

    But in tough economic times we have to make difficult choices about priorities for public spending and what the right balance is between universal and targeted support. So at a time when the public services that pensioners and others rely on are under strain, it can no longer be a priority to continue paying the winter fuel allowance to the wealthiest pensioners.

    THE ZERO-BASED SPENDING REVIEW 

    These are issues which we will address now as we prepare for the zero-based spending review – a root and branch review of every pound the government spends from the bottom up – which Labour will complete in our first year in office.

    We in the Labour Party value the huge contribution that public services – and public service – make to the strength of our economy and the fairness and stability of our society.

    We celebrate the excellence of our teachers and school support staff, the service of our police officers and non-police staff; and the quality of care that our doctors, nurses and health workers deliver – and the efficiency that our publicly funded NHS delivers compared to private health care around the world.

    But it is the duty of government to make difficult choices about priorities and to get maximum value for every pound of taxpayer money it spends.

    As I have said before, the last Labour government did not spend every pound of public money well. No government, including this one, can honestly say that.

    That is why Rachel Reeves, the Shadow Chief Secretary to the Treasury, has already set up a public sector efficiency advisory board, with Shadow Cabinet Office Minister Jon Trickett, to ensure we are ready for the challenges we will face in 2015, covering:

    – making best use of information and communication technology;

    – effective public sector procurement;

    – collaboration and joined-up government, including shared services; use of consultants and temporary staff;

    – and how we improve organisational incentives in the civil service.

    All of this work will feed into our zero-based review.

    Our preparations for this review will proceed in three phases:

    First, over the next year, each Labour spending team will prepare a report on Public Service Reform and Re-Design setting out how we deliver better public services with less money, involving employees, charities, and the voluntary sector in our deliberations, as well as business and public providers. We will publish a summary of these reports next spring.

    On that basis, the Labour Treasury team will work with spending teams to identify savings and switches for 2015-16 to reflect Labour’s priorities and report before our manifesto.

    And these detailed departmental reports will then inform our full zero-based examination of every pound we spend – in every department, including in any department whose spending we choose to ring-fence in our manifesto, and in annually managed expenditure too – which will be completed within the first year of the Labour government.

    The review will be guided by the following principles:

    – how can we use public money more efficiently;

    – how can we use departmental budgets to support growth and job creation;

    – how can we ensure fairness and consumer choice in service delivery;

    – and how can we ensure preventative spending – early years spending, support for troubled families, public and mental health services, scientific research into new cures and treatments – areas where spending now saves billions in the future – is given a high priority.

    The great advantage of this zero-based review is that it can ask basic questions about all aspects of government and spending, big or small.

    – Does it really make sense to have separate costly management and bureaucracy for so many separate government departments, agencies, fire services and police forces – the same number as when this Government came into office – all with separate leadership structures and separate specialist teams?

    – Should industries pay a greater share of the costs of their regulators?

    – Do we really need four separate government agencies delivering services to motorists?

    – Should we be spending millions on a separate company to deliver High Speed 2 when we already have Network Rail, which after all is responsible for rail infrastructure?

    – Has the Ministry of Justice properly made the case for a major new “Titan” prison, at a time when the prison population is falling?

    – Do we need more admirals than ships and more officers in our forces than our international counterparts at a time when frontline armed forces are under pressure?

    – Can we improve care and save money, as Andy Burnham has proposed, by thinking of health and social care as a single service, looking after the whole person, with a single budget and joint management?

    – And on infrastructure, how should we set priorities within rail spending, and between rail investment, trunk roads, expanding airport capacity, delivering super-fast broadband across the whole country, modernising our energy infrastructure and improving our flood defences?

    These are some of the questions our zero-based spending review will ask.

    CONCLUSION 

    In conclusion, let me say this.

    These are challenging times.

    How Labour responds will shape not just the politics of the general election but our economic future and the cohesion of our country over the next decade.

    Because in opposition or in government, the tax and spending priorities a political party chooses to set out reveal much about its values, its resolve and steel, its understanding of how the economy works.

    The British people know that George Osborne’s austerity economics has failed. They are worse off, growth has stalled, investment has fallen and the deficit is not coming down.

    But the last thing they want to hear from any politician is ‘we told you so’.

    What they want to know from Labour is that there is a better way.

    That we will put in place the polices now and for the future that can produce the investment and growth that bring sustained increases in living standards.

    And that Labour will take a tough and fair approach to deficit reduction.

    This is what we mean by striking the right balance for the British economy:

    – Action now to raise living standards, growth and long-term investment;

    – Bringing down the deficit steadily, with an iron discipline on spending control;

    – Making sure ordinary people do not carry the burden of meeting fiscal targets and ensuring those with the broadest shoulders bear their fair share.

    Where this government’s failure on growth and jobs has led to their failure on living standards and on the deficit, the next Labour government will get things back on track to finish the job.

  • Ed Balls – 2012 Speech to TUC Conference

    balls

    Below is the text of the speech made by Ed Balls, the Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer, to the TUC Conference on 11th September 2012.

     

    Congress, it’s a great honour to speak to you today.

    Thank you Paul for that introduction and for your leadership and support over recent years: fighting the BNP, campaigning for free school meals, standing up for jobs and a fair deal for working people across our country.

    And in the days after the fabulous and frankly nation-changing Paralympic Games – a week in which the whole country saw first-hand not what disabled people cannot do, but the excellence they can achieve – contrast that to the thousands of disabled working people who have proved that with the right help they can work, but have now be en thrown on the scrapheap with no guarantee of a new job to go to.

    So let me commend, too, the work the GMB has led to campaign against the betrayal of Remploy workers.

    But Congress, what do you expect.

    From a Government and a Prime Minister who think you:

    – restore consumer confidence and tackle insecurity at work by allowing employers to hire and fire at will;

    – end recession and kick-start the housing market simply by making it easier to get planning permission for a conservatory;

    – and tackle gender discrimination by telling a 54 year old woman Cabinet minister she is too old to do the job, and then appointing a 56 year old man instead.

    What a contrast to this Trade Union Congress – proudly set to anoint your first female General Secretary in 100 years.

    Let us take this opportunity to congratulate your General-Secretary-Elect, Frances O’Grady.

    Congress, I can think of no better person than Frances t o teach David Cameron that you don’t have to be ‘butch’ to be a strong and tough and principled leader.

    And let me start by adding my congratulations and thanks to all the deserved winners of the gold awards that we have presented this morning.

    Congress, we rightly celebrate the fabulous volunteers who made the Olympics such a success.

    Let us also celebrate all the trade unions lay members who – day in, day out – voluntarily give their time and energy and commitment standing up for the rights of their members.

    And on a personal note, I want to say – there is no one who has fought harder to defend members in tough times and make the case for a fairer, long-term future than the GMB’s President, our friend and colleague, Mary Turner.

    Paul, no-one here needs me to tell them that these are tough times.

    Britain is just one of two G20 countries in recession – the longest double-dip recession since the Second World War.

    Living standards face the biggest squeeze since the 1920s with prices rising faster than wages.

    Unemployment is high, with long-term youth unemployment rising month by month.

    And the costs of this economic failure are rising with borrowing up by a quarter so far this year.

    But Congress, it does not have to be this way.

    There is an alternative.

    And the Conservatives cannot say they were not warned.

    Remember what your General Secretary, Brendan Barber, said to this conference here in Brighton two years ago.

    Brendan highlighted the reckless gamble the Coalition Government was taking with our economy.

    He warned that the Cameron-Osborne plan risked choking off recovery and making a difficult situation worse.

    Brendan, you called it right. You and this Congress stood out against the consensus, not just on behalf of your members but on behalf of working people across the country.

    And Brendan, may I say, once a gain you showed the courage and calm judgement and commitment to jobs and social justice which have characterised your tenure as TUC General Secretary over the past decade.

    And I am proud to say that with Ed Miliband and my Shadow Cabinet colleagues we have stood side by side with you and argued and campaigned and marched to make the case for the economic alternative.

    Just remember what the Tories promised two years ago:

    That their faster tax rises and spending cuts plan would secure the recovery and make Britain a safe haven.

    That their economic plan would deal with the national debt.

    And that ‘we are all in this together.’

    The recovery secured?

    We’re in a double-dip recession and our economy has contracted by 0.6% since the Spending Review.

    Deal with our debts?

    Conference, the latest figures show that so far this financial year borrowing is £9bn higher than last year.

    Not borrowing falling… but borrowing rising – up by a quarter.

    Rising borrowing not to invest in the jobs of the future but simply to pay for the mounting costs of economic failure.

    And as for ‘we’re all in this together’, we don’t hear that line anymore.

    Not from a Chancellor whose Budget decisions have so far hit middle and lower income families harder than those on the highest incomes, women hit harder than men and families with children hit hardest of all.

    Not from a Chancellor who tried to raise taxes on pasties, caravans, churches, charities and pensioners, while cutting the top rate of tax only for the rich – a £3 billion tax cut giving £40,000 a year to a millionaire. Millions paying more in tax to pay for a tax cut for millionaires.

    No wonder trade union members up and down the country are saying – it’s the same old Tories, hitting the many to help out a privileged few.

    And as Brendan said at the weekend, we now risk a lost decade of slow g rowth and high unemployment which will do long-term damage.

    Over 33,000 companies already gone bust since the General Election.

    Investment plans cancelled – or diverted overseas.

    New ideas and new ventures being promoted in other countries.

    Our economy weaker, capacity lost, and I very much fear that the result will be an economy more prone to inflationary pressures when the recovery finally comes.

    And above all, long-term youth unemployment becoming entrenched – damaging young lives, and racking up costs which we will all have to pay.

    Not short-term pain for long-term gain, but short-term pain causing long-term damage and a long-term price for this government’s economic failure.

    And yes, at the same time, this coalition government is also using the cover of deficit reduction to mount a full-scale assault on our public services and those who work in them:

    – A reckless NHS reorganisation which will waste billions and risks putting profit before patient care;

    – Market-based school reforms, with Michael Gove now talking openly of profit-making schools;

    – And deep cuts to policing which are already hitting front-line services.

    All of which are rightly being challenged by Unison, the NUT, NASUWT, ATL, the Police Federation and many others.

    So let me say to Frances and to all the General Secretaries in this hall today.

    We understand that you need action now – a change of course and a plan for jobs and growth.

    The fact is you and your members cannot just sit back and wait for a Labour government .

    Because despite the valiant efforts of Labour councils up and down the country, the damage is being done now.

    That is why we have set out five immediate steps the government can and should take right now, steps the Labour would take now if we were in power:

    – repeat the bank bonus tax again this year – and use the money to build 25,000 affordable homes and guarantee a job for 100,000 young people;

    – genuinely bring forward long-term investment projects – schools, roads and transport;

    – reverse the damaging VAT rise now for a temporary period;

    – an immediate one year cut in VAT to 5 per cent on home improvements, repairs and maintenance to help home-owners and boost construction;

    – and a one year national insurance tax break for every small firm taking on extra workers to help small businesses grow and create jobs.

    Families and businesses – and every one of your members – are crying out for a change of course and some hope for the future.

    So Ed Miliband and I understand and share your frustration and worry and concern.

    You say that strikes must always be a last resort.

    And I am sure that the last thing the vast majority of trade union members want, at a time of such uncertainty, is strikes over the coming months.

    It is not what we want.

    It is not what the public wants either.

    But when coalition ministers warn that they will have to act and legislate if we see a return to the un-rest of the 1980s, what we are really seeing is Tories itching to provoke a row about strikes so they can blame the stalling recovery on trade union members and working people.

    When it should be David Cameron and George Osborne and Nick Clegg who must now admit their plan has failed and change course.

    So let us say loud and clear:

    We don’t want to see a return to the 1980s.

    We don’t want a return to the hatred, division and confrontation of the 1980s.

    We don’t want a return to the strikes and lost working days of the 1980s – seven times more days lost than under the last Labour government.

    We don’t want a return to the rising child poverty, decaying school buildings and long NHS waiting lists of the 1980s.

    And above all we don’t want to return – ever again – to the mass youth unemployment of the 1980s – when young people left school or college and went straight into long-term unemployment – opportunity denied, a terrible waste of talent, which scarred our country for years to come.

    Congress, we know now that it will fall to the next Labour government to clear up George Osborne’s economic mess.

    And it’s going to be hard.

    As Ed Miliband and I have said for many months, this Government’s failure – no growth, rising borrowing, our economy permanently weakened – means the next Labour government is now set to inherit a substantial deficit that we will have to deal with.

    Which is why – however difficult this is for me, for some of my colleagues and for our wider supporters – when we don’t know what we will inherit, we cannot make any commitments now that the next Labour government will be able to reverse particular tax rises or spending cuts.

    Unlike Nick Clegg, we will not make promises we cannot keep.

    Credibility is based on trust and trust is based on honesty.

    And we must be honest with the British people that under Labour, there would have been cuts, and that – on spending, pay and pensions – there will be disappointments and difficult decisions from which we will not flinch.

    Because the question the public will ask is: who can I trust?

    Who will have the discipline and the strength to take tough decisions which will be needed?

    George Osborne has shown there is no credibility in piling austerity on austerity, tax rise on tax rise, cut upon cut in the eventual hope that it will work when all the evidence is pointing the other way.

    But a radical plan to kick start our recovery, put jobs first and transform our economy will only be possible if we can win the trust of the British people that our plan is credible.

    We can stand up for jobs, social justice, equality and fairness – but if we re out of government , we just can’t deliver.

    Last Friday I met with a Morley constituent of mine, David, a construction worker and UCATT member for over 20 years with UCATT’s Yorkshire regional officer, Mark Martin.

    David told me that work is hard to come by at the moment, with the housing market still flat on its back and the cancellation of Building Schools for the Future.

    But he also described how employment in the construction sector has changed over his working life.

    Dave currently has an agency contract, which he knows will be restarted before he hits 12 weeks, so he gets limited employment rights. He is paid above the minimum wage, but only because his £7 an hour job includes compensation for holiday pay foregone. He has no sickness pay. No pension.

    And he told me he was still better off on the books of his agency than those of his work colleagues who have been forced into bogus self-employment. And much better off than if he was unemployed.

    What my constituents, like David, want to know is that we have a credible plan that will work:

    – action now to kick-start the recovery ;

    – and reforms so that we can change the way our economy works and make his life better for the future. And that is why, in tough fiscal times, as Ed Miliband and I said last week, we must begin to set out long-term reforms we need to unlock long-term investment, tackle insecurity and invest in skills which is the only route to long-term prosperity.

    – a modern industrial policy to support long-term wealth creation, with strategic support for our manufacturing and service industries.

    – stronger corporate governance to make sure decisions are taken in the long-term interests of wealth creation and jobs.

    It’s why we are examining the case for a proper British Investment Bank and why we want to see an international financial transactions tax too.

    And let’s make sure that government procurement is not done in a way that disadvantages UK-based manufacturing production.

    And that is why, too, on the issue of bogus self-employment, in the construction sector and more widely, I am determined that we look at this issue again.

    There is a careful balance to be struck. I do not want in any way to undermine genuine self-employment.

    But nor should contractual arrangements be distorted and misrepresented to avoid tax and undermine terms and conditions.

    It’s not fair to taxpayers.

    And it’s not fair to your members either.

    So I have asked the Shadow Chief Secretary, Rachel Reeves, to look again at the Treasury’s 2009 proposals for reform – abandoned by this government – and to consult employers, UCATT and the wider TUC to see if there is a better and fairer way forward.

    Construction is one of our most important industries.

    Let’s work together to make it stronger, safer and fairer for the future.

    And yes, we do need radical reform in our banking system, reform which this Government is now watering down.

    We were right to reject the absurd Tory claim that the global financial crisis was caused by too much public spending in Britain.

    We can’t say this often enough: it wasn’t too many teachers, and nurses and police officers here in Britain which made Lehman Brothers investment bank in New York go bankrupt.

    But nor was the global financial crisis caused by the hundreds of thousands of working people, earning ordinary salaries, who work hard every day behind the counter on every high street.

    People employed in financial services – in Leeds, Edinburgh, Manchester, Birmingham and Bristol as well as London – who were as shocked and dismayed as everyone else at the gross irresponsibility of a few millionaire bankers at the top who caused such damage and gave their industry a bad name.

    People who want tough regulation, w ho want banks to work for the long-term interests of our economy – and who do not deserve to be pilloried for their hard work and service.

    So let us work together to make our economy stronger for the long-term and improve the working conditions for trade union members and working people.

    I stand here proud to have served in the last Labour Government.

    Where we got things right – even where at times we disagreed – I won’t be shy in saying it.

    But when TUC members made calls which we did not hear – and which in hindsight we should have – I hold up my hands.

    It was TUC members who were telling us to address the housing shortage – and we were too slow to unlock the door to councils investing in new housing.

    And it was TUC members who first told us to implement the Temporary and Agency Workers Directive and strengthen enforcement of the minimum wage.

    But over those thirteen years, working together, based on common values, we did make real progress for working people.

    From tax credits and a national minimum wage to guaranteed holidays and our campaigning to promote the living wage.

    From the right to join a trade union and be represented to new rights for parents and carers in the workplace.

    From the windfall tax and the New Deal, to the action we took, supported by the Fair Tax campaign, to tackle tax avoidance.

    And we must keep working together on these vital issues for the future.

    In my time at education, our work together on school standards, discipline, anti-bullying and free school meals showed how Labour, working with unions, can get things right.

    And because fair pay and progression is just as important to teaching assistants, caretakers, cleaners, cooks and lunchtime supervisors as for teachers, nurses, doctors and the police, I was proud to work with colleagues in Unison, GMB and Unite to establish the school support staff negotiating body.

    Michael Gove has now abolished that body.

    And just as this is a profound mistake, so the Government is mistaken to undermine the independent pay reviews and pursue an agenda for wholesale regional and local pay bargaining – which will set hospital against hospital, school against school and be both unfair and cost us more.

    Frances, Brendan, we are not always going to agree on every issue.

    But I sincerely hope that, whatever disagreements we may have along the way, that you and your members will never stop giving me and the rest of the Shadow Cabinet plenty of tough and straight advice.

    Because we in the Labour Party value the commitment to a strong economy and a fair society that is this Congress at its best.

    Congress, we know the Government has failed.

    But this is no time for complacency for Labour.

    Yes, we are ahead in the polls.

    And yes, David Cameron does look increasingly trapped:

    – with an economic plan which isn’t working;

    – a Conservative Party deeply divided;

    – and a Chancellor he cannot sack, even though he knows George Osborne is the problem and not the solution.

    But Labour cannot just sit back and wait for Tory failure to hand us victory.

    That is the complacent road to failure.

    We have to make the case – a credible case – for how a Labour government will kick-start recovery and transform our economy if we are to win the support of working people in the ballot box when the General Election finally comes.

    Because we know, as you know better than anyone:

    – when living standards are squeezed, we know who pays the price;

    – when public services are scaled back, we know which communities lose out;

    – when unemployment becomes entrenched, we know which areas suffer most;

    – when only some children succeed, we know which children will be left behind;

    So rest assured, Ed Miliband and I and the whole of the shadow cabinet are determined to take the fight to the coalition and show – for the sake of millions of workers across our country – that there is a better way.

    Congress, there is an alternative.

    Let us win the argument together.

  • Ed Balls – 2012 Speech to the Fabian Society

    balls

    Below is the text of the speech made by Ed Balls to the Fabian Society in 2012.

     

    Thank you Suresh and Andrew – and to all of you for coming along today and giving up your Saturday.

    And let me start by saying – after over 20 years of attending the Fabian annual January conference – what a great honour it is to be invited to give the opening speech.

    I first spoke at this conference in January 1993 – when I was a junior leader writer at the Financial Times.

    It was a very different conference then – not the huge event it has become – with perhaps 100 or so people gathered at Ruskin College, Oxford, including among them the leader of the Labour Party, John Smith.

    That conference was held the January after Labour’s election defeat in 1992 – an election in which the Labour opposition had failed to pass either of the two necessary political economy tests for electoral success:

    – neither having a real alternative to the straitjacket of the Exchange Rate Mechanism, which could meet the aspirations of anxious voters on growth and jobs;

    – nor a credible approach to tax and spending which could win public trust.

    Ten months on from that defeat, as we met in Oxford, sterling had recently crashed out of a troubled ERM, the idea of the single currency as the solution for Europe was gaining momentum in Brussels, and here in Britain Labour’s ‘modernisers’ were trying to persuade John Smith that ‘safety first’ would not be enough.

    And my contribution at that Conference?

    To speak about my Fabian pamphlet, published a week or so before, which argued:

    –     that Labour could only win the argument for a radical alternative on growth and jobs if we had economic credibility;

    –     that neither the ERM nor the single currency could provide that credibility;

    –    and that the right approach for Labour and Britain was to make the Bank of England independent – a pretty controversial idea at the time.

    I remember showing the pamphlet draft to my FT colleagues Martin Wolf and John Plender, who both said: right approach, very brave – but the Labour Party will never forgive you.

    THE GLOBAL ECONOMIC SHADOW

    That 1993 Fabian Conference was held in the shadow of seminal events:

    – German unification in Europe;

    – Black Wednesday in Britain;

    – a fourth election defeat for Labour.

    And today’s conference – again to debate The Economic Alternative – is, without doubt, being held in the shadow of much greater and more defining events:

    –      political deadlock and an abject failure of economic leadership in the Euro area, Britain and the US Congress;

    –      following on from the biggest global financial crisis of the last century.

    A toxic combination of grossly irresponsible bank lending, poor governance and weak regulation round the world which in its aftermath poses – as I have argued consistently over the last eighteen months – a threat to the world economy as grave as that which we faced in the depression of the 1930s.

    So this is my starting point for today’s Conference.

    If Britain and the world are to avoid repeating the mistakes of that 1930s ‘lost decade’ and the 2008 global crisis, then we badly needs political leadership in Britain, Europe and the world to meet two great challenges:

    The Growth Challenge – to stop the aftermath of the financial crisis turning into years of slow growth, high unemployment and rising debts – leaving a permanent dent in our prosperity;

    and,

    The Reform Challenge – long-term reform to make sure such a financial crisis on this scale can never happen again and to build a stronger and fairer economic model for the future – what Ed Miliband has called a more responsible capitalism – which can, even in tougher times, meet our aspirations for social justice and strong public services.

    LABOUR’S POLITICAL SHADOW

    But of course, there is another shadow which casts itself across this Conference today – a political shadow which presents a particular challenge to Labour.

    I believe we are right to resist the ideological and a historical Tory analysis which tries to pin the blame for a global financial crisis on Labour’s approach to public spending – when it is clear that the global financial crisis bankrupted banks and pushed up deficits in high spending and low spending countries alike.

    But it is a fact that this financial crisis did happen on Labour’s watch – and that Labour lost the subsequent General Election.

    We have never denied that a plan is needed to get the deficit down, and that it would mean tough decisions on tax and public spending.

    Before the election, I set out £1 billion of cuts to education.

    But as a party and a leadership, I said then and I still believe now that Labour should have been clearer before the election that if we had been re-elected there would have been spending cuts as well as tax rises.

    And I have no illusions that there is a big task to turn round Labour’s economic credibility and show – even as George Osborne’s plans deliver unemployment rising, growth stagnating and long-term reform stalling – that Labour can be trusted again.

    It is not enough simply to be right in our diagnosis of the Coalition’s failures and unfairness.

    And it is not enough to set out a clear alternative – on growth, as we have with our five point plan for jobs; or on long-term reform of our economy, as Ed Miliband did this week and Chuka, Rachel and John Denham have too.

    The challenge we face is both to set out a radical and credible alternative; and to win public trust for that alternative vision.

    ‘KEYNESIAN OTHODOXY’

    I referred to that January 1993 Fabian Conference.

    Eighteen months later, in September 1994, just a few weeks after Tony Blair was elected Labour leader, and against the backdrop of stubbornly high youth unemployment, rising inflation and squeezed living standards, the Labour Party held a conference at the National Film Theatre on the new economy and Labour’s alternative.

    As it happens, that conference was the occasion of the infamous ‘post neo-classical endogenous growth theory’ moment – which, for those who don’t know what it means, says that the rules of the game that the government sets on taxes, spending and regulation are not irrelevant to growth but can have a profound impact – for good or bad – on how the economy works.

    Of course, those were very different times, and the policy debates of that time emphatically do not offer a blueprint based on the past when today we face such different economic and political challenges.

    But the unspoken purpose of that 1994 conference – and its emphasis on Bank of England reform and fiscal discipline – was to address Labour’s economic credibility deficit, and dispel the idea that the party was addicted to the short-term, quick fix, vested-interest-appeasing solution to every problem.

    I went back this week to look at the reporting of that conference – and in particular a preview piece in the Independent on Sunday with an anonymous briefing from ‘a senior party insider’.

    The article started by saying Tony Blair and Gordon Brown will “ceremoniously ditch Labour’s traditional ‘tax, spend and borrow’ image this week, in a fundamental re-positioning of his party’s economic strategy.”

    All under the headline… Labour Ditches Keynes.

    As someone who had only recently studied ‘New Keynesian’ economics at Harvard, with Democrat Keynesians like Larry Summers and Republican Keynesians like Greg Mankiw, I must admit I was pretty appalled to see the greatest economist of the twentieth century traduced like that.

    But the fact was that in the Monetarists versus Keynesians economic debates of the 1970s and 80s, the label ‘Keynesian’ had become – certainly in Conservative circles – a dirty word: profligate, irresponsible, statist, inflation-loving, not to be trusted.

    A caricature that clearly could not be allowed to be a Labour caricature if we were to go on and win the 1997 election.

    And what has been so striking to me over the past year listening to right-of-centre politicians and commentators – in Britain, America and Europe too – is how much the austerity debate has been used to try to reprise those old ideological divides.

    Warn about the risks of deflationary fiscal policy – and that makes you a ‘deficit denier’.

    Worry about the dangers of all countries trying to cut their deficits at once – and you are a ‘deluded Keynesian’.

    Counsel that the world needs a plan for growth as well as deficit reduction – and you are ‘an irresponsible deluded Keynesian deficit denier’.

    Keynes himself must be turning in his grave.

    For, as has been fully documented in Lord Skidelsky’s biography, the real Keynes was no profligate tax-and-spender. He would have had no time for some of his disciples.

    His seminal 1930 Treatise on Money was as hawkish on inflation as Milton Friedman decades later.

    His attitude to irresponsible wage bargaining in the 1920s was as unforgiving as Margaret Thatcher in the 1980s.

    Central bank independence? I think Keynes would have backed it – though not if his contemporary Montagu Norman was the Governor.

    And as for the irresponsible and inflationary profligacy of the 1970s

    Tory Barber boom? He would have abhorred it.

    KEYNES AND THE GROWTH CHALLENGE

    But – and this was his great insight – Keynes also knew that economies could occasionally get stuck in a deflationary rut.

    Although he called his famous book in 1936 ‘The General Theory’, it actually was not a general theory at all.

    It was a description of what can happen in the unusual and special circumstances after a big financial crash – for him 1929, for us 2008 –  when the ‘animal spirits’ of companies and consumers are so depressed that private spending stagnates.

    When interest rates are so low that they can’t be cut any further.

    When governments crudely cutting spending risks making deficits worse.

    Of course, there will be naïve ‘Keynesians’ who will think it is always a special case – time to let rip and just ‘tax, spend and borrow’ in the hope that will deliver full employment – people who think we are always in 1930s-style depression and more borrowing is always the solution to unemployment. And that is what gave Keynesianism a bad name in the 1970s.

    It is why Labour leader Jim Callaghan was right to tell the Labour Party Conference in 1976 that that you can’t just spend your way to full employment.

    But, as I argued well over a year ago now in my Bloomberg speech, the reason why the real Keynes is so relevant today is that the global economy has been sliding into that rare and dangerous ‘special case’ that Keynes identified in the 1930s and Japan suffered in the 1990s.

    You either learn the lessons of history or repeat the mistakes of history.

    With growth stagnating around the world, every country pressing ahead with deep cuts risks being a catastrophic mistake.

    Which is why Ed Miliband and I have argued for a global plan for growth, with clear medium-term plans to get deficits down, but stimulus now to avoid a global slump too.

    Rejecting the complacent isolationism of the 1930s and instead following Keynes’ lead by setting out a global solution to global problems – an economic alternative based on growth, job creation and balanced deficit reduction, which is the only sane way forward for Britain – and the only way back to credibility in the Euro area too.

    Let us be honest: the Eurozone crisis is a catastrophe building week by week. And the pre-Christmas summit was a disaster for Europe and the Euro and for Britain too.

    Europe’s leaders failed to back decisive action by the European Central Bank; they did not address the issue of the current fiscal straitjacket; and they still have no plan for jobs and growth – hence the downgrades of the past 24 hours.

    And did our Prime Minister bang the table and demand action?

    No, he walked out and undermined our national interests as he did so.

    Given the huge risks that the Eurozone crisis poses for Britain, we desperately need a Prime Minister and Chancellor who can lead in Europe.

    But they can’t – and not just because their party won’t let them.

    Because to do so means also admitting that they have got things wrong here in Britain too.

    George Osborne and David Cameron took it as read that deep and immediate spending cuts and tax rises would at least serve the goal of deficit reduction – no matter how much Labour warned that going too far, too fast would be bad for borrowing as well as for jobs and growth.

    The Chancellor claimed that public retrenchment would boost private sector confidence, investment and job creation. He called it ‘expansionary fiscal contraction’.

    But this has turned out to be a false prospectus – a repeat of the discredited ‘Treasury View’ of the 1920s. Fragile consumer and business confidence has been crushed by the inflationary hike in VAT, the threatened withdrawal of public sector demand, the reality of falling incomes and the fear of rising unemployment.

    And now the Government claim growth is stagnating because of the chilling effect of the Eurozone crisis – when our exports have actually been over performing compared with expectations, and it is weak domestic demand that has driven growth in the UK down, borrowing up and depressed long-term interest rates on government bonds.

    Conservative ministers scoff at our five point plan for jobs and growth, saying ‘Labour’s proposal is to borrow even more’. But it is Chancellor George Osborne who is being forced to borrow billions more – £158 billion more than he planned.

    Not borrowing to support the economy through difficult times and help get people back to work, but wasteful extra borrowing to pay for failure – the price of slow growth, rising unemployment and a bigger benefits bill.

    Because every time George Osborne revises down his growth forecast, he has to revise down tax revenues and increase the benefits bill too.

    Even the IMF has said that if our economy undershoots expectations and risks a period of stagnation, then the UK should slow down the pace of spending cuts and tax rises to get the economy growing again.

    Just think: last autumn, many 16 year olds who would otherwise have stayed on at school have lost their Education Maintenance Allowances, and – following the abandonment of the Future Jobs Fund – many have gone straight onto the dole, adding to the more than 1 million young people now unemployed in our country.

    On the surface of things, cutting EMAs and the Future Jobs Fund saved money and reduced borrowing.

    But at what cost? How much more will it cost our society and our economy to leave those young people long-term unemployed and unproductive; they and their children receiving benefits rather than paying taxes and contributing to the national wealth?

    If we do not invest now in jobs and growth, if we let a year of economic flat-lining become a decade of stagnation, what price will our country pay in the long-term?

    That is why to meet the Growth Challenge and get the deficit down we are right, as we have set out in the five point plan for jobs, to call for temporary tax cuts and investment in jobs and growth – to stop a decade of slow growth and higher debts becoming a self-fulfilling prophecy.

    Action now for growth, jobs and reform which does not conflict with the need for a credible medium term plan on the deficit, but which reinforces it.

    KEYNES AND THE REFORM CHALLENGE

    But changing times also demand new and long-term reforms to re-shape our economy for the future.

    As Ed Miliband argued earlier this week, we will need long-term reforms of our economy to boost growth and deliver social justice in straitened times.

    And here again, the words of Keynes writing in The General Theory in 1936 are instructive:

    “Speculators may do no harm as bubbles on a steady stream of enterprise” he wrote. “But the position is serious when enterprise becomes the bubble on a whirl-pool of speculation. When the capital development of a country becomes a by-product of the activities of a casino, the job is likely to be ill-done.”

    Keynes was right then and now – we cannot simply let markets, in which speculators spend their time chasing one another’s tails, dictate important investment decisions and set the benchmark for what is fair and unfair.

    Unregulated capitalism is not only unstable; it is inherently short-termist too.

    So just as the current coalition are wrong to reject the insight of Keynes based on his experience of the 1930s, we must, as Ed Miliband has said, learn the lessons of the past three decades and meet the Reform Challenge:

    –    tougher financial regulation and new capital standards with financial stability at the heart of economic policymaking and banking reform to make sure that the needs of small businesses are addressed, including examining the case for a National Investment Bank;

    –    stronger corporate governance to make sure decisions are taken in the long-term interests of wealth creation and jobs, not the short-term interests of traders, speculators and their chums;

    –    government action to back business and ensure markets work for the long-term, including tougher competition rules, tax incentives for long-term investment, research and development and skills;

    –    and a youth jobs guarantee with tough rights and responsibilities – and an expectation that every young person would take up work or training.

    GROWTH, REFORM AND DEFICIT REDUCTION

    This is the Economic Alternative:

    – to meet the Growth Challenge: short term action now to support jobs, growth and get deficits down;

    – to meet the Reform Challenge: long-term reform to tackle short-termism and instability and support long-term investment, growth and fairness.

    But to make that alternative work and be credible, it must be underpinned by a clear commitment to balanced but tough spending and budget discipline now and into the medium-term.

    The question for Labour has never been about ‘whether’ to get the deficit down but ‘how’ and ‘when’, who carries the greatest burden, and what kind of country we leave behind for our children.

    And while we would not have started from here – a fairer and more balanced approach to deficit reduction would not have choked off recovery and thrown borrowing plans off track – we are where we are.

    As Ed Miliband and I have said for months this government’s failure means the next Labour government will inherit a substantial deficit that we will have to deal with.

    After just 18 months, the government’s autumn statement admitted that it will not balance the books by 2015 – the promise that was the cornerstone of the coalition.

    And George Osborne has had to admit that he will now have to borrow more than the plan Alistair Darling set out before the election – because of the slow growth and higher unemployment his reckless plan has delivered.

    This represents a big challenge for Labour, as Ed Miliband made clear earlier this week. As I said at Labour’s annual conference, we will set out before the next election tough fiscal rules that the next Labour government will have to stick to – to get our country’s current budget back to balance and national debt on a downward path.

    In our manifesto we will commit to do the responsible thing and use any windfall gain from the sale of the government’s stakes in RBS and Lloyds to repay the national debt – not for a giveaway.

    And, however difficult this is for me, for some of my colleagues and for our wider supporters, we cannot make any commitments now that the next Labour government will reverse tax rises or spending cuts. And we will not.

    Because we don’t know how bad things will be on jobs, growth and the deficit. But we do know that the next Labour government will have to sort out the deficit where this government failed and deliver social justice in tougher times.

    And as we make the argument that cutting spending and raising taxes too far and too fast risks making the economy and the deficit worse not better, it is right that we set out where we do support cuts and where we would be making the tough but necessary decisions.

    In education, as I have said, £1 billion of cuts – but not the biggest cuts to schools since the 1950s. In policing, 12 per cent cuts to budgets – but not 20 per cent cuts which will hit the frontline hard and see 16,000 officers lost. In defence, £5 billion of cuts – but not a strategic defence review that raises more questions than answers.

    And because as progressives we believe in the role of the state and public services to do good, it is vital that we are even tougher on waste than our political opponents – whether that is the £2 billion being wasted on a reckless reorganisation of the NHS, billions being lost in tax avoidance or the waste of mass unemployment.

    Times will be tough – we will have no choice but to make difficult choices.

    Let me give you one example.

    Pay restraint in the public sector in this parliament would have been necessary whoever was in government.

    But George Osborne’s economic mistakes mean more difficult decisions on tax, spending and pay. It is now inevitable that public sector pay restraint will have to continue for longer in this parliament.

    Labour cannot duck that reality. And we won’t. Jobs must be our priority before higher pay.

    That said, there are important issues on incomes, pay and pensions that George Osborne must get right.

    We will continue to press for fair pay and fair pensions reform while defending the vital role the national pay review bodies play in delivering discipline, reform and fairness.

    We believe the 3p in the pound rise in pension contributions should never have been imposed without negotiation.

    And it is wrong and unfair to penalize those on low and middle incomes by cutting tax credits, hitting women harder than men and families with children hardest of all.

    But pay discipline in the public and private sector needs to be accompanied by fairness.

    That is why the government should also ask the pay review bodies to deliver the 1 per cent average settlement cap in a fair way – being tougher to those at the top in order to offer more protection to those at the bottom.

    Pay also needs to be fair in the private sector, where there have also been tough decisions – with real pay in the private sector falling around 3% in the last year. But for those at the top boardroom salaries in FTSE 100 companies have increased by 50% in the past 12 months.

    That is why Ed Miliband has rightly called for reforms to ensure that rewards at the top better reflect the success people achieve and the contribution they have make to our economy. David Cameron has now started to talk the talk on this issue, but he now needs to take the action we have been calling for.

    THE POLITICAL CHALLENGE FOR LABOUR

    Let me finish by returning to the politics.

    Because it would be naïve for anybody to think that the government’s deepening economic failure will automatically translate over the coming months into success for Labour.

    And the question the public will of course ask is: who can we trust?

    Credibility is based on trust and trust is based on honesty.

    And let’s be clear: the Tories won’t own up either to the scale of the challenge or the failure of their plans.

    They claim Britain is a safe haven… when our low long-term interest rates are not a sign of enhanced credibility but a reflection of stagnant growth in our economy, as it was in Japan in the 1990s.

    And they claim we’re all in it together… when middle and lower income families, women and young people are hardest hit, and the pain is only now beginning.

    So with determination and vigour – loud and direct – we must expose day by day the huge gulf between what Coalition ministers say and the truth.

    But we must be honest with the British people that under Labour there will have to be cuts, and that – on spending, pay and pensions – there will be disappointments and difficult decisions from which we will not flinch.

    But honesty does not mean going along with a failed Conservative plan because it is easier in the short-term. We tried that when Labour supported the disastrous decision to join the ERM and stuck with a failing policy right up until September 1992.

    I have heard much advice over the past year from people who admit that combining stimulus now to get the economy moving with a tough but balanced medium-term deficit plan may be good economics – but who argue that it is bad politics because it is ‘out of tune’ with the public mood.

    But that is not honest politics either.

    Now is not the time to stand aside, bite our collective lip while this government and Euro area governments make historic and terrible mistakes.

    I do believe that we have both a duty to make the right argument on growth and jobs – even if this has put us outside the consensus for a time.

    And I do believe this is an argument we can win.

    Now is the time to hold our nerve.

    To make the case for The Economic Alternative.

    To speak up for the people we seek to represent and the values that we stand for.

    And to do so in a typically Fabian way – steady, step by step, determined, credible and radical in our vision for a better and fairer future for Britain.

    Thank you.

  • Ed Balls – 2012 Speech to British Chambers of Commerce

    balls

    Below is the text of the speech made by Ed Balls, the Shadow Chancellor, to the 2012 British Chambers of Commerce annual conference on 15th March 2012.

     

    John, thank you for inviting me here today to Westminster Central Hall to address your annual conference this afternoon.

    And Iet me start by sympathising with you all – as I am now the third politician you have heard from today – and with two more to come, I am sure you are all flagging a little.

    But I know, from my own direct experience, the passion of your members and their commitment to their businesses and their communities.

    Over the last decade and more I have had the opportunity to work closely with the BCC and my local chambers in Wakefield and Leeds on many important issues from regional funding and apprenticeships through to enterprise education in schools.

    In fact, I was speaking only last Friday night in Wigan at a local gala dinner organised with the excellent local Chamber.

    And we talked about many issues which I am sure have come up today already

    From the local – delays in planning decisions, problems at the Valuation Office in assessing business rate valuation appeals when business rates are rising by over 5%, worries that the LEPs don’t have the resources and powers to do the job; through to national and global issues – rising youth unemployment, the Eurozone and why the Brazilian economy is now bigger than the UK.

    And what that dinner again drove home to me is this: while the CBI, FSB and IoD also play a very important role on the national and regional stage, if you want to know the views of local small and medium sized businesses up and down the country then it is local Chambers of Commerce that you turn.

    John – you truly represent the authentic voice of UK business and it is good to be here today.

    And let me say on behalf of Ed Miliband, the Labour Party under his leadership will always be a good but honest friend to business – challenging when we must be – but determined to work with you to build an economy for the future that works not just for financial institutions, but for businesses large and small and the people who work for them – in an economy that is both dynamic and fair to all who work hard and play their part.

    But let us be honest – these have been a difficult few months for business in Britain.

    I refer, of course, to the way that the depressed consumer and business confidence here in Britain has had a direct effect on to your profits and performance alongside the Euro zone crisis.

    But also the way in which issues of bonuses and executive pay have hit the headlines.

    And I know how frustrating politics can be when it looks as though politicians are continually moving the goal posts.

    I don’t think anyone can be in any doubt that after the financial crisis, reform is needed in financial regulation and corporate governance more widely.

    But I know too that the most important things businesses need are stability and predictability – government decisions made and then stuck to so that you can plan ahead:

    That it is the clear view of business that, where possible, we politicians should seek consensus where we can in the national interest;

    I want to come back in a moment to where I believe we can all agree on the big strategic objectives facing our country.

    But I have to say I have been dismayed over the past year by the way in which government policy and its attitude towards business has at times seemed driven more by newspaper headlines, and change for change’s sake, than what makes for good business policy.

    What signal did the Government send to international investors in renewable energy when it abruptly, arbitrarily and without consultation slashed the support for feed-in tariffs and undermined the solar industry at stroke?

    What signal did it send to the Chinese investors in the new Longbridge MG line that the very organisation which brokered the deal – the RDA Advantage West Midlands – has now been abolished?

    What signal was sent to multinational companies about the abrupt change in North Sea oil taxation in last year’s Budget?

    Or to globally mobile construction companies with the out-of-the blue and immediate cancellation of Building Schools for the Future, cancelling nearly 800 schools where millions of pounds of private sector investment had already been made and contracts drawn up and negotiated?

    And the way business decisions are announced matters too.

    Whatever the case for minimum alcohol pricing – and we will study the evidence carefully – is it really sensible for the Prime Minister to announce his intention to proceed the day after Boxing Day without any proper consultation with the beer, cider or pub industries, which will be heavily affected by policy in this area?

    And what signal did it send that the Prime Minister – having rejected our calls for greater transparency in City bonuses and a repeat of the bank bonus tax to fund a youth jobs programme – ended up telephoning individual chief executives from Brussels to order them to give up their bonuses?

    And whatever you think of the culpability or otherwise of Fred Goodwin – and I don’t think there are many who would defend his behaviour over his pension payments after he resigned, or some of his decisions which took RBS to the brink –what signal did it send to businesses round the world that the decision to remove his knighthood was first announced by the Prime Minister to the Daily Mail, with the decision of the supposedly independent committee then announced just in time for the 6 o’clock news?

    The right decision – but handled, in my view, in a dreadful manner.

    For a country like Britain, the signals we send around the world about Britain as a place to do business really do matter.

    And starting with next week’s Budget, this Government needs to do a better job of it.

    I know you will be expecting me to highlight my differences today with Coalition politicians. And I will.

    But, in the spirit of consensus, I also want to set out where, on each of the three big questions of our time..

    – deficit reduction;

    – the long-term prospects for jobs and growth in the UK

    – banking and regulatory reform

    – the Chancellor George Osborne and I agree on the strategic goals even if we disagree on how to get there.

    The first thing that George Osborne and I agree on is that, after the global financial crisis, we do need a credible plan for deficit reduction.

    For a country like the UK, open to trade and commerce, dependent on the support of international investors, a credible deficit reduction plan is now vital – just as a credible independent monetary policy was one of the most important reforms I was involved in delivering in the last Labour government, alongside keeping Britain out of the Euro.

    But we need a plan which will work, and which pulls all the levers required to deliver deficit reduction.

    Of course, we need spending cuts and tax rises as part of that package.

    But we also need jobs and growth to get the deficit down.

    In office, our plan was based on restoring strong, sustainable growth, getting people back into work, and then beginning the difficult task of cutting spending and raising taxes where necessary.

    But nearly two years ago, when the Coalition was formed, they took a radically different path.

    First, they decided that the speed of deficit reduction had to be substantially increased.

    Second, the emphasis of their plan took a sharp turn from increasing jobs and growth to immediate and steep spending cuts and the VAT rise.

    But since the Chancellor’s spending review we have grown by just 0.2%, while America has now more than recovered all the output lost in the global recession.

    Our recovery was choked off in the autumn of 2010, well before the recent euro zone crisis.

    Unemployment continues to rise and over the last year the number of jobs created in the private sector has been outweighed by the huge loss of jobs in the public sector.

    And the result is that the Government is having to borrow £158 billion more than they planned, to pay for the cost of this economic failure.

    If the economy isn’t growing and so fewer people are in work paying taxes – and more people claim benefits instead – it makes it harder to get the deficit down, and harder to maintain confidence – of businesses and the markets too.

    Don’t forget it was the impact of slow growth on deficit reduction here in the UK which prompted the Moody’s credit rating agency to put the UK on ‘negative outlook’ last month, followed yesterday by Fitch. As another agency, Standard and Poor’s said this year, ‘austerity alone risks becoming self-defeating’.

    Many of you will remember the 1980s. Of course, action was needed then to get inflation down from its 13 per cent peak. But who now doubts that the depth of the resulting recession did permanent damage?

    Manufacturing jobs and companies lost – never to return. Small businesses bankrupted – losing skills, ideas and potential. Infrastructure plans first postponed, eventually dropped and never resurrected. Adults and young people out of work for years, leaving a permanent scarring effect on their skills, their health, and their ability ever to work again.

    That is why, alongside tough decisions on tax, spending and pay, I believe we do need urgent action in next week’s Budget to kick-start the recovery.

    A Budget for jobs and growth including a temporary cut in VAT and genuinely bringing forward infrastructure investment to strengthen our economy for the long term.

    And let’s use the almost £1 billion of unspent money in the Treasury’s failed national insurance holiday for new firms and extend it to give a tax break to all small firms taking on extra workers.

    Because without action now to support growth and jobs, I fear we are in for a lost decade of slow growth and high unemployment which will leave a permanent dent in our nation’s prosperity.

    But reducing the deficit is not by itself a guarantor of economic success.

    So the second thing George Osborne and I agree on is that a credible deficit reduction plan is a necessary condition but it is not by itself a credible plan for jobs and growth.

    The question is what form that plan for growth and jobs should take.

    And whether it is backtracking on planning for large- scale infrastructure projects, the abolition of the RDAs or the scrapping of skills programmes, I fear that the current Treasury view that the only thing government needs to do for business is just to get out of the way risks undermining your efforts, not backing them.

    As the Business Secretary himself wrote a few weeks ago in his famous leaked letter, the Government lacks “a compelling vision of where the country is heading beyond sorting out the fiscal mess”

    He is right – and – on transport, planning, skills, strategic industrial support – government has a vital role to play and cannot just walk away.

    With China currently producing more graduates a year than the whole population of Scotland; and adults in Brazil already twice as likely to be running their own business as Britons – I believe here in Britain we do need a long-term plan for growth to support and back your leadership and innovation and risk-taking.

    That is why Ed Miliband, Chuka and I are clear that a modern industrial and business policy needs:

    – government action to back business and ensure markets work for the long-term, including tougher competition rules, tax incentives for long-term investment, research and development and skills;

    – stronger corporate governance and transparency in executive pay to make sure decisions are taken in the long-term interests of wealth creation and jobs;

    – and tougher financial regulation and banking reform to make sure that the needs of small businesses are addressed, including examining the case for a British Investment Bank.

    Which takes me to the third thing that George Osborne and I agree on – – the need for banking reform.

    The global financial crisis started with the reckless lending practices of American financial institutions, but it exposed risky behaviour by banks and inadequate regulation in every major country of the world, including in Britain.

    This must never happen again.

    And while it was the irresponsible actions of banks which caused the crisis, it was also the fault of governments and central banks – including Britain’s – who did not see the financial crisis coming and should have been tougher in regulating the banks.

    Every government in the world got that wrong. We did here in Britain. And while it is not good enough simply to be wise after the event, life is also about admitting when you get things wrong and learning from your mistakes and that is what we must all do.

    For the longer-term, I do believe that the report from the Vickers Commission on banking reforms is the right way forward – though the devil will be in the implementation detail.

    But I know too from my own constituents the huge frustrations that many small and medium sized businesses currently feel about the ways the banks are now behaving.

    Since the widely criticised Project Merlin deal between the Government and the banks, net lending to businesses has fallen by £10 billion over the last year.

    And despite all the promises that credit easing would be a short term solution to this problem, in the six months since it was announced not a single businesses has yet been helped, indeed the details of the National Loan Guarantee scheme have yet to be announced.

    Vickers is right to argue that to protect customers and taxpayers we need much tougher accountability and transparency and clear, workable and robust firewalls – as well as stronger competition, especially in business lending, where the Government is taking much too long to make progress.

    But on regulation, we must take a careful and balanced approach

    Too soft: and we risk again leaving taxpayers and businesses exposed.

    Too heavy-handed: and we risk throwing the baby out with the bath water and ignoring the needs of businesses small and large.

    The easiest way to avoid any financial risks at all would be to have no transactions at all. But a lurch to regulatory risk aversion would be disastrous for the UK economy.

    That is why in Parliament we are arguing that the proposed permanent Financial Policy Committee of the Bank of England should have a clear objective, alongside financial stability and consumer protection, to promote economic growth – a proposal which has been supported by many business organisations.

    In my view, we need to have in our minds the US response to the WorldCom and Enron accounting scandals a decade ago.

    The US Congress reacted with a heavy-handed piece of rules-based legislation – Sarbanes-Oxley. But it didn’t work.

    It did not stop the financial crisis which started in the US.

    And its complexity drove jobs and tax revenues out of the US year by year.

    This audience doesn’t need telling that rigid rules-based regulation is often not the answer, and that small and medium-sized businesses desperate for much needed risk capital and fair terms are likely to be the losers if regulation is too heavy-handed.

    Let me be clear – I know many of your members worry about the burden of regulation.

    It is always important to keep Government under pressure on that issue as on spending too where wasteful public investment can never be justified.

    As my colleague the Shadow Business Secretary Chuka Umunna said in his speech earlier this week, a good industrial policy:

    “is as much about knowing when not to intervene, to let business and competition thrive in healthy markets, as it is about knowing when to intervene to address market failure where needed. Active, intelligent government understands its limits.”

    But that does not mean the only thing government needs to do is cut regulation and spending and then leave business alone to get on with it.

    I am not going to claim to you that Labour got everything right in government – let alone that you all agreed with what we did.

    But many of our most successful economic policies:

    – record investment in rail and roads,

    – an expansion of higher education and science,

    – a renaissance in apprenticeships,

    – CGT for entrepreneurs cut to 10%

    – faster business planning decisions,

    – the car scrappage scheme,

    were successful because we had moved beyond the old-style British debate – public bad, private good? private bad, public good? – and recognised that partnership between business and Government is vital if we are to rise to the competitive challenge.

    Peter Mandelson was right when he said:

    “ministers and markets can and should mix.”

    And at a time like this, when we need to rebuild our economy for the future, that partnership is needed more than ever.

    I said at the beginning of my speech it is the clear view of business that you need stability and predictability and, where possible, we politicians should seek consensus where we can in the national interest.

    In all sectors, but especially in manufacturing, aviation or energy, that is the only way to ensure businesses can invest.

    Consensus is not always a good thing. But nor is headline-grabbing change for the sake of it.

    That is why – issue by issue – whether we agree or disagree – I am committed to working with you and listening to you on all issues which affect your businesses and our economic future.

    It is the only way forward for Britain.

  • Ed Balls – 2011 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    balls

    Below is the text of the speech made by Ed Balls, the Shadow Chancellor, to the Labour Party conference on 26th September 2011.

     

    Conference –

    It’s a great honour to make my first conference speech as Shadow Chancellor – the first ever Labour and Co-operative Shadow Chancellor – here at our first annual conference in this great city of Liverpool since 1925.

    Thank you to Norma for that introduction – and to all the members of our Policy Commission for their hard work this year.

    And I want to say a special thank-you to my co-Chair, Cath Speight, for all her advice and leadership as a member of the NEC for the past 11 years.

    Cath – you are a great servant to your union and to our party and we all thank you.

    And Conference, I also want to pay tribute to our leader – my friend – Ed Miliband.

    On Libya, on phone hacking and on the riots – he has shown calm, resolute and courageous leadership:

    – not afraid to take on vested interests;

    – passionate that we have responsibility in our society from top to bottom;

    – determined that the promise of Britain – that the next generation will do better than the last – can be fulfilled.

    In Ed Miliband, conference, we have a leader who is genuine, principled, honest and fair…

    … a leader who speaks his mind and tells the truth…

    … a leader in whom I believe we can ask the British public to put their trust.

    A BETTER WAY?

    And nowhere is it more important that we win the public’s trust for an alternative future – a better way forward – than on the economy.

    Speaking to one delegate this morning, she said to me:

    “people are really worried about jobs and the cost of everything going up – and they’re all saying, ‘surely there’s a better way?’”

    Here in Liverpool, and as a result of the Coalition’s policies, unemployment is now rising again as this city faces the deepest cuts to local services in a generation.

    But – a far cry from the scuttling taxis carrying redundancy notices in the 1980s – it is a Labour Council here in Liverpool which is working night and day to make savings and cut bureaucracy so they can protect jobs and keep services for the most vulnerable.

    And I say to Liverpool’s Labour leader Joe Anderson – to all our leaders in local government facing difficult times across the UK – and to First Minister Carwyn Jones in Wales – we pay tribute to your leadership and responsibility and determination that there can be a better way:

    – yes – a credible plan to get our deficit down;

    – but action now – a plan for growth and jobs;

    – and long-term reforms to build a stronger, fairer economy;

    A Labour plan to get Britain working again.

    GLOBAL LEADERSHIP

    Conference, let’s face the facts.

    These are the darkest, most dangerous times for the global economy in my lifetime.

    Our country – the whole of the world – is facing a threat that most of us have only ever read about in the history books – a lost decade of economic stagnation:

    – The aftermath of a worldwide financial and banking crash;

    – Families and businesses fearful about the future, cutting back on spending and investment;

    – Governments all around the world trying to cut spending at the same time;

    – Demand sucked out of the economy;

    – Stock markets tumbling, banks in trouble, economies stalling, unemployment rising – a vicious circle as slow growth makes it harder to get deficits down;

    – Not a crisis of any one country or continent – but a spiralling global crisis – from which no economy can be safe…

    … threatening the jobs, pensions and living standards of families here in Britain and across the world.

    Conference –

    This is not – as the Conservatives claim – simply a crisis of public debt which can be solved – country by country – by austerity, cuts and retrenchment – but truly a global growth crisis which is deepening and becoming more dangerous by the day.

    And the world must remember the lesson of the 1930s: that there is no credibility in piling austerity on austerity, tax rise on tax rise, cut upon cut in the eventual hope that it will work when all the evidence is pointing the other way.

    I said to you a year ago – you either learn the lessons of history – or you repeat the mistakes of history – that is the choice the world faces today.

    But at a time when the world desperately needs a global plan for growth – when it needs wise and strong leadership – where will it come from?

    Not so far from the Euro zone – unable to stand together and do what it takes to restore confidence and growth.

    Not so far from America – deadlocked by the reckless games of the Republican right.

    And Conference, what about our Prime Minister and Chancellor?

    Do they urge a change of course in the Euro zone?

    No – they applaud austerity, and urge even deeper cuts.

    Do they urge sanity in America?

    No – George Osborne boasts that his Republican friends in Congress are following his advice.

    Do they urge a global growth plan in the G7, the G20 or the IMF?

    No.

    Confronted with the biggest most urgent global challenge of our age, all they can do is urge other countries to pile austerity on austerity too… ignoring the lessons of history and the evidence here in Britain, and across the world, that austerity just isn’t working.

    That is not just a failure of leadership – it is a complete abdication of responsibility too.

    A SAFE HAVEN?

    But Conference…

    It’s not right to blame David Cameron and George Osborne for everything that’s wrong with our economy.

    They didn’t cause the global financial crisis.

    That crisis was a body blow to our economy and our public finances – we went into recession, lost tax revenues, a big deficit opened up.

    Whoever won the last election faced a difficult task to secure economic recovery and reduce that deficit over time.

    And that task has been made harder by the economic problems in the Euro-zone, America and Japan.

    But the simple question that the government has to answer – the issue on which they can and must be held to account – is this: have their decisions over the past year and a half made things better or have they made things worse?

    A year ago, I warned that, with our economy still fragile and a global hurricane brewing, it was not the time to tear out the foundations of the house.

    But David Cameron and George Osborne thought they knew better:

    – They said a VAT rise and cutting faster than any other major country would boost economic confidence and growth;

    – That if they cut public sector jobs, the private sector would more than fill the gap;

    – That their plan would make Britain immune from the global storm – and any other course of action would cause stock market turmoil…

    And to be fair, some respected people agreed with them.

    But we in this Party argued for a steadier, more balanced approach – halving the deficit over four years.

    We said that going too far, too fast would choke off the recovery and put jobs at risk;

    We warned that cutting spending and raising taxes too fast would create a vicious circle here in Britain too – and make it harder to get the deficit down.

    And look what’s happened – even before the global instability of the past three months.

    Confidence has slumped.

    Our economy has flat-lined now for nine months.

    Slower growth in Britain than any other G7 country except Japan.

    Unemployment now rising again.

    That is why the deficit is already set to be £46 billion higher than the government planned.

    Because if you choke off the recovery and put tens of thousands of people on the dole – not paying taxes, claiming benefits instead – then, of course, borrowing goes up.

    In the 1980s, the Tories told us – shockingly – that because their economic objective was to reduce inflation, rising unemployment was a price worth paying.

    This generation of Tories need to realise if your economic objective is to reduce the deficit, then rising unemployment is one thing you just can’t afford.

    NO ALTERNATIVE?

    So Conference…

    .. the global economic crisis is deepening, our economy is badly exposed…

    And what do we hear from ministers?

    However bad things get… even when we can all see it’s not working:

    ‘We are sticking to the plan,’ they say

    ‘We are not for turning.’

    ‘There is no alternative.’

    ‘There is no better way.’

    They claim that any change of course would lead to a market crisis and higher interest rates.

    But our interest rates are at record lows because our economy has stagnated.

    Markets are losing confidence in governments all around the world because there is no growth.

    And there is a growing chorus of voices calling for a change of course…

    Even the IMF now says:

    “growth is necessary for fiscal credibility”, and…

    “slamming on the brakes too quickly will hurt the recovery and worsen job prospects.”

    Yes – a credible economic policy does needs a plan to get the deficit down.

    Yes – a credible economic policy needs political agreement to implement that plan.

    But an economic policy can only be credible if it works.

    And George Osborne’s economic plan is hurting… but Conference… it’s just not working.

    ALL LABOUR’S FAULT?

    But you all heard the chorus from the Lib Dems last week…

    You all know what we will hear next week from the Tories…

    The only line in the script they’ve got left:

    ‘It’s all Labour’s fault – we’re just clearing up the mess’.

    Conference, we could spend all of our time defending our record… and there is much to be proud of.

    But for families today – struggling to pay the bills, worrying about their jobs – being told about the great things Labour did in government isn’t much comfort… it doesn’t pay the bills, help get a job or secure the pension.

    Some commentators say the opposite: accept the Tory critique that Labour spending caused the economic crisis; back Tory policy on the deficit; neutralise the issue and move on.

    And when they say we made mistakes in government, they’re right… we must admit them and show we’ve learned from them.

    The 75p pension rise – that was a mistake.

    So was abolishing the 10p tax rate.

    We didn’t do enough to get all employers to train.

    We should have adopted tougher controls on migration from Eastern Europe.

    We didn’t spend every pound of public money well.

    And yes – we didn’t regulate the banks toughly enough and stop their gross irresponsibility – here in Britain and all around the world.

    But don’t let anyone tell you that Labour in government was profligate with public money – when we went into the crisis with lower national debt than we inherited in 1997 and lower than America, France, Germany and Japan.

    And don’t let anyone say it was public spending on public services here in Britain which caused the global financial crisis.

    It wasn’t too many police officers or nurses or teachers here in Britain that bankrupted Lehman Brothers in New York.

    Conference.

    We didn’t get everything right.

    We made mistakes.

    But abolishing the Future Jobs Fund and cutting 100,000 jobs for young people out of work… that wasn’t Labour’s mistake.

    Scrapping the Regional Development Agencies, ending EMAs, cutting childcare tax credits for working parents… those aren’t Labour’s mistakes.

    Wasting £2bn on a reckless NHS reorganisation…

    Wasting £100m on elected police commissioners…

    Wasting 1bn on a tax cut for the banks…

    Wasting billions of pounds on the bills of rising unemployment…

    Ripping up our balanced plan, trying to cut the deficit faster any other country and choking off the recovery as a result…

    Conference… these aren’t Labour’s mistakes…

    They are David Cameron’s mistakes…

    And George Osborne’s mistakes…

    And Nick Clegg’s mistakes…

    Reckless. Ideological. Unfair.

    Tory mistakes every one of them.

    A BETTER WAY

    I think of a family I know in my constituency: self-employed – a husband and wife team – times are hard at the moment – but things are still just about ok – they can pay the mortgage – they managed a holiday with the kids this year.

    But they are worried…

    Worried about gas bills, petrol, food all going up…

    Worried about losing their tax credits and the child benefit..

    Worried when they see other local businesses closing down…

    And worried too about the future – can they keep up their pension payments, can they afford it when their son goes to college.

    Better off under Labour – but it was their hard work which did it.

    Deeply aspirational for their kids – but now very worried about their futures too.

    Believe me – they don’t want to hear about all the things Labour got right.

    And believe me – they certainly do want to know we’ve learned from our mistakes.

    But most important…

    They want to know that there’s a reason to be hopeful…

    That their hard work will be rewarded and their kids will do well…

    That there is a better way.

    Conference…

    Trying to cut the deficit too far, too fast isn’t working.

    The government must adopt a steadier, more balanced plan to get our deficit down and take immediate action now to support the economy and create jobs here in Britain.

    So here are five immediate steps the government can and should take right now:

    Step one – repeat the bank bonus tax again this year – and use the money to build 25,000 affordable homes and guarantee a job for 100,000 young people – it can’t be right to be cutting taxes on the banks when almost 1 in 5 young people are now out of work.

    Step two – genuinely bring forward long-term investment projects – schools, roads and transport – to get people back to work and strengthen our economy for the future.

    Step three – reverse January’s damaging VAT rise now for a temporary period – a £450 boost for a family with two kids – immediate help for our high streets and for struggling families and pensioners too.

    Step four – announce an immediate one year cut in VAT to 5% on home improvements, repairs and maintenance – to help homeowners and the many small businesses that are so dependent on the state of the housing market.

    Step five – a one year national insurance tax break for every small firm which takes on extra workers, using the money left over from the government’s failed national insurance rebate for new businesses – helping small businesses to grow and create jobs.

    Conference… a plan to help struggling families and small businesses, get our economy growing and create jobs which are the key to getting our deficit down.

    Action on jobs;

    Investment brought forward;

    Support for families;

    Support for homeowners;

    Support for small businesses.

    Five immediate steps the government could take tomorrow – and if they do so, we will back them.

    Call it Plan A plus

    Call it Plan B

    Call it Plan C

    I don’t care what they call it.

    Britain just needs a plan that works.

    TOUGH DECISIONS

    But I have to level with you all – and the country… a plan for growth now will help get the economy moving again and stop the vicious circle on the deficit – but by itself it won’t secure our economic future or magic the deficit away.

    A steadier, more balanced, medium-term plan to get the deficit down will still mean difficult decisions and tough choices in the years ahead that any government will face.

    Tough choices on tax and spending – like the cuts to welfare, education and Home Office budgets that we set out before the election.

    Discipline in public and private sector pay.

    And no matter how much we dislike particular Tory spending cuts or tax rises, we cannot make promises now to reverse them.

    I won’t do that and neither will any of my Shadow Cabinet colleagues.

    And while we know that the Government’s approach to pensions has been confrontational and unfair…

    That there is nothing George Osborne would like better than a strike this autumn to divert attention from his failing economic plan…

    … we know too that there are difficult decisions on pensions which we cannot duck and that under Labour contributions and the retirement age would be rising too.

    Conference – it will not be enough to expose that David Cameron and George Osborne have got the economy badly wrong.

    We still know today what we recognised seventeen years ago: we will never have credibility unless we have the discipline and the strength to take tough decisions.

    When I left the Financial Times to work for Labour in 1994, it was because I knew that a reputation for credibility and a platform of stability were the essential pre-conditions for achieving our wider goals, and I wanted to play my part.

    And Conference…

    – Bank of England independence;

    – not joining the Euro;

    – levelling with the public that saving the NHS needed a tax rise;

    – using all the £22bn windfall from the 3G mobile phone auction to repay the national debt – despite Tory demands to spend it at the time;

    … the same iron discipline that guided those decisions must guide a future Labour government too.

    And let me say these two things today.

    First, before the next election – and based on the circumstances we face – we will set out for our manifesto tough fiscal rules that the next Labour government will have to stick to – to get out country’s current budget back to balance and national debt on a downward path.

    And these fiscal rules will be independently monitored by the Office for Budget Responsibility.

    And second we know that, even as bank shares are falling again, David Cameron and Nick Clegg are still betting on a windfall gain from privatising RBS and Lloyds to pay for a pre-election giveaway.

    We could also pledge to spend that windfall.

    But – just as with the 3G mobile phone auction – we will commit instead in our manifesto to do the responsible thing and use any windfall gain from the sale of bank shares to repay the national debt.

    Conference that will be Labour’s choice – fiscal responsibility in the national interest.

    SECURING OUR LONG-TERM ECONOMIC FUTURE

    And on that platform of fiscal responsibility and action now for jobs and growth, we must also build the long-term future of the British economy.

    And that means government must act to ensure markets work in the public interest and tackle unfair concentrations of power.

    Many of us have had enough experience of government to know that the public sector can fail too:

    – that Whitehall doesn’t always know best;

    – that well-meaning business regulations designed by public servants can sometimes do more harm than good in the real world;

    – that central directions shouted ever more loudly are no substitute for proper public service reforms that get incentives right, tackle market failure and put power in the hands of users.

    But we know too that government just walking away is not the answer…

    That government has a vital role to play, working closely with business, in making our economy stronger and more balanced for the long-term.

    John Denham, Liam Byrne, Angela Eagle and I are working on our new financial, industrial and employment policies.

    We can’t claim we have all the answers at this stage.

    But we know we can’t tackle our skills deficit unless both government and employers do more.

    We can’t have a modern industrial policy without government action:

    – to support new manufacturing technologies, including green manufacturing;

    – to make the planning system work to support investment and jobs;

    – and yes, to ensure a genuinely level playing field for procurement too.

    And we can’t tackle the debilitating short-termism which still plagues the relationship between finance and industry in Britain without radical reforms… reforms that must go beyond the tough regulation of the banks that the Vickers Commission has proposed.

    That is why Ed Miliband, John Denham and I are determined that Labour will lead a debate on how to tackle short-termism in our economy… including tackling market failures in small business lending… and that means we must now examine proposals for a National Investment Bank for small business.

    CONCLUSION

    Conference, these are vital reforms.

    Reforms upon which the future of our country depends.

    But they are reforms which this Government just cannot deliver.

    Because to back these reforms means to reject the debilitating ideology – private always good, public always bad, rising inequality inevitable – which grips this Tory-led Government.

    The same view that says government is always the problem, and getting government out of the way the solution and that rewards at the top will eventually trickle down.

    It is the same ideology that says private companies running the health service will always be better for patients.

    That says cutting police officers, youth services and family intervention projects will somehow make our communities safer.

    That claims ‘we’re all in this together’… but then delivers Budgets that hit families with children, hit women more than men and hit people with disabilities hardest of all

    It is the same ideology that believes the global financial crisis was caused by too much public spending – and that because they are cutting public spending faster than ever in our history, Britain has become a safe haven.

    A safe haven…?

    When unemployment is rising, when our economy is flat-lining – how on earth can our Prime Minister and Chancellor say that Britain is a safe-haven?

    It may be a safe haven for those who don’t need to work, for those with independent means, and those for whom £9,000 a year tuition fees is small change…

    It may be a safe haven for David Cameron and George Osborne and Boris Johnson and their friends…

    But for the 16,000 companies that have gone out of business in the last year, Tory Britain is not a safe haven:

    – for the young people losing their EMA this term;

    – for the women seeing their pensions cut;

    – for the families about to see their child benefit taken away;

    – for the million young people now out of work…

    …Tory Britain is no safe haven.

    And for the millions of families struggling with higher bills, worried about their jobs and what their children’s future holds…

    …Tory Britain is no safe haven at all.

    Conference…

    True to our values…

    Willing to make the tough decisions…

    For the sake of our economy, for al the British people…

    Labour must win the argument.

    We must show there is a reason to hope.

    We must show that there can be a better future.

    There is a better way.

  • Ed Balls – 2011 Speech to GMB Conference

    balls

    Below is the text of the speech made by Ed Balls, the Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer, to the 2011 GMB Conference.

     

    It’s a great honour to be invited today to address your annual conference here in Brighton.

    A year ago, I spoke at your conference in Southport as shadow education secretary.

    And that day I told this Conference that I came with bad news – that the Conservative Education Secretary Michael Gove had put an immediate stop to the extension of free school meals that this union campaigned for and delivered, through Labour’s National Policy Forum.

    Back then, we could only guess at the scale of what this Conservative-led government intended to unleash.

    The reckless gamble they were willing to take with our economy, jobs and living standards.

    Their determination to force through the deepest cuts to public services for over sixty years – faster than any other country.

    And the biggest hit to the living standards of your members in a generation:

    VAT up to 20% costing families with children £450 a year and pushing up petrol prices too;

    Pensions and benefits uprated by the CPI not RPI on a permanent basis;

    Women already in their fifties having to work another one or two years to draw their pension;

    Cuts to childcare support;

    The youth jobs fund abolished;

    Workplace rights scaled back for parents;

    Tuition fees to be trebled;

    And Educational Maintenance Allowances – support that helped the children of thousands of low paid workers stay on in education – now removed.

    And we also had no idea of quite how unable or unwilling Nick Clegg, Vince Cable and their Liberal Democrat colleagues would be to do anything about it.

    But we can’t be in any doubt any more.

    We know that the global financial crisis was a crisis that happened in every country – it was not a recession made in Britain.

    We know that the crisis was caused by the irresponsible actions of banks round the world – but I say this to you in all humility – Labour should have been tougher on them.

    And we know we need to get the deficit down and that means tough decisions – tax rises and spending cuts.

    But the evidence is all around us – George Osborne’s plan is not working as he expected. And however much he and the IMF now hope this is just a temporary blip, the fact is his spending cuts are going too far and too fast and have seen our economy flat-line in the last six months, as the confidence has slumped and the recovery has stalled.

    And by cutting too far and too fast, he is creating a vicious circle in our economy: more people out of work and on benefits will make it harder to get the deficit down. In fact the Government is now set to borrow £46bn more than they had planned.

    So today I want to set out why this rash plan is not working – and why the Government should follow Labour’s alternative and balanced deficit plan which puts jobs first.

    I want to explain why this week the shadow work secretary Liam Byrne and I will launch a new campaign for a £2 billion tax on bankers’ bonuses which should be used to create 100,000 more jobs for young people, build more affordable homes and support Small Businesses.

    But before I do – let me say this…

    When Coalition Ministers come to this Conference and warn that they will have to act and legislate if we see a return to the un-rest of the 1980s…

    Do not fall for this transparent game…

    This attempt by Government Ministers to provoke a row about strikes and blame the stalling recovery on trade union members and working people.

    Do not fall for David Cameron and George Osborne and Vince Cable’s desperate attempt to take this country back to the confrontation of the past.

    Instead… let us say loud and clear:

    We don’t want to see a return to the 1980s.

    We don’t want a return to the division and confrontation of the 1980s.

    We don’t want a return to the strikes and lost working days of the 1980s – seven times more days lost than under the last Labour Government.

    We don’t want a return to the mass unemployment of the 1980s.

    We don’t want a return to the rising child poverty of the 1980s.

    We don’t want a return to the decaying school buildings, and long NHS waiting lists of the 1980s.

    And above all we don’t want to return – ever again – the mass youth unemployment of the 1980s – to a time when young people left school or college and went straight into long-term unemployment – opportunity denied, a terrible waste of talent, which scarred our country for years to come.

    That is why we now need a proper debate about an alternative economic policy – a proper Plan B for jobs and growth, which – with sensible cuts and fair tax ris es – is the best way to get the deficit down.

    A proper debate which does not falsely claim that the recession and the deficit and now the stalling recovery are all caused by the national minimum wage or better maternity and paternity pay or record spending on the schools and NHS.

    You cannot blame this global financial crisis on GMB members, trade unions members, teachers, nurses, carers, lunch-time supervisors – Mums and Dads and Grandparents too.

    That would be a travesty – and we must not let David Cameron, George Osborne and Vince Cable get away with it.

    Let me say first how much we in the Labour Party value the commitment to a fairer society that embodies this union at its best.

    We appreciate the strong and challenging leadership of your general secretary, Paul Kenny.

    We appreciate the work your members do up and down the country to improve the working conditions for those in vital industries across our country – whether in our utilities, our public services or in the private sector.

    A mature relationship with the Labour Party and the trade union movement working together will be a vital part of any future for a strong and prosperous Britain.

    I stand here proud to have served in the last Labour Government.

    Where we got things right – even where at times we disagreed – I won’t be shy in saying it.

    But when this union made calls which we did not hear – and which in hindsight we should have – I hold my hands up.

    Your union led by Paul was at the forefront of bringing key issues to the top of the political agenda.

    Paul was the one of the first to make the case that we were too slow to recognise the impact of the unrestricted movement of labour within the rapidly expanding EU.

    He was the one saying that we cannot fight racism effectively if we ignore people’s worries about immigration

    We were too slow on the temporary and agency workers directive and we should have done more to manage the influx of labour from the EU.

    And your members were telling us we were late in addressing the housing shortage – and we were too slow to unlock the door to councils investing in new housing.

    But in thirteen years there were times when a mature relationship, based on common values, reaped real rewards for working people.

    From tax credits and a national minimum wage to make work pay to guaranteed holidays;

    From the right to join a trade union and be represented to new rights for part-time, temporary and agency workers;

    And new rights for parents and carers in the workplace.

    Our free school meals campaign shows how Labour, working with unions such as yours, can get things right.

    And with Brian Strutton and our colleagues in Unison we established the School Support Staff Negotiating Body.

    Fair pay and progression is just as important to teaching assistants, caretake rs, cleaners, cooks and lunchtime supervisors as for teachers, nurses, doctors and the police.

    The Government is making a profound mistake by abolishing that body.

    As I said at the outset, these are difficult times for the Labour Party, the Trade Union movement and above all the people we are here to represent.

    Well over twelve months on from the last general election, it is a matter of real regret that I am addressing your conference as the Shadow Chancellor, of an opposition Labour Party rather than as part of a Labour Government.

    I remember meeting a group of trade union activists in Manchester last July during the leadership election and one of them saying to me:

    “It’s all very well you coming along with your diagnoses of what went wrong and your vision for the next decade – but our members are losing their jobs now. What are you going to do about it?”

    It is both public sector and private sector workers who are being hit ha rd by the deepest and fastest cuts of any other major economy in the world

    It is GMB members whose jobs are on the line because of the Southern Cross scandal – as well as vulnerable people in their care. And with thanks to the work of your union we know the true impact of the massive frontloaded cuts to local government – hitting jobs and services and hitting the poorest areas hardest.

    We should remember that when the government claims that we are all in this together.

    GMB members – especially those working part time or in low paid jobs, or women and parents bringing up children – know the truth of that claim.

    Because while David Cameron promised to lead the most family-friendly Government ever, the reality is that he is giving the banks a tax cut this year, while his changes to tax and benefits are hitting women harder than men and hitting families with children the hardest of all.

    And GMB members know that his real agenda includes seein g the door opened wide to a two tier workforce in our public services as TUPE and other rights are reviewed – and protection against unfair dismissal scaled back.

    So when anyone tells us that – after 13 years in Government – Labour needs a period in opposition, I think they need their head examining.

    People say to me: Ed, you’re good at opposition.

    I reply: I hate being in opposition.

    Because however effective we are in holding this Tory-led Government to account.

    If we’re out of power, we can’t turn people’s aspirations into realities.

    If we’re out of power, we can’t protect the vulnerable and help those most in need.

    If we’re out of power, we can’t get every child the support they need to succeed.

    We can stand up for jobs, social justice, equality and fairness – but if we’re out of power, we can’t deliver.

    And yet having spent the last year travelling around the UK as a candidate for the lea dership of our party, then shadow home secretary and now as Shadow Chancellor, I know that – despite the general election result – the Labour Party and trade union members I have met are not down or despondent but energised and united and determined to do what it takes to see Labour back in Government.

    And I was proud, along with many of you – and with mums and dads and Grandparents and teachers and nurses and small business owners too –to be part of the TUC rally on 26 March – a massive and peaceful march that said no to the Conservative–led Coalition’s too deep and too fast cuts.

    Because we know the very future of our public services, our welfare state, our economy are now in peril because of the reckless and deeply ideological Tory direction this Coalition Government has taken.

    And don’t let anyone tell you the lie that this Government has no alternative because Labour spent too much on schools, hospitals and police.

    It wasn’t because we built too many new hospitals or repaired too many leaking roofs in our schools here in Britain that Lehman Brothers, an Investment Bank in New York collapsed.

    Yes we did increase public spending – because for 18 years the Tories had starved our public services and I make no apologies for building new hospitals – for building new schools.

    And we did so by increasing some fairer taxes such as the national insurance rise in 2003 to increase health spending.

    And we were able to do so also because we got many of the big calls on the economy right;

    Independence for the Bank of England – which the Tories opposed – delivered stable growth and low interest rates;

    We kept out of the Euro, a decision which looks even more sensible when we see the trouble Ireland, Greece and Portugal are facing;

    And before the global financial crisis we had the second lowest level of debt of any G7 country – lower than the US, France, Germany, Italy and Japan.

    And when we left office a year ago, and after some really tough times, we were turning a corner – unemployment starting to fall month by month, lower inflation and the economy starting to grow strongly.

    There was still a long way to go, but we were getting back on the right track.

    And because more people were in work, paying taxes and not receiving benefits, borrowing ended up over £20 billion lower last year than forecast.

    But now George Osborne has ripped up our plan to halve the deficit and decided he will cut the deficit faster than any other major economy in the world – putting up VAT, cutting deep into frontline services, scrapping public and private sector jobs.

    And look at what’s happening now:

    Our economy – w hich was growing – has now ground to a halt.

    Prices are rising for everyone – threatening a rise in mortgage rates.

    Unemployment – which was falling month on month – is now forecast to be higher – up to 200,000 higher.

    The Treasury borrowed more this April than in any other April – ever.

    That’s because there’s a vicious circle.

    If the economy isn’t growing and hundreds of thousands of people are losing their jobs, then fewer people pay tax and more people claim benefits making it harder to get the deficit down.

    So when George Osborne, Nick Clegg, David Cameron say there is no alternative to deep and fast cuts now.

    Let us remember:

    That is what Margaret Thatcher said in 1980 – and we saw the devastation to our communities, to manufacturing and youth jobs as unemployment rose year by year for half a decade.

    And the previous Prime Minister to say ‘there is no alternative,’ was a Labour Prime Minister , Ramsay MacDonald, in 1931, two years after the 1929 Wall Street Crash – the second biggest financial crisis of the last hundred years.

    There is no alternative, MacDonald said, but to cut spending and unemployment benefits to get the deficit down and keep the financial markets happy.

    But the Labour party said no – and so did Lloyd George and the Liberals.

    And MacDonald had to form a Coalition with the Conservatives to make his cuts.

    And what happened?

    The Great Depression of the 1930s, mass unemployment and – yes – the deficit got worse.

    Conference, you either learn the lessons of history or you repeat the mistakes of history – and that’s what they are doing.

    The truth is George Osborne is going too far and too fast – and we’re paying the price in lost jobs and slower growth.

    He has replaced Labour’s balanced plan to halve the deficit over four years with his plan to wipe it out – with £40 billion more cuts and tax rises.

    And he abolished the youth jobs fund which was helping thousands of young people back to work.

    We need to act now to stop another lost generation of young people – like in the 1980s when youth unemployment rose for four years after the recession was over.

    Because putting young people on the dole is not just a waste of talent but a waste of money too.

    Our plan for a £2 billion tax on bankers’ bonuses to create 100,000 more jobs for young people and build more affordable homes will be put to a vote in parliament – and we’re asking MPs from other parties to back it.

    It’s the best way to get the deficit down – and stop Britain’s talent going to waste.

    That’s the right and fair thing to do, but George Osborne isn’t listening.

    He just doesn’t seem to get it.

    He doesn’t get how hard people are being hit by higher vat and cuts in local services.

    And he doesn’t get what it means to face the fear or reality of unemployment and the damage this will do to our young people.

    For the sake of our country’s future, he needs to think again and start putting jobs and growth first – and he needs to do it now.

    Conference, members of this union knows better than anyone

    When living standards are squeezed, you know who pays the price.

    When public services are scaled back, you know which communities lose out.

    When unemployment becomes entrenched, you know which areas suffer most.

    When only some children succeed, you know which children will be left behind.

    And the reason why our movement campaigned so hard in 1945 and 1964 and 1997 was because we had seen the reality of what Tory Governments do.

    Our predecessors saw their communities ravaged by the mass unemployment of the ‘30s.

    They saw millions of young people excluded from the chance of a university place in the ‘50s.

    And then many of us lived the rough the 18 years of Thatcher and Major Governments and saw:

    Child poverty doubling;

    Youth unemployment soaring;

    Public services slashed to the bone.

    So in the coming months let us carry on the hard work of winning back the trust of the British people – because there is so much at stake that is worth winning for.

    3,500 children’s centres – that’s what’s at stake;

    Health and safety at the workplace – that’s what’s at stake;

    A young generation – at risk of mass unemployment again – that’s what’s at stake;

    Over 2 million children still living in poverty – that’s what’s at stake;

    Our National Health Service – that’s what’s at stake;

    The future of our country – that’s what’s at stake.

    So Ed Miliband and I and the whole of the Shadow Cabinet will take the fight to the Coalition and show there is a better way.

    There is an alternative.

  • Ed Balls – 2010 Labour Party Conference Speech

    balls

    Below is the text of the speech made by the then Shadow Education Secretary, Ed Balls, at the 2010 Labour Party Conference.

     

    Conference.

    Today – all across our country – millions of children are going to school no longer putting up with leaking roofs or peeling walls…

    …but instead going to one of the 4,000 brand new or fully refurbished schools built in the last thirteen years by our Labour government.

    So when people tell you that politics doesn’t make a difference – that ‘you’re all the same’ – let us be proud of what we all achieved together in government.

    The best generation of teachers we have ever had.

    Over 120,000 more teaching assistants.

    3,500 Sure Start children’s centres.

    More young people getting an apprenticeship or going to university than e ver before.

    The best exam results ever.

    And standards rising fastest in the poorest areas.

    That is a record of which we can all be proud.

    So Conference please join me today in thanking my predecessors:

    David Blunkett, Estelle Morris, Charles Clarke, Ruth Kelly, Alan Johnson – and the brilliant team of ministers who worked with me over the past three years – for the enormous contribution they have made to our country.

    And I want to pay tribute in particular to David Miliband who – as schools minister – made the inspired decision to launch the Building Schools for the Future programme…

    Conference, David has made a massive contribution already – and we all know he has a huge contribution to make in the future too.

    But we know too – every one of us in this hall:

    It’s the teachers and teaching assistants, the heads and caretakers, the social workers and nursery staff, the cooks and lunchtime supervisors whose publ ic service every day transforms the life chances of children in our country.

    They are the real heroes and we thank them all.

    Building Schools for the Future

    Conference, Vernon Coaker and headteacher Neil Wilson have shown us the difference our Labour government has made for the young people attending Newall Green High School here in Manchester.

    I am proud that we transformed hundreds of schools across the country – and today we have not one in two schools below our National Challenge standard as in 1997, but just one in 20 – schools Michael Gove has shown he will now abandon.

    But because of Michael Gove’s short-sighted and arbitrary and unfair decision to scrap the Building Schools for the Future programme, over 700,000 children in 700 schools up and down our country will now not be getting the new school building they were promised.

    And Michael Gove could not even publish a list of cancelled school buildings without getting it wrong – not just once but five times.

    We have heard from Councillor Elaine Costigan from Sandwell about the deep hurt and pain that the mistakes in the lists and the cancelled buildings have caused for children and parents in her ward.

    Elaine Costigan.

    Four weeks ago a Tory Councillor.

    Today proud to be a Labour Councillor fighting for fairness for all local children.

    Michael Gove.

    The man they told us was a genius – the Tories’ rising star.

    They don’t say that any more.

    In opposition he might have been able to write good jokes for the House of Commons.

    But it’s no joke for all the children whose school buildings have been cancelled and whose hopes have been dashed.

    And when I hear Michael Gove say that new buildings don’t make a difference.

    I remember last year opening a new school in Knowsley, in a deprived ward on Merseyside, and walking round the magnificent new school build ing with a group of the students.

    And asking them what’s the best thing about your new school?

    And expecting – as usual – them to mention the Astroturf or the new canteen or the IT suite.

    And you know what a girl in Year 9 said to me?

    ‘We never thought anyone would ever think we were worth a place like this’.

    And when I mentioned her remark to the headteacher, he said to me ‘you’ve got to understand, all these millions of pounds, there has not been a building built like this in this community for decades – and my job is to use this chance to raise aspirations and to say to all the students – and their parents too – look, work hard, take the opportunity, show them you’re really worth it.’

    And that is why it is such a tragedy that in Sandwell, and Liverpool, and Nottingham and Brent and Wakefield and in 80 local authorities round the country Michael Gove has now told hundreds of thousands of children – sorry, but you are not worth it.

    And that is why I was proud to stand this summer with the NASUWT and the NUT and ATL and Unison and GMB and Unite and UCATT and parents, governors and teachers from around the country at the Save Our Schools rally to say to Michael Gove:

    Think again.

    Change your mind.

    Our children are worth it.

    Curriculum and free schools

    But Michael Gove is not just cancelling new school buildings, he is also narrowing the curriculum and his education reforms will entrench division and inequality.

    A few weeks ago I went to see a new BSF building for Mossley Hollins High School in Tameside – set to open next February.

    It is an ‘outstanding’ school and the headteacher and the school council took me on a building site tour to see the science labs and the library and the dance studio.

    Yes, the new dance studio.

    Michel Gove says he wants schools now to focus only on ‘academic’ subjects, to drop our new Diplomas and to shun what he sneeringly calls ‘soft’ subjects like design and technology, construction, music, sports or dance.

    Conference, I really don’t think he’s got a clue.

    I’ve been to so many schools over the last three years where head teachers have taken me to see a lesson in GCSE dance and said to me: ‘look at that class, it’s not just that we have a great dance teacher in this school but the boost to aspiration and the belief and motivation of the students in this studio from this course will translate directly into their GCSE maths and English results as well’. That is great teaching and great leadership – and we should celebrate our pupils’ achievements and not keep running them down.

    But what really upsets me is that as Michael Gove is dashing the hopes of children in state schools around our country, he a nd David Cameron are also travelling round promising new school buildings to a few parents but only if they are willing to opt out of the state system and any relationship with the elected local authority and set up one of their go-it-alone DIY ‘free market’ schools.

    A policy which we know from Sweden delivered lower standards and greater inequality.

    A policy which even the Liberal Democrat conference agrees is divisive, costly and unfair.

    A policy which will divide communities and disadvantage children with special educational needs.

    Conference, this is the most socially divisive education experiment for 60 years.

    In government, our Children’s Plan was driven by a moral cause:

    – that every child has talent and potential

    – that some children do face greater challenges because of their disability, their special need or where they live

    – but that no barrier is too great to overcome if the community works together to make sure every child can succeed

    And our academies programme gave more help and support to underperforming schools in the most disadvantaged communities.

    Michael Gove’s academies programme gives extra resources to outstanding schools in more advantaged communities.

    And he has cancelled many of the radical reforms of our Children’s Plan:

    – guaranteed 1 to 1 tuition for all children – cancelled

    – free school lunches for half a million primary school children – ditched

    – breakfast clubs for disadvantaged children – mocked

    – social work reform – shelved

    – the new pay negotiating body for support staff – abolished

    – hundreds of new play areas – scrapped

    What a shameful record after just five months in Government.

    Stammering

    And Conference, our Children’s Plan was important because it said no child should be held back through the lack of proper support, whatever their extra need.

    That’s why Alan Johnson and I asked John Bercow to review and improve speech and language support.

    And this is a personal thing for me.

    I have had a stammer all of my life.

    That’s why in the past I’ve often had to speak without notes.

    I only started to talk openly about this recently – since being in the Cabinet – because it’s only by talking about it, and being open about the challenge, that I’ve been able to deal with it.

    I was lucky. I am pretty tough.

    I have had help and support, including from Yvette and friends.

    But the lesson for me is clear.

    There are hundreds of thousands of children struggle with their speech, or communication or their reading or their learning or a disability which so often holds them back.

    Struggling on alone without support – and the understanding of those around you – will never get you through.

    But if you can help a child deal with something like that – and help them to beli eve in themselves too – then you put their future back into their own hands.

    That is why I am in politics.

    That is why all of us are in politics.

    To get every child the support they need to succeed.

    That is our moral cause.

    Opposition

    So when anyone tells me that – after 13 years in government – Labour needs a period in opposition, I think they need their head examining.

    People say to me: Ed, you’re good at opposition.

    I reply: I hate being in opposition.

    Because however effective we are in holding this Coalition to account.

    If we’re out of power, we can’t turn people’s aspirations into realities.

    If we’re out of power, we can’t protect the vulnerable and help those most in need.

    If we’re out of power, we can’t get every child the support they need to succeed.

    We can stand up for jobs, social justice, equality and fairness – but if we’re out of power, we can’t deliver.

    Liberal Democrats and Conservatives

    And yet having spent the last four months travelling around the UK as a candidate for the leadership of our party, I know that – despite the General Election result – the Labour Party, Co-operative Party and trade union members I have met are not down or despondent but energised and united and determined to do what it takes to see Labour back in government.

    And let me tell you one reason why our party is so determined and our membership is surging.

    Two words:

    Nick Clegg.

    Don’t forget last year at this Conference, when The Sun newspaper came out for David Cameron, he was on track for an 80 seat majority.

    But David Cameron failed to convince the country his party had changed and that he could be trusted.

    It was not The Sun what won it for the Tories this time. It was not the Sun that put them into power.

    It was Nick Clegg:

    – the man whose own el ection leaflets said ’Vote Liberal Democrat or you’ll get a Tory government,’

    –  who said ‘stop the Tory VAT bombshell,’

    – who said spending cuts now would be ‘reckless’ and put jobs and the recovery at risk.

    It was Nick Clegg who has given us:

    – a Tory Prime Minister

    – a Tory Chancellor

    – a massive and unfair hike in VAT

    – and a Budget which even George Osborne’s new head of Budget responsibility says will hit the poorest hardest.

    I say to Liberal Democrats MPs:

    It is one thing to want to be in power.

    It is quite another thing to sacrifice your Manifesto and – yes – your principles for power.

    But to do so on the backs of the young and the poor and the pensioner and the vulnerable is a disgrace.

    But Conference.

    While we are shocked to see Liberal Democrat MPs propping up this Coalition government – and if we’re shocked, just think what all the people who voted for them feel like…

    … there is a second and more important reason why our party is determined.

    Because we know that this is a Conservative government – and it is the Tories we’ve got to beat to win the next election.

    Nick Clegg may look like David Cameron and increasingly sounds like David Cameron, but it’s David Cameron who is in charge.

    And however much David Cameron and George Osborne use the Liberal Democrats as their human shields, we must not let the Tories off the hook.

    Because we know the very future of our public services, our welfare state, our economy are now in peril because of the reckless and deeply ideological Tory direction this Coalition government has taken.

    There is an alternative 

    Take the decision to cancel Building School for the Future.

    It is not just educationally short-sighted and unfair.

    It is also putting hundreds of thousands of private construction jobs at risk just at the time when the priv ate sector is holding back from investing in new houses or private buildings.

    And when the Tories and the Liberal Democrats say we have to cancel our school building programme because getting the deficit down as fast as possible is the number one priority – when they say that there is no alternative to these cuts now, Let us remember:

    That is what Margaret Thatcher said in 1980 – and we saw the devastation to our communities, to manufacturing and youth jobs as unemployment rose year by year for half a decade.

    And the previous Prime Minister to say ‘there is no alternative,’ was a Labour Prime Minister, Ramsay MacDonald, in 1931, two years after the 1929 Wall Street crash – the second biggest financial crisis of the last hundred years.

    There is no alternative, MacDonald said, but to cut spending and unemployment benefits to get the deficit down and keep the financial markets happy.

    But this party said No – and so did Lloyd George and the Liberals.

    And MacDonald had to form a Coalition with the Conservatives to make his cuts.

    And what happened?

    The Great Depression of the 1930s, mass unemployment and – yes – the deficit got worse.

    Conference

    You either learn the lessons of history or you repeat the mistakes of history – and that’s what they are doing.

    Just think if Clement Attlee in 1945 – when after the war when our national debt was over twice its current level – had said that the first priority was to get the deficit down…there would have been no NHS, no new homes for heroes and no welfare state.

    But we don’t need to go back to the history books to see the warning signs over George Osborne’s economic policy – we only need to look across the Irish Sea.

    Two years ago, the Irish Government convinced itself they had to slash public services and cut child benefits to get their deficit down as fast as possible and reassure the money markets.

    The IMF praised the Irish government for its “sense of urgency”.

    And what has happened since?

    Recession turned to slump, unemployment at a 16-year high, 19 consecutive months of deflation, consumer spending and tax revenues plummeting, and the deficit worse now than when they started.

    The Irish Economist David McWilliams said this week:

    “It is like watching a slow car crash. The more they cut, the more the economy will continue to stagnate.”

    George Osborne used to say that Ireland has so much to teach us, if only we were willing to learn.

    Now he’s the one ignoring the lessons.

    Just imagine if Alistair Darling and Gordon Brown had listened to David Cameron and George Osborne in 2008 – and not nationalised the banks, not cut VAT, not invested in a new jobs programme – recession would have turned to depression and unemployment would be much higher today.

    And Conference, let me say – I was proud to s erve in Gordon Brown’s Cabinet – we did not get everything right – but he was the right Prime Minister for a world financial crisis and history will give him the credit he deserves.

    Of course we need tough decisions to get the deficit down.

    But Alistair Darling and Gordon Brown were also right to say: don’t start to cut the deficit until the recovery is secure.

    Conference, there is an alternative – a Labour alternative.

    We must win the argument – as Alistair said on Monday – that the speed and severity of the Coalition’s ‘ideological’ cuts are both unfair and unnecessary and will put the recovery at risk.

    So we must make the case, as Ed Miliband did yesterday, that the credible way to reduce the deficit and get the economic moving again is not to sacrifice jobs and growth – but to put jobs and growth first.

    George Osborne

    Too many people have worked too hard over the last three years to get us through thi s economic storm to let George Osborne throw it away.

    So let this Conference send out a message to George Osborne and David Cameron:

    Whenever you put at risk the jobs that we protected.

    Whenever your policies threaten the homes that we saved from repossession.

    Whenever you put another child and another pensioner back into poverty.

    The Labour Party will be there…and we will fight you every inch of the way.

    The Leadership

    But Conference, there is a final reason – perhaps the most important – why I believe our party is ready for the fight ahead.

    Because I believe our Labour leadership contest has shown we have learned the lessons of Labour history – from the 1950s and the 1980s and from more recent times – that to divide is fatal, to look inwards and blame the voters spells disaster.

    I have been proud to be a candidate in this leadership election, the first every Co-operative MP to do so, and I want to thank my colleagues who backed me, the CWU, all the party members and councillors and trade unionists round the country who helped me, my brilliant camp aign team –  and Yvette for her immense tolerance.

    David, Andy, Diane were great candidates and a credit to our party and we have conducted this election in a truly comradely way.

    But for the four of us who finished behind Ed Miliband, there is no shame in losing to someone who has inspired and energised our party – and who brought this hall to its feet yesterday.

    And working with him for 16 years in opposition, in the Treasury and in Parliament, I always knew that – for Ed – fairness, opportunity and social justice weren’t just slogans, they were his reason for coming to work in the morning – they were his defining purpose.

    Ed, I’ve been proud for 16 years to call you a colleague and a friend.

    And now I’m proud to call you our leader.

    And it will be my mission to back our new leader, to take the fight to the Coalition and to return us to government in the shortest possible time.

    Conference.

    Let that be the mission of us all.

    United, disciplined, determined.

    Winning the argument for a credible and radical Labour programme.

    There is an alternative.

    Together we can make sure Labour wins again.