Tag: Gordon Brown

  • Gordon Brown – 1998 Speech to the British Retail Consortium Annual Dinner

    Gordon Brown – 1998 Speech to the British Retail Consortium Annual Dinner

    The speech made by Gordon Brown, the then Chancellor of the Exchequer, on 13 October 1998.

    Just as we must work with our international partners to secure global stability and growth, so we have been taking action at home to set in place a long-term and credible  platform to achieve the stability that is an essential  pre condition for long-term investment, growth and jobs.

    It is in pursuit of our long-term goals – high and stable levels of growth and employment- and the rejection of the short-termism and stop-go polices that have undermined the UK economy in the past- that we have taken tough decisions.

    In the face of rising inflationary pressure and the large structural deficit we inherited, we made the bank of England independent, the MPC raised interest rates and we tightened fiscal policy by 20 billion pounds last year, amounting to 3.5 per cent of GDP from financial year 1996-97 to financial year 1999-2000.

    There must be no return to the boom-bust we saw in the late 1980s and early 90s, when interest rates reached 15 per cent, 1 million manufacturing jobs were lost, nearly 170,000 businesses went under and thousands who faced mortgage misery and negative equity are even now not yet recovered from it.

    We are committed to steering a path of stability based on a stable monetary framework and sound public finances.

    And it is because of the reduction in borrowing and tough action on inflation, which has today seen us meet our inflation target for the second month in succession, that Britain is now better placed to steer a path of stability in these troubled times for the global economy.

    We have consistently taken a prudent and cautious approach to managing the public finances and we will continue to do so. Our projections have been based on cautious assumptions which have been audited by the independent national audit office and our plans have built in margins to cover uncertainties, including the risk of slower growth.  We have worked within the previous government’s spending plans for the first two years and our careful plans mean that current spending is now  set to grow in real terms by less over this parliament than the last.

    As I have said, slower world growth makes it inevitable that growth in Britain next year will be more moderate than previously expected.

    But because of the prudent approach we have followed, even with more moderate growth next year we remain on track to meet our strict fiscal rules over the economic cycle while maintaining our commitment to an additional 40 billion pounds for improvements in health and education.

  • Gordon Brown – 1998 Speech to the CBI Conference

    Gordon Brown – 1998 Speech to the CBI Conference

    The speech made by Gordon Brown, the then Chancellor of the Exchequer, to the CBI Conference in Birmingham on 2 November 1998.

    Introduction

    I am delighted to join you once again here in Birmingham on the first full day of your Conference, grateful for the opportunity to address business leaders, to pay tribute to the contribution you and your companies make to the prosperity of Britain.

    One look at your agenda and the speakers you have invited to address you – last night President Menem of Argentina, today Prime Minister Aznar of Spain, tonight Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder of Germany – I am grateful to have a look in. But the fact that you have speakers from all over the world tells us much about the global economy in which business now operates and the international and European nature of all our interests and concerns.

    And so I am pleased to take this opportunity to talk to you about the forces at work in the global economy, which we must meet and master; to outline with you the steps we are taking at home and through our work in the international and European communities that will help Britain – and your businesses – steer a course of stability in this uncertain world, and discuss with you the reforms in labour markets, capital markets and product markets that we need in Britain and Europe if we are to be equal to any and every challenge this uncertain global economy brings.

    Globalisation

    The global turmoil we are witnessing could not have happened in the same way in the old sheltered economies of the past, with their national barriers and their limited capital markets. The challenges that we have to confront today arise from us being part of a global marketplace – with its ever more rapid waves of innovation and its fast-moving and often destabilising capital markets.

    When the world’s second largest economy, Japan, is likely to contract by 2.5 per cent in one year, when countries hitherto the growth areas of the world economy now face unprecedented declines and when world trade growth falls by two thirds in one year then, it is everyone’s business – not only because we are dependent on each other’s goods and services but also because – as we have seen – a weak financial system in one country can threaten another country’s financial system.

    This afternoon I will make a Statement to the House of Commons detailing a number of reforms which the G7 Ministers and Central Bank Governors have now agreed to strengthen the international financial system.

    Our challenge is to create the best conditions for stability and growth in the world economy. Firstly, by recognising that the balance of risks in the global economy has changed and therefore being vigilant in our monetary policies. Secondly, by avoiding protectionist tendencies when trade imbalances begin to appear. And finally ensuring that our policies for transparency, supervision and financial stability are as sophisticated as the markets they have to deal with. Hence our proposals for a new mechanism for crisis prevention, improvements in global financial regulation and codes of conduct that require all countries to pursue transparent procedures in their monetary, financial and fiscal policies.

    Stability in the domestic economy

    Monetary and fiscal stability is a precondition of economic success. And just as we must work with our international and European partners to create the best conditions for global stability and growth, so we must work together to steer a course of stability for Britain.

    In the 1970s British inflation averaged 12 1/2 per cent, and went as high as 27 per cent. In the 1980s it averaged 7 per cent. And having reached a high of 21 per cent. Even a few years ago in the early 1990s it stood as high as 10 per cent, revealing a still inflation-prone economy not capable of sustaining non-inflationary growth without a resort to boom and bust.

    That is why on coming to government we took immediate action to set in place a credible and long term monetary policy framework, making the Bank of England independent. By tackling inflation head on, inflation is now at our target of 2.5 per cent and expected to stay close to there for the period to come. And as a result long term interest rates have fallen from over 7 to 5 per cent, the differential with Germany narrowed by almost 1 per cent, the lowest long term rates in Britain for 35 years, the lowest since the boom-bust cycle in Britain became entrenched.

    It is also because alongside our monetary framework we have created a new framework for fiscal stability – with similar rules, similar disciplines and a similar transparency – that we are eliminating the current structural deficit while maintaining our commitments to health, education and infrastructure investment.

    Having kept within rigorous spending ceilings in our first two years, we reduced the deficit by 20 billion pounds, tightening fiscal policy by 3 per cent.

    We have consistently taken a prudent and cautious approach to managing the public finances and we will continue to do so. Our projections have been based on cautious assumptions which have been audited by the independent national audit office and our plans have built in margins to cover uncertainties, including the risk of slower growth.

    And it is because Britain now has an explicitly long term fiscal as well as monetary framework and policy from which we will not be diverted that, as world growth has weakened, monetary and fiscal policy can now work together. Let us not forget that in the last downturn the inflationary problems of our economy were such that even after the economy turned downward interest rates remained at 15 per cent for a whole year and in double figures for 4 years. In contrast, the Bank of England has now been able to reduce interest rates, to respond to a changed international environment – able to respond more quickly and in a more forward looking way than in past British economic cycles.

    I know your concerns about the pound and I have heard them.

    Set against the deutschmark the pound is now 10 per cent lower than at its peak, lower than May 1997, and I think everyone here would agree that the greater danger for our economy would have come if we had taken the wrong action and returned to the double-digit interest rates of the past.

    We are conscious, of course, that there is a balance of risks: the risk on the one hand of a sharper slowdown in the world economy, the risk on the other that inflationary pressures might persist.

    But because we have a long-term framework within which we are eliminating the current structural deficit and because we will continue to meet our inflation target Britain is now better placed to steer a path of stability in these troubled times for the global economy.

    If the country’s wage responsibility matches the Government’s inflation resolve – and this is as relevant to the public sector as to the private sector – then Britain can have a low inflation environment for many years to come that will end the violence of stop-go economics in our country.

    It is my objective to start a virtuous circle of low inflation, low long term interest rates and rising long term investment that will become the platform for driving our economy forward. And that in the face of the current international difficulties is a prize for Britain, one that has eluded us for too long. Higher productivity

    But in the global economy every country has to face ever intensified competition. For all the changes that brought liberalisation and flexibility in the 1980s, no one can doubt that Britain in the 1990s had two great economic challenges to resolve – the stop-go instability I have referred to, and a productivity gap with our competitors, which we must bridge if we are to rise to the challenge of more intensified competition in the global economy.

    So as you know over the past six months the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry and I have been holding a series of seminars with many of you, examining together some of the barriers to high productivity in our country.

    Because we believe it is businesses and companies not governments that create prosperity and jobs, we have already cut the main rate of corporation tax to its lowest level ever, first to 31p and from April to 30p. And we have cut the rate to 21p and from April to 20p for small businesses. This is the lowest of any major industrialised. And to encourage long term investment, we have also cut the long term rate of capital gains tax from 40 pence to 10 pence.

    But we can do more. Tomorrow I will present to Parliament our Pre-Budget Report. It will set out for the coming year the next steps that we must take to increase competition, cut red tape, increase investment and to equip the British economy for all the challenges ahead. And this will inform the Competitiveness White Paper Peter Mandelson is preparing.

    The Pre Budget Report on raising productivity will be the start of a process of discussion and debate leading up to the Budget in which I hope every part of the business community will be involved.

    This is not a theoretical exercise it is entirely practical because as I will say tomorrow, in preparing this Budget and the next the Government is ready to consider all tax, spending and regulatory changes that will help us bridge the productivity gap with our competitors and equip us to succeed in the future.

    Part of the solution to bridging the productivity gap is through a modern employment policy. And I want to say how grateful I am to hundreds of you for joining more than 29,000 employers in supporting our Welfare to Work Programme.

    Europe

    But there is a further area in which Government and business must work together to equip ourselves for the future – that is in moving forward our relationship with Europe, where we do half our trade, and being ready for the euro in little more than eight weeks time.

    My view of Europe is of a continent that has to accelerate change and modernise through pushing ahead with reforms in labour markets, capital markets and product markets for more competition, more flexibility, more investment and more employment.

    So we need a pro-business, pro-opportunity Europe that must not turn its back on necessary reform.

    The Single Market must not remain just an aspiration, in all areas it must become a reality.

    European-wide competition must not just be talked about. Markets must be opened up not least in telecommunications, energy, the utilities and public contracts.

    Budget reform must reduce wasteful expenditure in favour of a rigorous selection of priorities.

    The adaptability and flexibility which modern economies need, free of burdensome regulations, must become a reality across the continent.

    And this does not require the people of Europe to reject the strong desire for social cohesion. For by committing ourselves in this new Europe to maximising opportunity for all, and to getting the best out of people and their potential, Europe can be both enterprising and socially cohesive.

    This Government has decisively and unambiguously put this country on a new road of constructive engagement with Europe.

    Our position on the euro is as we set out last year, that we have committed our country to active preparations that will allow us to make a decision, subject to a Referendum, early in the next Parliament and our strategy is to prepare and then decide.

    When I spoke to you last November, I set out the challenges that economic and monetary union would mean to British businesses. How EMU would lead to fiercer competition for trade and for future investment across Europe and what we in Government would do to help you take advantage of the new opportunities.

    I can now report back to you on the results of our work.

    First, when we found that only 30 per cent of firms thought they needed to prepare for the euro and only 5 per cent had done anything, we decided to tackle this directly under Lord Simon’s leadership – through direct mailing of 1.6 million firms and a series of television adverts.

    Twice as many businesses are now making preparations.

    Second, we have brought together firms, business advisers, trades unions, and Government through 12 new Euro Forums in every region of the country, led by local business people.

    Over 500 personal advisers from business links, Chambers of Commerce and local authorities have been on training courses organised by the Treasury’s Euro Preparations Unit.

    Third, we have put in place arrangements to enable firms to pay taxes, file accounts and issue shares in euros. The tax authorities have issued guidance and the DTI will legislate next year to make redenomination of company shares into euros even easier.

    By the end of this year, over 10,000 of Customs and Excise staff will have been trained to deal with enquiries or deliver services in euros to the business community.

    The next stage is that in January, we will publish an Outline National Changeover Plan which will set out the practical steps which would be needed for the UK to join the euro.

    We will set out the stage-by-stage procedures that will need to be followed, we will spell out the practical implications of changing to the euro and we will give new advice to companies on the way to take forward their preparations.

    Finally, I am conscious that a test that business will apply is whether the public sector is prepared to take a lead in making preparations. And I can tell you today that every Government Department is playing its part, that we are investing in what is necessary to keep preparations on track and that as a further step a cross-party group of Members of Parliament on euro preparations will be set up to discuss euro preparations.

    Conclusion

    My themes therefore: our economy founded on a platform of monetary stability equipped to steer a course of stability in an uncertain and unstable world. Sound finances through prudence and investment in reform. A national drive for higher productivity through economic reform, and a new purpose in Europe. The great British qualities – our commitment to the virtues of enterprise, creativity, of hard work, fair play and being open and outward looking – put to work for a new era of global competition.

    A modern Britain, founded on lasting British values, the values of the British people.

    An economy that, because our commitment to opportunity for all means getting the best out of people and their potential, is both enterprising and fair.

    And a Britain where there is a mature patriotism that is outward looking and internationalist – giving us a renewed sense of national purpose and a long term direction as a country.

    A Britain ready to fulfil its role in the new world, and to realise the potential of all its people.

  • Gordon Brown – 1998 Speech at the Kennedy School, Harvard University

    Gordon Brown – 1998 Speech at the Kennedy School, Harvard University

    The speech made by Gordon Brown, the then Chancellor of the Exchequer, at Harvard University, the United States, on 15 December 1998.

    Introduction

    There can be no more appropriate country to discuss the challenges facing the new global economy than the United States of America: the pre-eminent architect of the post-war global system.

    There can be no forum more appropriate than the Kennedy School, named after the President, who on July 4th more than a third of a century ago, matched the Declaration of Independence of 1776 with a new declaration of economic interdependence for our time.

    And there can be no more appropriate institution than Harvard where 50 years ago, the Marshall plan, the most ambitious multi-national effort for economic reconstruction the world has seen, was first launched.

    More than half a century ago, leaders who were still engaged in war took the time to prepare for peace. In a breathtaking leap into a new era, the world created not just new international institutions – the IMF, the World Bank, the GATT as well as the UN- and a whole set of new rules for a new international economy, but gave expression to a new public purpose based on high ideals.

    A generation of leaders who had known the greatest of depressions and the greatest of wars knew also that just as peace could not be preserved in isolation, prosperity could not be maximized in isolation.

    What they did for their day and generation was so dramatic that Dean Acheson spoke of that period as akin to being present at the creation.

    One of the signal events was the Bretton Woods conference – and I ask myself why it was held not in Washington, or New York, or Boston, but in the white mountains of New Hampshire. In fact the location was the price the Roosevelt administration had to pay to persuade a New Hampshire senator to abandon isolationism. As Tip O’neill used to say, “all politics is local” … Even global politics. If Massachusetts and not New Hampshire had threatened to be isolationist we might be talking today of the Cambridge Agreement. Nothing could more vividly show the practical nature of the visionaries who created the new world than their choice of Bretton Woods.

    But as practical as it was, Bretton Woods also defined a new public purpose characterised by high ideals. The conference was about more than exchange rates, the mechanics of financial arrangements or even new institutions. As the American secretary of the treasury said at the very start of the opening session:

    “prosperity has no fixed limits it is not a finite substance to be diminished by division. On the contrary the more of it that other nations enjoy the more each nation will have for itself.

    “prosperity like peace is indivisible. We cannot afford to have it scattered here or there amongst the fortunate or enjoy it at the expense of others…..”

    in short, prosperity to be sustained had to be shared. Practicality and morality went hand in hand.

    George Marshall reaffirmed this in his own historic speech here at Harvard. We must fight against “hunger, poverty, desperation and chaos”, he insisted, to secure “the revival of a working economy in the world [that would] permit the emergence of political and social conditions in which free institutions can exist”.

    So the post-war arrangements were founded on the belief that public action on a new and wider stage could advance a new and worldwide public purpose of high ideals rooted in social justice:

    • to achieve prosperity for all by each co-operating with every other:
    • new international rules of the game that involved a commitment to high levels of growth and employment.

    In short, the job of every economy was to create jobs for all.

    The founders of Bretton Woods resolved that the failed policies of laissez-faire which resulted in vast inequities and recurring depression from the 1870s to the 1930s would not be repeated. Untrammelled, unregulated market forces had brought great instability and even greater injustice. In the post-war era governments had to work collectively if they were to achieve either justice or stability.

    The initiatives and institutions of that era were shaped to the conditions of the time – a world economy of protected national markets, limited capital flows, and fixed exchange rates. And for nearly thirty years the system worked, for hundreds of millions who enjoyed unparalleled prosperity Bretton Woods took us a long way. Yet even in the 70s with hundreds of millions still in poverty we had still a long way to go.

    In the first historic phase of international economic management, nation states spoke unto nation states, with an unprecedented degree of co-operation between separated and still largely insulated economies. The international rules of the game then largely consisted of open current accounts, fixed exchange rates and closed capital accounts and of collective support when countries ran into balance of payments problems.

    But over the next generation, that new world, too, became old, as the existing order of nation states and collective international action was increasingly bypassed by the growth and eventually the sheer force of international financial flows, successively ending dollar convertibility into gold, the fixed exchange rate system, and post-war keynesian certainties, bringing in its wake an outbreak of inflation and then stagflation that spread across the western world.

    The 1980s saw a new consensus emerge, essentially an attempt to return to laissez-faire. It focussed not on what governments should do, but on what governments should not do, emphasising private pursuits almost to the exclusion of public purpose. Enlightened self-interest gave way to sheer self-interest. Instead of rising to the challenge of applying the high ideals of the post war world to a new world, instead of aiming for high levels of employment and prosperity for all, sights were lowered, the vision was narrowed. The new right consensus focussed almost entirely on inflation and minimal government.

    Of course it was and is right to say that inflation is costly, and once out of control, it is even more costly to reverse. Macroeconomic stability, based on low inflation and sound public finances, is an absolute precondition of economic success. Indeed there is a new premium on economic stability in the global economy. A nation state relying on investment flows from round the world – and also vulnerable to them – now knows that retribution for getting things wrong is swift and terrible.

    The 1980s consensus did understand the importance of liberalizing economies from excessive regulation and bad government. But they confused means with ends and said in effect that inflation alone, not jobs and growth also, were exclusive concerns. And they said that all government was bad: that government can’t make a difference, at least a positive one, in jobs and growth, and that global markets have to be left entirely to market dogmas, which have no place for the public pursuit of high ideals. But this 1980s consensus failed even in its own stated purpose – bringing the largest fiscal deficit in American history and reducing britain to inflationary boom-and-bust.

    And by 1997, an increasingly turbulent and inadequately supervised international financial system threatened to create boom and bust on a global scale. Now both of the Bretton Woods objectives – not only prosperity for all but stability for all – were at risk. The post-war hope for an indivisible prosperity was replaced by the sudden fear of indivisible instability. The 1980s consensus could not endure.

    As the downturn in Asia reverberated around the globe, President Clinton said that ‘the world faces perhaps its most serious crisis in half a century’.

    In recent months as interest rates have come down, and the G7 group of leading industrialised nations have set a timetable for reform, financial markets have become less unstable.

    But this is no time for complacency. We must recognise how far we have come – in purpose as well as time – from 1945 and how, without public purpose in this new global economy, one set of events in one continent could inflict so much damage on so many people.

    This year we have experienced events that were unthinkable just two or three years ago:

    • free enterprise Hong Kong taking publicly owned stakes in all its private companies;
    • japan nationalising its banks;
    • russia going into default;
    • in America the mounting of one of the biggest ever emergency refinancings not for a bank, but for a hedge fund;
    • most damaging of all, the biggest growth economies of the last decade in east asia suffering larger contractions in output even than experienced in the great depression of the 1930s.

    The political dimension as George Marshall foresaw, is equally far-reaching: in only one year, revolution in Indonesia; civil strife in Malaysia; the loss of authority in Russia; and as unemployment rises, unrest in South America, typified by the outcome of last week’s Venezuelan election. It is a sign of the times that only one of the Asian finance ministers I met with in Bangkok last September is still in office today.

    The ultimate price of all this is profound human suffering. In Korea unemployment has trebled in one year. In Indonesia ten years of growth have been wiped out; and in the Asian crisis countries as a whole the number of people in poverty is set to double by 2000. We can’t simply declare whenever the stock market bounces back that the crisis is over and we can return to the status quo. We must act – both because it is in our self-interest – to safeguard our own prospects and prosperity – and because it is right.

    So now the responsibility falls on this generation to be present at a new creation – of new rules that break with the past and both effectively and fairly meet the demands of the new global economy. We must reject the false choice between clinging to laissez faire and retreating to 1930s protectionism or the tightly-controlled, restricted capital markets of the 1940s. We must meet the new challenge but we must remember that while times and circumstances change, ideals endure.

    Our aim must be an international financial system for the twenty first century that recognises the new realities – open not sheltered economies, international not national capital markets, global not local competition. It must be one that captures the full benefits of global markets and capital flows, minimises the risk of disruption, maximises opportunity for all and lifts up the most vulnerable, in short, the restoration in the international economy of public purpose and high ideals.

    Our predecessors did this for the post-war world of distinct national economies drawing closer together. Now we must do it for the post-national economy – where economically no nation is an island.

    The consensus of the 1980s with its narrow focus on inflation, privatisation and deregulation must evolve into a new 1990s consensus with a new and broader emphasis on competition, supervision and the right conditions for growth and employment.

    Before I describe the specific reforms we need, let me be clear that this new public purpose will require public endeavour.

    In the international economy the era of absentee government is over.

    We need that middle way between government doing everything and government doing nothing.

    It was here in your country that Franklin Roosevelt in the 30s found a third way for a national economy – securing the benefits of the market while taming its excesses.

    And I believe that the third way initiated and developed by Tony Blair has profound relevance for the challenge we now confront on the global stage. The issue is not one of either markets or government, but how markets and government can best work together. And the way forward for the new global economy is not to retreat from globalisation – into either protectionism or old national controls – or to retreat into a failed laissez faire. It is to ensure global markets can work in the public interest. And transparency in policy-making is one way to develop the informed and educated markets we need.

    In a world where the new frontier is no frontiers, we must rediscover the public purpose and high ideals of 1945 with four major reforms that add up to a transformation of the international financial system – a new economic constitution for the new global economy.

    New rules of the game for the global economy

    First, internationally agreed codes of conduct for transparency and proper procedures that ensure educated markets. These would cover monetary, financial and fiscal policy and corporate governance and would be applied by all countries, rich and poor, as a condition for participation in the international financial system.

    Recall that the first constitutional settlement of the world economy in 1945 was not simply about institutions but about rules of the game. And we must now return the international financial system to this idea of rules of the game. While the founders of Bretton Woods devised rules for a world of limited capital flows, we must devise new rules for a world of global capital flows. But our guiding principle remains the same – the promotion of global economic stability and international cooperation to promote growth and employment.

    The codes will require accurate reporting to the international community, by each national economy, of all relevant information – for example the size of a budget deficit, the state of bank reserves and the level of currency liabilities.

    And the codes will require not only this flow of information but the adherence to specific timetables and proper standards for transparency and disclosure.

    The new disciplines involve both the private and the public sector. We need new standards of corporate governance – including an international standard of best practice for financial institutions and their regulators.

    We used to think that all that industrialising countries required was raw materials, good communications, a supply of labour and the funds and ability to tap commercial inventions. But we now know that all nations also require a sound robust financial system: no nation can afford – and the international community cannot condone – national financial systems that are reckless, disordered and dishonest. Lack of transparency anywhere can create lack of credibility everywhere.

    By requiring exposure of deteriorating conditions, the codes would prevent the temptation for countries to deliberately mask problems, which is what happened in Thailand and Korea with consequences felt across Asia and then the world.

    And we should not be so complacent as to assume that codes of conduct are needed only in other countries and not our own. Given that the most recent threat to global stability came from lack of transparency in hedge funds in both the United States and Britain, we need tougher standards and requirements for disclosure all round.

    The codes I propose will mean radical changes in the way governments and financial markets operate.

    These new rules of the game are not incidental to the financial architecture for the new global economy: they are the financial architecture for the new global economy. They require countries to pursue self discipline with the prospect, if they do not, of imposed discipline. So the right to participate fully in the system should thus be conditional on meeting explicit responsibilities. In this way the codes will reduce the risk of future failures. And if failures do occur, a stronger financial system will be better able to deal with them.

    The codes are as relevant for underdeveloped Africa as they are for industrialising Asia and Latin America and industrialised America and Europe. They help us to lay down a route map for sequencing capital account liberalisation. By making sure that economic facts can’t be manipulated and underlying problems can’t be hidden, citizens will know their country’s real problems and prospects, the codes will deter corruption, restore public confidence and build public support for the sometimes painful reforms that are essential to long-term economic growth and prosperity. And this is critical for investor confidence in the wake of the Asian crisis. Without transparency and the proper procedures that the codes of conduct will require, investors may not reinvest on the long term scale that is necessary for jobs, growth and social progress.

    National governments should not pick and mix which standards they choose to meet and which standards they choose to ignore. So proper implementation of the codes should be a condition of any IMF and World Bank support. In the global economy national governments have rights but they also have responsibilities they must meet.

    Global financial regulation

    And because today’s financial markets are global, we need not only proper national supervision but also a second fundamental reform – global financial regulation. That is why Britain has proposed bringing together the IMF, the World Bank and key regulatory authorities: a new permanent standing committee for global financial regulation charged with delivering the global objective of a stable financial system.

    The G7 have now agreed on the urgent need for this kind of coordination, and we are grateful to the president of the Bundesbank, Hans Tietmeyer, who has undertaken the critical task of preparing detailed recommendations.

    I see the standing committee not as an additional institution but as process of monitoring developments in global finance, ensuring that necessary worldwide standards are put in place, and providing timely surveillance of financial conditions and international capital flows.

    The standing committee’s work would make co-operation between international institutions and national regulators a fact of international economic life. In short, the standing committee would be the world’s early warning system for regional and global economic risk.

    Global crisis prevention and resolution

    Our aim must be crisis prevention where possible crisis resolution where necessary.

    So in place of the old approach whereby crisis-triggered intervention, we need, thirdly, a modern mechanism, rooted in transparency and reliable surveillance, and built on public and private sectors both accepting their responsibilities, which can identify potential problems at a stage where preventative action can be effective.

    The mechanism they agreed in 1945 for crisis prevention dealt with imbalances in current account flows in a world of restricted capital flows and fixed exchange rates: to tackle public sector deficits and balance of payments crises, it offered temporary financial support or permanent exchange rate adjustment.

    The new mechanism for crisis prevention must deal with imbalances as a result of global capital flows.

    We need a process of active and transparent surveillance that is a matter of course for all countries, operating in normal times, all the time: not one triggered only by the warning signs or onset of crisis in a particular region or country.

    And all main participants, public and private, must accept their responsibilities.

    So emerging market economies in particular must not only be transparent in their activities: they must now also forge regular contacts and lasting relationships with their private investors. An open and honest dialogue, in which investors can ask hard questions and then advise, will make it more difficult to cover up bad news, and make it easier to assess what policies will increase or reduce market confidence, thus making it more likely that we can prevent today’s problems from deepening into tomorrow’s crisis.

    The short-hand phrase for these creditor-to-country arrangements is country clubs, but these are not exclusive clubs, old boy networks, an informal means of defending privilege. These are modern investor networks that can bring real benefits in return for real responsibilities: networks that every country should form and every creditor should join.

    To make these work there should, be a new presumption across the board, in favour of the release of information wherever possible.

    The G7 have proposed greater openness from the World Bank, the IMF and other international financial institutions. Their monitoring tells them much of what is happening in every national economy. Clearly in exceptional cases some policy discussions will have to be kept confidential but I strongly support the publication of the IMF’s country surveillance reports under Article IV. The case for an exception must be made and justified, while openness should be the norm.

    Put simply we should establish an international right to know that is not occasional or voluntary but ongoing and mandatory.

    This will work best if the IMFand other international institutions are more open about themselves. They should do more to explain their practices and procedures to the public. And they too should join in a new partnership with the private sector – ongoing discussions about broader and more systemic issues facing the world economy.

    With a right to a greater flow of information comes greater private sector responsibility. We need a system of debtor-creditor agreements – crisis resolution procedures signed up to in normal times with private sector responsibility clauses, such as agreement on collective representation and majority voting when creditor decisions are being made. When trouble hits an economy, the private sector must be prepared to do more than simply pull money out and accelerate the panic. On an ad-hoc basis investors did the opposite in Korea and Brazil and their decisions were essential in halting the flight of capital.

    With these three changes – transparency, enhanced surveillance and investor networks we can establish a markedly lower threshold for effective response than the old ad-hoc crisis-triggered system.

    Detailed discussion should now take place on the right mechanisms for private sector involvement in crisis resolution. Of course more information and more participation must not become a licence for reckless investment or insider dealing instead, by universalising reliable information and creating orderly consultation procedures open to all, we can minimise the risks arising from insider information on the one hand and moral hazard on the other.

    In the new framework it should be the duty of the public sector to inform, the duty of the international financial institutions to monitor and the duty of the private sector to engage.

    And because of the new disciplines we propose the public sector can now justify a system of mutual financial support, assistance to countries pursuing sound policies and to contain the spread of financial contagion.

    In the last few weeks the international community has proposed a temporary preventative facility, with short-term lines of credit for sound economies that are the victims of contagion. Once transparency, surveillance and agreed private sector responsibility clauses are embedded in the new system of crisis prevention, this facility should be made permanent, and be properly funded.

    Of course countries that do not follow these procedures or act on advice cannot expect that they and their private sectors will secure crisis support, the moral hazard would be to guarantee such support independent of whether they do the right things.

    With the reforms we propose, we have a real opportunity to move the emphasis of international financial governance from one of crisis resolution to one of crisis prevention and crisis containment.

    A global social code

    There is a fourth reform: we propose a code of global best practice in social policy which will apply for every country, will set minimum standards and will ensure that when the IMF and World Bank help a country in trouble the agreed programme of reform will preserve investment in the social, education and employment programmes which are essential for growth. This should be an indispensable goal for government in the new global economy: not guaranteeing that nothing will change, but equipping people to turn change into new opportunity.

    International economics is not just about numbers in a ledger, but about the lives of people. For too long it has been assumed that the cost of crises will inevitably be paid by putting more burdens on the poor – by cutting health, education and basic social services.

    This is wrong in the short term and it will not work in the long term because it erodes both the economic and the political foundations of a society. For reasons of self-interest as well as conscience, we cannot accept a worldwide regime of the well-off in the castle, and the vast majority at the gate. Creating national support for needed reform depends on sharing gains, and helping those who are hurt by economic crises. As Jim Wolfensohn, President of the World Bank, has so vividly put it “social and economic issues are inseparable, they are like breathing in and out”.

    In their October statement the G7 recognised the urgent need for a code for good social practice and asked the World Bank to work countries and with the United Nations and others to develop the principles and provisions of such a code.

    This is an historic opportunity to realise the enduring public purpose, the high ideals of 1945. And we should not see this code in narrow terms as merely creating social safety nets. We should see it as creating opportunities for all by investing more not less in education, employment and vital public services.

    The way forward is not leaving people defenceless – and tolerating a culture of poverty; not repeating past mistakes which have created a culture of dependency; it is equipping people to cope with change, through a new culture of opportunity.

    The first building block is, of course, minimum social provision such as safe water supplies; universally available vaccinations and basic health care; and in every society- universal access to schooling for girls as well as boys.

    The second building block is the chance to work and the assurance that work will pay, a commitment that we must, stage by stage, year by year, fulfill in developing countries as well as developed ones. The code would set out best practice that can help people find and remain in paid employment: programmes to move them from poverty or welfare to work; life-time learning so that people can move themselves up a ladder of opportunity; and pension systems that mean a lifetime of work will be followed by a decent retirement.

    We should forge new partnerships between the public and private sectors – and the ngos. But of course the existence of a programme today should never be the excuse for its perpetuation tomorrow. And the reforms the IMFand other international authorities require must be consistent with the social principles and make a virtue of preserving necessary social investment.

    For the poorest highly indebted countries of the world we must create a virtuous circle of debt relief, poverty reduction and economic development. We should never leave countries with an impossible choice between paying or defaulting on unsustainable levels of debt. Immovable mountains of debt run up in the 1980s have become impassable barriers to progress for poor countries in the 1990s. It should now be our ambition that every highly indebted poor country will be in the process of debt relief by the millennium.

    And for countries like hurricane-hit Nicaragua and Honduras, weighed down by the burden of debt and devastation, it is right to create a new World Bank trust fund – now with over 130 million dollars pledged – to alleviate their debt payments. It is also right to devise the new post-disaster facility that will give faster relief from debt, to all countries in this position. I believe 1999 must bring a new urgency to relieving third world debt.

    Conclusion

    So what we must together create is a new economic constitution for a global economy, born out of new realities, grounded in new rights and responsibilities, enshrined in codes of conduct that are agreed nationally and applied internationally, rediscovering public purpose in the international economy and bringing to life again the high ideals of 1945.

    We need to build quickly, not debate indefinitely.

    Agreement on the codes of conduct should be reached at the IMF meetings in April.

    A new system of global financial regulation should be in place by the summer.

    The new mechanism for crisis prevention and crisis resolution should be agreed in principle this summer and the detail should be the subject of intensive discussions between the private sector and national and international institutions to reach agreement by the end of 1999.

    • and the code for best practice in social policy social code should be agreed at the next world bank meetings in the spring.

    This is a programme of reform for our generation. It is more than simply a collection of proposals. It rests on a modern vision of government, doing the right thing, but not everything; of markets working, but not always perfectly; of principles of economic and social justice that reflect our best values and ultimately determine world stability and growth.

    This project is indivisible; each element is essential to the success of the whole. And all of it is built on the understanding that increasingly we are part of both one global economy and one moral universe. Now more than ever, in the phrase of the Scottish author, William Mcilvanney, we must understand that ”the economy should be there to serve the people, not the people to serve the economy.”

    Ours is an age of great challenges but also great possibilities. What Franklin Roosevelt said to the citizens of his nation in 1933 is now powerfully relevant to the citizens and governments of all nations.

    If I read the temper of our people correctly we now realise – as we have never realised before – our interdependence on each other, that we must be willing to sacrifice for the good of a common discipline – because without such discipline no progress is made.

    Today I believe that we in our generation have the vision, the values and the will – as the generation which preceded us – to make the world economy anew; the public purpose and high ideals to make a better world economy in every sense of that word.

  • Gordon Brown – 1998 Speech Launching the New Deal

    Gordon Brown – 1998 Speech Launching the New Deal

    The speech made by Gordon Brown, the then Chancellor of the Exchequer, on 5 January 1998.

    Today marks the start of a new deal for Britain’s young. A new beginning in the war against poverty, and the first step in the modernisation of the welfare state in Britain.

    It’s the Labour Government’s 1998 new year’s resolution for Britain – to help our long-term unemployed back to work and to give them the skills they need.

    Here today from Dundee and Tayside we launch the first of twelve pilot programmes offering jobs and training to every young person six months out of work.

    From April, every long term unemployed young man or woman under 25 will be offered the new deal options of work or training.

    A total of 3 billion pounds is being invested in jobs.

    It is not just the young who will benefit from the new deal.

    From June, employers will be offered a 75 pounds a week subsidy to take on the long-term unemployed.

    During 1998 lone parents with their youngest child at school will be offered help to find work.

    And from this year too disabled men and women, denied the right to work for too long – will be given new opportunities to work.

    The old deal – of paying people a few pounds in benefit and then forgetting about them – failed the unemployed and failed Britain.

    Today begins the long haul towards full employment in the years to come.

    From now on in Britain, young people will have new opportunities and a new contribution they can make under the new deal. Rights go hand in hand with responsibilities and for young people offered new responsibilities from today there will be no option of simply staying at home on full benefit doing nothing.

    So it is something for something, not something for nothing

    Young people are our future. Yet unemployment among the under- 25s is twice the national average.

    With new resources from the windfall levy we will invest in young people and in the skills the whole country needs them to have for the future.

    From today there are pilot programmes in every part of Britain, offering every young person unemployed for more than six months the chance of work.

    Already 9,000 employers have signed up in our pathfinder areas.

    Some of the top household name companies are making their contribution to the new deal.

    In the next few weeks, 1 million employers will be contacted and asked to consider taking part.

    The programme that starts today in 12 pathfinder areas will offer young people advice, help and training to enter the world of work. From April the programme will operate nationally.

    The scheme offers four routes into work and helps each young person pick the route that suits their needs – a job, full-time education, a job  in the voluntary sector or a role in the environmental task force.

    Tayside

    300 million pounds will be invested in scotland under the new deal here in Tayside there are more than 1,000 young people  who have been nemployed for more than six months. For them opportunity is available now. The pathfinder approach is to ensure that young people receive the help they need immediately.

    Every month, 100 more young people will be entering the programme.

    I have no doubt lessons will be learned from the pilot and we will be carefully evaluating the programme in Tayside and other pathfinder areas so that rough edges can be identified.

    Here in Dundee some of the biggest companies like NCR and Michelin have committed themselves to the new deal. Stagecoach and National Express, together with Scot-Rail and Travel-Dundee will be mounting travel concessions for young people in Tayside on the new deal and I am grateful to them for their involvement.

    This programme will succeed only if we involve all employers who are able to make a contribution.

    My appeal to employers is as businesses in the community who can see at first hand the impact of social division and a wasted generation of young people and who know that failure to tackle the problem now will hurt us all in the future.

    My appeals is to employers and managers with a reputation for motivating people who will immediately understand  how a job can make the difference between what young people are and what young people are capable of becoming.

    My appeal to employers is as leaders of the economy who know that however successful their own business is, the economy as a whole will never be at its best unless we unlock the potential of all our people.

    I want all of you to feel part of what I believe is a national crusade to clear for one and for all the social divisions that are entrenched in our society because of unemployment.

    And this is just the start. The Government believes in helping thousands more from welfare to work in the years to come as part of the long haul towards our goal of full employment.

    That is why we are prepared to extend the new deal from the under 25s to the over 25s and are prepared to invest more in the long term unemployed, lone parents and disabled men and women who want the right to work, to make this ambition a reality.

    And we will do more. The new deal is our first step towards a new welfare state. And I want men and women who have been unemployed and written off by many to be able to say they now have a new chance to make the best of themselves and to make a contribution, not just to their families, but to the progress of Britain.

  • Gordon Brown – 1998 Speech at the Central Organisation of Scottish Local Authorities

    Gordon Brown – 1998 Speech at the Central Organisation of Scottish Local Authorities

    Part of the speech made by Gordon Brown, the then Chancellor of the Exchequer, in Glasgow on 27 February 1998.

    Since I took over as Chancellor I have always said that a commitment to stability and prudence as well as work and; enterprise will be the watchwords of this Government.

    We will not make the mistakes of previous Labour Governments who failed to control spending and then had to cut back.

    And we will learn the lessons of the late eighties where the public finances and the economy’s ability to sustain growth were misjudged, plunging us into the longest recession since the war.

    So the Budget on 17 March will not be a Budget with quick fixes for the short term. The Budget will be an investment Budget for the long-term, laying the foundations to build a more dynamic and successful economy.

    We will not sacrifice our spending discipline and commitment to prudence – instead there will be consistency to ensure long-term prosperity.

    With a 400 billion Pounds national debt, 25 billion Pounds a year interest payments, a borrowing requirement of 23 billion Pounds last year and with the deficit continuing into next year, ensuring prudence in our public finances is our priority – not just in one year but in every year across the economic cycle.

    Just as there will be no return to boom-bust in the economy so there will be no return to soft options in public spending.

    We are all long termists now – the best guarantee for our future.And long term measures for enterprise and work – making work pay – will come top of my agenda.

  • Gordon Brown – 1998 Speech to the British American Business Council

    Gordon Brown – 1998 Speech to the British American Business Council

    The speech made by Gordon Brown, the then Chancellor of the Exchequer, in London on 28 April 1998.

    I am delighted to be here at the Park Lane Hotel today at this the first conference of the British-American Business Council to be held in the United Kingdom.

    I am pleased that so many distinguished businesses are represented here today and indeed also the American Ambassador to London, Philip Lader, whose work here is much valued.

    And as someone who already knows a great deal of your work, not least from addressing the British American Chamber of Commerce in New York in December, I want to congratulate all of you, from the 27 member organisations representing 3,000 companies and billions in trade between our two countries who are making the British-American Business Council one of the strongest voices for transatlantic cooperation. And at the start of a week that will be decisive for European economic history, as we prepare to inaugurate a single currency, I want, in the context of a new Europe, to talk not just about relations between Britain and America but about the development of relations between Europe and America.

    But first, I want to thank someone who has, as an individual, done more in recent years than perhaps any other to cement the strength of the links between America and Britain. Sir Colin Marshall has combined a distinguished career in international business with a broader commitment to the success of British business and in particular to business links between the US and Britain. He has been a driving force behind the creation and growth of the British-American Business Council. As chairman of the international advisory board from 1994 to 1996 he mobilised the key players in British and American business in support of the council at a key stage in its development.

    So we honour Sir Colin today for helping to make the British American Business Council a success. We are all grateful for his commitment to this important network of over 3000 corporations, that helps strengthen your organisations and businesses and helps maintain and develop business relations between Britain and the United States, working with the US and British governments to strengthen these relations.

    Today Britain and north America enjoy trade flows of 60 billion pounds and have a total of around 150 billion pounds of investment in each other’s countries. We are the largest single investors in each other’s countries.

    Now I believe, as I think Sir Colin’s career shows, that the connections between Britain and the USA, are stronger today, not just because a shared history links our countries but because of our shared values that bind us even more closely together.

    A commitment to liberty and to our countries as lands of opportunity for all. A belief in hard work and enterprise, and a dedication to an openness that is outward-looking and internationalist, not least in our shared commitment to free trade.

    These are values that brought America to the defence of Europe twice this century and values that allow America to rely on Britain as a bridge to Europe. Values that become ever more important as the world economy is transformed from the relatively sheltered national economies to a global market place, and when, as the insecurities that come with change affect us all, protectionist tendencies must be tackled.

    Values that represent, in my view, a partnership for progress. And it is this partnership for progress between our two countries that has been so important in securing the basis of a peace settlement in Northern Ireland. And I pay tribute on behalf of the British government to the work of the American government.

    It is this partnership for progress that has led us to work together in Bosnia, in the Middle East and now in Africa.It is this idea of a continuing partnership for progress that lies behind the transatlantic agenda launched in 1995 that has achieved much progress in lowering barriers to trade and investment in our two countries and which we must build on John Kennedy, who quoted Alexander Hamilton urging Americans in the late eighteenth century to think continentally and said the task now was to think inter- continentally, and who said that the declaration of independence should be followed by a declaration of inter- dependence – a concrete Atlantic partnership between the new union emerging in Europe and America – said he regarded a strong and united Europe as essential to the free world.

    A strong and united Europe is not a rival to America but its best partner and I believe that for America, Britain is a bridge to Europe and it is this idea of a partnership for progress that most certainly lies behind the proposals for a reform of the international institutions which the G7 heads of government will look closely at when they meet in Birmingham in two weeks time: that the USA and Britain which, more than any other two countries in the world, were the inspirational forces in the creation over fifty years ago of the international financial institutions – the IMF, World Bank, GATT – institutions born in the days of essentially national economies, often sheltered, with very limited capital markets, should now lead the way in reshaping international rules and build international institutions that are more appropriate for the new world of global markets, massive international trade flows and the need for greater international cooperation and for greater openness and transparency to secure stability

    Now, today, I want to highlight how our shared values have led us as countries to a set of conclusions about the two priorities for national government in the new era of more open, more competitive, global markets.

    First, to succeed, the need to create a platform of macro- economic stability which rejects false trade offs between inflation and growth and is based on clear long term objectives, on well understood procedural rules and on openness and transparency.

    And, second, that our economies must pursue continuous and far-reaching structural economic reform to promote productivity and employment.

    And I want to tell you that in our first year in government we have begun to tackle these tasks. And as president of the European Union we have sought to drive forward work on these objectives throughout Europe.

    Now it is true to say in Britain that the last forty years has been characterised by stop go, boom bust, instability in economic policy. And so I can tell you that the first objective of the new government has been the determination to ensure monetary and fiscal stability, in place of stop go, and to do so in an economy far more open than the sheltered national economics of the past. And here we have learned a great deal from America, and the Federal Reserve Bank.

    In any modern economy it seems to me that monetary and fiscal policy , which can no longer be based on the so called fine-tuning of the 1945-1975 period nor on the crude application of rigid intermediate monetary targets that we saw in the years that followed should be based on three central decisions.

    First, clear long-term objectives by which governments will be judged – in Britain our inflation target of 2.5 per cent and our five year deficit reduction plan to bring prudent and sustainable public finances.

    Second, orderly procedural rules for monetary and fiscal decision making – making the Bank of England independent and legislating for a code for fiscal stability which guarantees certainty and therefore credibility in decision-making.

    And third, an open and transparent decision-making process which allows proper scrutiny and which, as a result, offers a confidence that a long term view is being pursued. Our budget deficit reduced from 23 billion pounds to only 3 billion pounds in a year and indeed I believe that it is because people are now coming to believe that for the first time in Britain’s post-war economic history the inflation target will actually be met that long term interest rates have come down to below 6 per cent, the lowest for 33 years.

    And it is the same search for stability in a global economy that has led our European neighbours to agree on monetary union.

    Again clear long term objectives. First of all at the heart of the project – price stability and sustainable public finances as the key to growth and jobs; secondly orderly procedural rules – the new European Central Bank and the growth and stability pact of the European Union; and third, a system of multilateral surveillance that allows for proper scrutiny of each member’s position and offers confidence that stability can be achieved.

    As I reiterated in a speech in New York a couple of weeks ago, as far as Britain is concerned, we have committed ourselves, in principle, to monetary union. To make our economic assessment of the advantages the decisive test as to whether we will enter and to begin preparations that will allow us to make a decision, subject to a referendum, early in the next parliament. Our strategy is to prepare and then decide.

    Meanwhile, we are working closely with all sectors of business to ensure that when the euro arrives elsewhere in Europe – as it will in 1999 – British businesses benefit from it.

    The Bank of England is leading Euro preparations in the City of London. So inside or outside the euro zone, British economic policies will go on being right for business. Britain will continue to be the most profitable place in Europe from which to exploit the new business opportunities after 1999. And Britain will continue to lead Europe towards ever freer trade and more open markets.

    But although macroeconomic stability is a necessary pre-condition for growth it is not sufficient on its own to achieve the high levels of growth and employment we need. This requires far-reaching reform of our labour, capital and product markets. And I want to say that learning from each other, the United Kingdom is now, as president of the European union, leading the debate about economic reform.

    As many here will know, in the UK we have embarked on a radical programme of labour market reform, through welfare reform to move people back into work, tax reform to create jobs and improve work incentives, changes in labour market rules to ensure the adaptability we need, and educational reform to ensure the standards and skills a modern economy needs. But we have also embarked on a programme of reform in our product markets – with a new competition policy – and our capital markets – with new measures, for example, not least cutting corporation tax to 30p, the lowest of any major economy, to encourage the flow of funds to small business, to hi tech business and to risk capital. But there is more to be done in Britain and in Europe.

    We need a new approach in Europe to risk taking, we need to increase the number of entrepreneurs and to raise the survival rate of small businesses. So we must remove the barriers that exist – fiscal, regulatory, economic, cultural – as a matter of urgency. Let me give one example of where Europe’s agenda is changing, learning from the USA – venture capital.

    In the UK, only 5 per cent of venture capital funds go to start ups and early stage companies. In the USA, nearly 25-30 per cent goes to these companies. The amount of hi-tech in venture capital is 50 per cent in the USA, but only around 20 per cent in the UK.

    The challenge for Europe is to create a strong venture capital industry and to orientate venture capital to hi-tech risk, early stage and start-up companies.In June here in London we are holding an EU conference to promote venture capital in Europe.

    So, just as the new government in Britain has begun to create a new Britain, we are also working with our European partners to create a new Europe – one that combines enterprise with social cohesion, more dynamic, more competitive, more open and thus learning from the entrepreneurial and flexible labour markets of the American economy.

  • Gordon Brown – 1998 Speech at the Scottish Business Forum in Glasgow

    Gordon Brown – 1998 Speech at the Scottish Business Forum in Glasgow

    The speech made by Gordon Brown, the then Chancellor of the Exchequer, on 24 April 1998.

    I am delighted to be with Donald Dewar at the launch of Scotland’s new business forum.

    The creation of  the new Scottish Business Forum brings in the biggest change in  the government’s approach to business consultation since the introduction of the Scottish Economic Council in 1971 and it reflects the new challenges for Scotland of a changing global economy.

    In the 1960s when the old Scottish economic planning council, later known as the Scottish Economic Council, was formed, Scotland led the way in a new generation of regional policy, whose central objective was to raise the level of incentives for capital investment.

    Today I believe Scotland can lead the way again, to a new understanding of how there can be better relations between public and private sectors and to a new generation of regional policy.

    In fact for far too long political arguments about our economy have focussed on how here in Scotland we divide the cake, about how we spend money, about the relative shares between public and private sectors rather than what we have to do to increase our wealth and our productive capacity as a country, and how public and private sectors can work far more effectively together.

    And so I want a new partnership for prosperity.  Not a return of the old corporatism which ended up in weak compromises in smoke filled rooms far from the factory floor but the whole country engaged in the shared challenge of improving productivity.

    And in doing so we will have to look at every weakness, every handicap that has held us back,  every barrier to growth.

    Modern Budgets are not so much about dividing up the national cake as about implementing measures that can help us compete more effectively in the global economy.    So I want the period from now until the next Budget to be used constructively by all of us to examine what more we can do.

    It is a relentless and uncompromising agenda of modernisation in education, the welfare state and our approaches to business that we now need.

    Our first concern is stability.

    Of course it is businesses not governments that make profits and create jobs, but business needs governments to shape the environment in which profitable companies can grow.

    It is the government’s job to make sure it has done everything to ensure stability and I can promise that we will not take risks with inflation, we will not engage in the false trade-offs between inflation and unemployment. And  we will not compromise our hard-won reputation for prudence in economic management by short-term gestures.

    We will avoid short termism in all these areas by the clarity of setting down  clear long term  objectives against which we can be judged.

    •     An inflation target of 2.5 per cent
    •     An independent bank
    •     A golden rule for discipline in  public spending
    •     A five year deficit reduction plan

    Scotland needs this stable foundation because it has been the victim of stop-go policies – and whatever the temporary difficulties for exporters with the pound, the greater concern is avoiding a  return to the  boom-bust approaches that have deprived us  of the long-term investment funds we need.

    First investment

    Cutting the main rate of corporate tax from 33p to 30p, 40 percent investment incentives, a 10p long term rate of capital gains tax are all measures designed, alongside  monetary and fiscal stability, to create the best environment for new investment in our future.

    But we are prepared to look at further changes and I want the business forum to comment on whether our investment incentives should be placed on a permanent basis, whether the targeting to small and medium sized firms is effective, whether more needs to be done to help the tax position of start-up and small companies and what more we can do to build the successful enterprises of tomorrow.

    Second innovation

    Scotland has now a reputation for inventiveness that extends well beyond the traditional inventions for which we are famed.  Biotechnology, computer software and electronics all provide examples of the latest wave of Scottish innovations of global significance.

    So we want to let the creative talents of Scotland flourish to turn new ideas into successful businesses created in Scotland. I want us to examine whether there is more we can and should do.

    So i would like the forum to comment on the practical advantages for business of more investment in science and technology in our universities, our new university challenge fund, the next phase of the UK foresight programme and the possibility of an r&d tax credit to build on developments such as the arrival of cadence and encouragement for the expansion of the venture capital industry.  This is a huge step forward and on these new developments we will build.

    A consultation paper was published in March, giving the business community in Scotland an opportunity to influence how this major initiative will be taken forward.  It provides us with a means of recognising Scotland’s needs and shaping the programme accordingly.  Foresight is about preparing for the future – in a very broad sense.  It is about future technologies, future markets, and their influence on the prosperous, modern and inclusive society that we want Scotland to become.  It is a UK guide to the future for today’s decision-makers – in business, in research, in government.

    That said, it takes relatively little foresight to come to the view that the Scottish venture capital industry needs to expand to American levels.  We need more high tech ventures and more risk capital.  We should consider what we can do together.

    Third small businesses

    The Scottish Enterprise business birthrate strategy now encompasses a range of initiatives to encourage individuals to set up businesses.  For example, there are 40 business shops offering assistance to new and small businesses.  And we want to build on these.

    We should ask whether we could do more to help men and women  start their own businesses and encourage small businesses to expand by using the jobs subsidy to take new people on.

    I want more young entrepreneurs, more Scots starting small businesses and the best motivators are those who themselves have worked their way up and know the pitfalls as well as the opportunities.

    And I am pleased that a number of business leaders have this week given a personal commitment to visit schools and colleges around Scotland, not just to talk to teenagers but to inspire them.  From this generation of business leaders will come the next.  And these school visits will help motivate young people to turn their ambition here in Scotland into achievement.  I am delighted that Richard Emanuel, Tom Farmer, David Murray, Belinda Robertson and Brian Souter have agreed to start this process off.

    Fourth getting people into work

    I want to  remove the barriers that deprive thousands of men and women of employment opportunities in Scotland today.  And so I want to discuss any barriers – tax, legal, regulatory and competitive  – that are unnecessary and that by their removal can help jobs be created.

    And I want employers to work with us on getting the New Deal right in Scotland not just for the young people who will benefit but for the companies to whom they will contribute.  Initiatives like the new futures programme  which is aimed at ensuring all young people have the social and life skills to make them job ready when they join a new employer.

    I want New Deal to become more than ambulance relief for young people in difficulty but the smart solution for companies looking for motivated young people they can train with new skills.

    Fifth, education

    Modern employers will succeed when we get the best out of all our people, and  the countries which succeed in mastering the waves of technological change and fiercer competitive pressures will be the ones that invest in their key national resource:  the people.

    One priority is improved standards in our schools and Donald Dewar and Brian Wilson have already acted  to ensure that for the first time individual targets are set for each school in Scotland.

    But equally because 80 per cent of those in employment today will be in the workforce in ten years time, education cannot stop at the school gates.  There must be lifelong learning if we are to achieve the productivity gains we want in the years to come.

    We must have a stronger relationship between education and business in charting the way forward.

    Scotland’s university for industry will enable people from their homes all over urban and remote  and rural areas  to benefit from education from home, on a range of areas beyond the university level courses catered for by the Open University.

    I believe we should consider the extra skills which Scotland’s university for industry should concentrate on expanding – whether it be for the expansion of call centres – or for computer software engineers – or for electronics as a whole, including starting your own business.

    So our aims – aims I believe we share in common – are of an open, dynamic Scottish economy  with  economic stability for investment rather than instability; a Scotland which is business-friendly, working with business rather than in isolation from it; a working Scotland with the vision to be a world leader in education the centre point of both our economic and social ambitions  for the long term.

    This modernisation for the future, is the way forward.  Setting the old conflicts behind us. Understanding the objectives we share in common.  Recognising the challenge must involve all of us, all of our workforces, working together.

    And the prize is a modern Scottish economy more fit for the challenges ahead, ready to ensure employment opportunity and greater prosperity for all our people in the years ahead.

  • Gordon Brown – 1998 Speech at CBI President’s Dinner

    Gordon Brown – 1998 Speech at CBI President’s Dinner

    The speech made by Gordon Brown, the then Chancellor of the Exchequer, on 22 April 1998.

    I am grateful for the opportunity to address this CBI Dinner tonight, to be able to thank you as business Leaders of Britain for the contribution you and your Companies make to the success of Britain at home and Abroad.

    When I spoke to your conference in Harrogate in the final months before the general election of the need to modernise government’s relations with business we agreed that we needed as our building blocks:

    • First, stability with low inflation;
    • Second, sustainable public finances;
    • Third, not just open markets but a constructive engagement with Europe;
    • Fourth, a modern employment policy;
    • And finally higher levels of skills and productivity.

    And the Government has already made a start:

    • to achieve monetary stability – independence for the Bank of England;
    • to achieve fiscal stability – a five year deficit reduction plan to which we have adhered;
    • to boost investment – a cut in corporation tax and new incentives for investment in small and medium sized business;
    • and to boost skills and productivity – our education reforms and welfare to work programme.

    And it is the need to raise our game in productivity that I want to address many of my remarks this evening, and to make some suggestions on which I think we can agree.

    Stability with low inflation

    First stability

    When we have met representatives of the CBI we have been  agreed on the need for a credible framework for monetary stability for the long term.

    And I believe people now understand that the way to stability for national Governments in a modern global marketplace is to base monetary and fiscal policy on clear long term objectives by which you will be judged – in our case our inflation target and five year deficit reduction plan;

    • to have orderly procedural rules which guarantee certainty and therefore credibility in decision-making – making the Bank independent and legislating for a code for Fiscal stability;
    • and to have an open and transparent decision-making process which allows proper scrutiny and offers a confidence that a long term view is being pursued free of short term party political considerations.

    All to meet our aim, businesses aim:  In place of stop-go cycles, long term stability.

    Whatever one’s views of the month to month decisions of the monetary policy committee, the new system has, in my view, already freed interest rate decisions from short term political pressures and given greater credibility to monetary policy making.  And because people are now coming to believe that the inflation target will be met, long term interest rates have come down to below 6 per cent, the lowest for 33 years.

    At this point in every cycle in the past the British economy has been prone to inflation instability.  So when we came into power we faced inflationary pressures and had to act.  Because of the action we took inflation which when we came to power was heading well above our target is expected to be at 2« percent next year.

    And let me add just one thing –

    It would be the worst of short-termism now to pay ourselves more today at the cost of higher interest rates, fewer jobs and slower growth tomorrow.  All of us must therefore show greater responsibility.

    Whilst the public sector has understood the need for moderation, today’s wages figures suggest that private sector employers have some way to go sustainable public finances

    When I spoke to your annual dinner last year we were also agreed that responsible public finances are the cornerstone of stability.  We had already demonstrated a commitment to prudence with our two year ceiling on public spending.  We have now made it clear that this is not a one-off measure, but is part of a five year deficit reduction plan that has not only brought public borrowing down from an unacceptable 23 billion pounds in 1996-97 to 3 billion pounds last year but has allowed us to lock in a long term commitment to sustainable public finances while meeting our priorities.

    In July we will complete our comprehensive spending review and we will lock in our commitment to fiscal stability not just by the legislation for a code for fiscal stability but also by the conclusions of the Spending Review.  It is only if we manage to achieve spending discipline across the board, through the elimination of waste and rigorous focus on our priorities, that we will be able to ensure investment in and modernisation of our key public services, particularly education and health – consistent with both our golden rule of at least balancing the current budget over the economic cycle and our commitment to keep debt at a stable and prudent level.

    To achieve our aim, your aim: sustainable public finances and modernised public services.

    Trading relationships

    So stability and long term prudence are key building blocks for prosperity but there is another building block that for too many years we have undervalued – strong and lasting trading relationships with Europe.   We are not only one of the most open economies in the world – trading 25 per cent of our GDP.  But, in addition, nearly 60 per cent of our exports are to mainland Europe and astonishingly high levels of us and Japanese investment into Europe – 40 per cent of it – comes to the UK.

    The new Government has made four principled decisions on Europe which have decisively and unambiguously put this country on a new road.

    First, for the first time we are committed, in principle, to European monetary union.  second, we see no constitutional barrier that prevents us joining.  Third,  we are committed to making an economic rather than political assessment the decisive test as to whether and when we will enter and finally we have committed our country to full  preparations that will allow us to make a decision, subject to a referendum, early in the next Parliament.  Our strategy, to prepare and then decide, is being pursued.

    So this is a government that having declared for the principle will help to make sure that the preparations are made.

    Our slogan is Britain is ready for the Euro and we will be.

    All necessary steps are being made to ensure business will be able to use the Euro here from 1999 for a wide range of business activities, from filing company accounts, to paying certain taxes and issuing shares.

    And low corporate tax as well as our financial expertise  and our commitment to free trade and open markets will further underpin Britain’s position as the most profitable place in Europe from which to exploit new business opportunities after 1999.

    And I believe that a new national consensus on Europe – the very consensus that has eluded us for years – is now within our grasp.

    Modern employment policy

    The fourth building block is a modern employment policy that does not offer welfare irrespective of work, but is built on a system of matching rights with responsibilities, an active welfare state which provides new opportunities for work, and a tax and benefit system that makes work pay.  And I am grateful to many of the companies represented here today for signing up to the new deal, to help tackle our problems of youth and long term unemployment.

    And to create the right incentives to work and to cut the costs of hiring, we have already announced radical changes to the current tax and benefit  system;  changes in employers and employees national insurance for which I am grateful for the CBI’s support; and a new working families tax credit which, underpinned by a national minimum wage, is the means to ensure that work pays more than benefits.

    Higher productivity

    But our aim is high levels of employment and high levels of growth to secure prosperity for all.  And that brings me to my fifth building block – how, in Britain, we modernise to achieve the higher productivity on which lasting growth depends.

    Since I arrived at the Treasury I have been seeking to understand the extent of and the reasons for our productivity gap  with other major economies.

    The latest figures show a productivity gap with France and Germany of around 20-30% and a gap of 40% with the United States.

    There are great British success stories – world class firms that are beating competition all around the Globe, many represented here tonight, in whose achievements we all have pride.  But in manufacturing as a whole UK productivity is lower than in other major economies.  In the United States, productivity is twice that in the UK in the food and  beverages industry and in the machinery industry.  Even in the service sector we fail to lead the others in any major industry.

    I believe these disappointing figures can no longer be ignored.  And together we have to consider how to close the productivity gap.

    Today I want to set down a challenge to ourselves in Government, to you the country’s business leaders and to every shareholder, every employee, every citizen of this country.  The challenge is to work together to bridge the gap in productivity, the gap between what Britain is today and what we can become in the future.

    For decades governments of all parties have wrestled with these problems.

    Some say that first we managed decline. Then we mismanaged decline.

    Then we declined to manage.

    But I think we can all agree that fifty years of our economic history from 1945 was marred by a succession of sterile and self defeating conflicts between state and market, managements and workforce, public and private sectors.

    I believe that we should not only set aside for good these old battles but think of a Britain where public and private sectors are not just in some temporary truce but where public and private sector are constructively  working together to meet nationally Important and defined objectives.

    In other words it is time to develop a sense of national economic purpose, to agree a new long term direction for Britain.

    A new national purpose born out of the recognition that we need to work together;  focussed on removing the barriers to higher productivity whether they are regulatory, fiscal or cultural;  with the clear long term objective – to bridge the productivity gap with our competitors; and founded on the innate British strengths – our creativity, adaptability and internationalism.

    The British genius is our belief in hard work and enterprise,  and these are the strengths on which we can build: our creativity, our willingness to adapt, our belief in fair play and opportunity for all, our outward looking approach to the world.  The same strengths which built manufacturing in the 19th, are the platform on which to build our strength for the future, not just in fashion in London but in every manufacturing and service industry in every part of the UK.

    But we must turn ideas made in Britain into products made in Britain, make our strengths count with our team work and innovation in individual business and companies, and we must be sufficiently confident about our virtues to make  committed long term investments in our future.

    Margaret Beckett and I will look systematically and rigorously at every barrier to higher productivity that is identified.

    So let me say to exporters.

    I do understand your worries over the current strength of sterling, but what would be an even greater worry would be any risk of a return to the boom-bust we saw in the late 1980s and early 90s, when 1 million manufacturing jobs were lost, over 150,000 businesses went under and thousands who faced mortgage misery and negative equity are even now not yet recovered from it.

    It is for this reason we must all of us take a long term view, Government, Industry and the Financial  Community:

    • Government – by ensuring lasting stability;
    • Industry – by investing for the long term and
    • The Financial Community by refusing to resort to
    • The short-termism and stop-go attitudes which
    • Have bedevilled us since the war.

    I repeat our policy is a stable and competitive pound in the medium term.

    The countries that have succeeded over the long run are not those that have made a policy of continuously devaluing  their way to success, but those  who have travelled the long and hard road to high productivity.

    Now I know that it is businesses not Governments that make profits and create jobs, but I also know that business needs Governments to shape the environment in which profitable companies can grow.

    So today I make the promise that Government will do everything it can to create the conditions in which you can succeed.  To help set in place the basic building blocks for long-term economic success: stability and low inflation, responsible public finances, good trading relationships, a modern employment policy and improved skills and productivity.

    We have made a start in the last year.

    We have since we came to office reallocated money to education and training  allowing an additional 2.5 billion pounds to improve standards and facilities in our schools and to improve skills – 100 million pounds was made available in the budget to help reduce the skills gap in I.T. And high technology.

    And we have made tax changes to create the right environment for investment.  I was delighted that last July’s 2 per cent cut in corporation tax, to its lowest level ever, the reduction to 21 per cent of small business corporation tax, and the new investment incentives for small and medium sized companies, could be followed last month by the announcement of a further reduction to 30p for the main rate of corporation tax and 20p for small business corporation tax.

    But just as in business the competition for economic success requires constant modernisation, business developing new approaches to achieve success in new circumstances, so too  rapid  change forces government to reconsider continuously its
    responsibilities and role.

    I believe that we must now combine a strategy for achieving stability by being prepared to consider major structural reforms of our product, capital and labour markets to equip us for the future.

    And I say tonight that where it is necessary modernisation,  wholesale modernisation and nothing but modernisation will be my policy.

    Just as there will be no room in the New Britain for penal taxation, wasteful public spending or for taking risks with inflation, there will be no room in the new Britain for complacency, old confrontational attitudes, short-termism, the undervaluing of education and investment or  restrictive practices from whatever quarter they come.

    We do not want a return of the old corporatism which ended up in weak compromises in smoke filled rooms far from the factory floor but a joint strategy to achieve a new dynamism which engages everyone in the workplace.

    On product markets the way forward is not stifling competition by over-regulation, or pursuing a free-for-all devoid of anti-trust, anti-monopolies legislation.  It is to vigorously pursue a pro-competition agenda, that involves opening up competition in financial services, telecommunications, energy – removing barriers that still thwart open trade.

    Any examination of price levels shows the need for more competition.  Let me give you some examples. According to the OECD, household appliances like washing machines and dishwashers are about 30% more expensive here than in the United States, prices in restaurants and hotels are more than 50% higher and furniture is nearly 60% more expensive.

    The challenge in a modern economy is to balance the minimum standards that are needed to make markets work effectively and fairly with rooting out excessive regulation and red tape.

    The competition bill will help achieve more competitive markets and I know it is welcomed by business.

    We also need to consider modernising our capital markets.

    In the first half of the 90s NASDAQ in the United States raised seven times more capital than all the European equivalents together.  Its listed companies employed nine million people and created 16 per cent of all new jobs.

    The challenge for Britain is to create a stronger venture capital industry and to orient venture capital to hi-risk, early stage and start-up companies.

    In the UK, only 5 per cent of venture capital funds go to start ups and early stage companies.  In the USA, nearly 25-30 per cent goes to these companies.  The amount of hi-tech in venture capital is 50 per cent in the USA, but only around 20 per cent in the UK.

    We need a new approach in Britain to risk taking, we need to increase the number of entrepreneurs and to raise the survival rate of small businesses.  So we must destroy the barriers that exist – fiscal, regulatory, economic, cultural – as a matter of urgency.

    We must also engage in far-reaching reform of our labour markets not just in employment policy but in welfare, education and taxation and social security policy.  The way forward is neither old style regulation or a crude form of deregulation, which leaves the unskilled without the training or education essential for employability.  But one that recognises that bringing out the best in people – by policies that ensure opportunities for – is the best route to prosperity in the modern world.

    That is why we are committed to widening opportunities in education and training: higher standards in our schools and lifelong learning.

    In fact about 80 per cent of people in employment today will still be in the workforce in 10 years time.  And yet only a fraction of today’s workforce ae upgrading their skills.  while their skills are all the time becoming obsolete.

    Our proposals for individual learning accounts and a University for industry recognise the new reality that not only should people upgrade their skills throughout life but they should be encouraged to take responsibility for doing so.

    I want the period from now until the next budget to be used constructively to examine what more we can do, focussing on modernisation in labour, product and capital markets and on the tax and spending reforms they imply, to meet the 40% productivity challenge.

    We need to work together -that is all of us, business, workforces and government – to increase our productivity as a nation.

    Margaret Beckett and the DTI have already undertaken a benchmarking study to identify some of the main constraints on UK productivity performance.  And subsequently set up a number of private sector led working groups to look at this in more detail.  In the Treasury we sponsored a business-led working group examining proposals to overcome barriers to finance in high-technology companies, and in the budget we launched a consultation exercise on ways of improving the UK’s record on R&D and innovation.

    Now Margaret Beckett and I have agreed to hold a series of seminars with business leaders, over the coming 10 months to address the British productivity gap and how we can catch up.

    The first seminar, to be held next month at number 11 Downing Street, will start by examining the global picture and Britain’s place in the productivity league. Mckinsey’s global institute are currently compiling an independent study of Britain’s performance in growth, employment and productivity, this is a follow-on to previous studies which have focussed on France and Germany.  Their report will analyse Britain’s record across a wide range of industries – and this will form the basis of discussion for the first seminar. Future seminars will focus on the sectors where our performance is weakest and the policy areas where government can play its role.

    These then are the challenges ahead: to lock in stability, to invest for the long-term, to reward work, to encourage new enterprise and skills so we can bridge the productivity gap.  So we must set old conflicts behind us . Understand the objectives we share in common .  And recognise that the challenge must involve all of us, Government, workforces and business working together.  The challenge is enormous but the prize is a more up-to-date and dynamic economy more fit for the challenges ahead, ready to ensure employment opportunity and  greater prosperity for all in the years ahead.

  • Gordon Brown – 1998 Speech in Belfast

    Gordon Brown – 1998 Speech in Belfast

    The speech made by Gordon Brown, the then Chancellor of the Exchequer, at the Parliament Buildings in Belfast on 12 May 1998.

    To be here in Belfast at this historic moment of opportunity for the people of Northern Ireland is a privilege in itself.

    And I am honoured to be able to pay tribute to all those who, not just by their participation in the peace negotiations of recent weeks, but in their everyday actions over many years have brought us closer to peace.

    From a country that has not known a single year, a single month, a single week, in which mothers have not wept for their sons or daughters, we now have, in our grasp, an opportunity that a few years ago only poets could dream of and church leaders could pray for – a lasting peace. The greatest honour history can bestow is that of peacemaker.

    And we owe a debt of gratitude to all those who have played their part in working towards peace. And I am particularly pleased to be here today alongside someone who, with Tony Blair, has done more than anyone else over twelve long and difficult months – Mo Mowlam. And I am pleased to be here with her and also with Adam Ingram who is working closely with her.

    And hopefully – when the decision is completed – some years from now we can look back and say in the words of Robert Frost, the American poet:

    “I can say somewhere ages and ages hence
    two roads diverged in a wood
    and I took the one less travelled by
    and that has made all the difference”

    But let me first repeat how pleased I am to be here. The first serving chancellor to visit Northern Ireland for 18 years. And to be here at such an important time and to make important announcements is a privilege for me.

    I am reminded of the story of Dr Henry Cole, a minister sent to Ireland, on behalf of the Queen in the 1550s and so anxious were some to ensure he did not make the announcements he planned that when he opened his red box to take out the speech there was no speech – but simply a packet of playing cards. I have, I hope, more to offer.

    Now today I also want to pay tribute to all those who throughout the troubles, through dark days and dark years, have continued the long hard work of sustaining the productive base of the Northern Ireland economy, and kept alive the dream of peace with prosperity: those who have invested in Northern Ireland; those who have built up businesses; those who have worked together to tackle the social tensions of some of the worst-hit unemployment areas of Northern Ireland; those who through their actions have offered hope.

    But it is as a result of the hard work, the enterprise, and the commitment of thousands of men and women at work in Northern Ireland – managers and employees – that Northern Ireland has grown at 3 per cent a year on average over the last decade. That inward investment has risen, and that 73,000 jobs have been created in this period.

    For years we have been attempting to build the Northern Ireland economy against a background of violence.

    From today, 1998, we can begin to build on new foundations. Having created a framework for peace we can now create a framework for prosperity.

    Peace underpinned by prosperity. Prosperity made possible by peace. A peace sustained, because it is built on the rock of prosperity.

    So we need a new agenda for prosperity, an agenda for prosperity that is born out of an understanding of the need for growth, founded on new investment in Northern Ireland, driven forward by building up our skills and whose success will be new companies, new jobs, new opportunities in Northern Ireland.

    And let me say that the set of initiatives I am announcing today is not a shopping list dreamed up in a few days to tide us over a few months; it is a strategy that has been developed over many months that offers the prospect of prosperity for many years.

    And so today I want to match the new partnership for peace with a new partnership for prosperity.

    And to do that we need to achieve two things: to encourage the creation and growth of small and medium size enterprises and to attract inward investment.

    And there are five building blocks to achieve these goals:

    Stability – economic stability as well as political stability;
    Investment in the physical infrastructure of Northern Ireland, with a new fund for investment;
    Investment in people and in skills, with a new fund for skills;
    Investment in innovation and new ideas, with a new fund for innovation; and
    direct help to boost business investment, with a new fund for enterprise.
    And in each of these areas I want to make new announcements about what the government will do to match the enterprise of the people.

    So our policy is not for or against any one group – but against unemployment, under-investment, poverty and waste of potential.

    The first building block for prosperity is stability. To encourage entrepreneurs to set up in business here and to encourage businesses to locate here, we need stability. First, of course the stability that comes from lasting peace. But also economic stability. And this government has made it clear that it will do everything to ensure monetary and fiscal stability based on:

    Clear long-term objectives by which we will be judged – an inflation target of 2% and a commitment to fiscal stability that will be locked in by the conclusions of our comprehensive spending review; orderly procedural rules which guarantee certainty and therefore credibility in decision-making – making the Bank of England independent and legislating for a code for fiscal stability; and an open and transparent decision-making process which allows proper scrutiny and offers a confidence that a long term view is being pursued free of short term party political considerations.

    This foundation of economic stability is necessary to avoid the boom-bust which we have suffered from in the past.

    But stability is only the first building block for a peaceful and prosperous Northern Ireland. For business to succeed we have to invest in the future. We have to invest in the physical infrastructure, in skills, in innovation.

    So the second building block for prosperity is investment in our physical infrastructure.

    A modern economy needs good transport links, good schools, decent housing, reliable utilities and cutting-edge communication networks. Doing this properly means an end to the sterile old conflicts between public and private sector, it means public and private sector working in partnership to invest in the infrastructure of Northern Ireland.

    So today I want to announce new investment in our social and economic fabric. A 150 million pounds Northern Ireland investment fund to help create the transport network, housing and schools that Northern Ireland needs.

    Completing the best modern transport and communications links for Northern Ireland is a priority – linking up our towns, linking industrial estates to the seaports and airports, cutting the costs and times of travel from production to exports.

    To build a good transport system in road, rail, airports and seaports we need public and private sectors working together as a part of a publicly-led integrated transport strategy.

    We want to cut the time it takes to travel by road. Today I can announce an investment of 15 million pounds to upgrade the road from Belfast to Newry. I have been in contact with the European commission, and look forward to an early reaction on the scope for EU funding in support of further investment.

    The Belfast-Newry road and other new initiatives will be partly funded by the transfer of Belfast harbour from the public sector to a public private partnership which will further enhance the port’s operation and assure its future growth. Measures will be put in place to ensure that all employees will be able to benefit from the change.

    Today’s package will invest a further 87 million pounds to enable progress in other key road programmes:

    In the road from Belfast to Larne which will improve the connection between Belfast and this key port and important link with the mainland; in the west link through Belfast, connecting the M1 and M2 motorways, which will provide a through route from major sites of inward investment to the port and to the city centre; and in the bypass at Toome connecting Belfast and Londonderry, the Antrim to Ballymena road and the Londonderry to Ballygawley road which will all improve the road network of Northern Ireland bringing benefits to business.

    Transport links go beyond the roads. We want to raise the standard of the worst rail rolling stock to that of the best, and the Treasury Taskforce is already examining options for the development of our rail industry.

    And we will also use money from the Northern Ireland investment fund to improve infrastructure of St Angelo airport at Fermanagh.

    Some of the worst housing estates in Northern Ireland need a fresh start. And 11 million pounds has been allocated to the Northern Ireland investment fund to address these problems.

    But investing in Northern Ireland’s future means more than investing in the physical infrastructure. We need to invest in our human infrastructure – our key resource – the people. So the third building block for prosperity is investment in people and in skills so today I can announce a Northern Ireland skills fund.

    I want to remove the barriers that deprive thousands of men and women of training and employment opportunities in Northern Ireland today.

    I want employers to work with us on getting the new deal right here in Northern Ireland, not just for the young people who will benefit but for the companies to whom they will contribute.

    I want the New Deal to become more than ambulance relief for people in difficulty but the smart solution for companies looking for motivated people they can train with new skills.

    In Northern Ireland today – despite 6 years of economic recovery – over 8 per cent of the workforce are unemployed. Unemployment here is consistently above the level in the rest of the UK.

    So today I want to announce some measures to expand the new deal for jobs and training in Northern Ireland.

    Today I was pleased to see Shorts Brothers join with Northern Ireland electricity, Hilton hotels, Moy Park and other northern Irish firms to sign the agreement to participate. 220 employers in total have already signed up for the New Deal.

    Long-term unemployment has – for too long – been a drain on the Northern Ireland economy. People who become unemployed spend on average 45 per cent longer out of work than in the rest of the UK. The modernisation of the Northern Ireland economy means addressing the long-standing problem of long-term unemployment. Only then will we build a growing economy with economic opportunity for all.

    We promised in our manifesto to introduce a 75 pounds a week employment subsidy to help people unemployed over 2 years into work. That measure is particularly needed in Northern Ireland – and will begin here in June. But I want to provide more intensive help to make a real assault on long-term unemployment.

    So I can announce today that the whole of Northern Ireland will participate in a new initiative on jobs. From the autumn – everyone in Northern Ireland over 25 who has been unemployed more than 18 months can get the help they need to find work. We will create 30,000 new opportunities for the long-term unemployed.

    We will offer a gateway of support tailored to individual needs. Work experience. Help in starting a business. Work trials with employers. A “bridge to employment” programme to develop employment-related skills.

    And to give disabled people who want to work the opportunity to work a 9 million pounds pilot programme will begin in the autumn to help disabled people improve their employability through work experience, training and education.

    But the New Deal is only one way in which to invest in people. Modern employers will succeed when we get the best out of all our people, and to succeed in mastering the waves of technological change and fiercer competitive pressures we must invest in our key resource: people.

    One priority is improving standards in our schools, to which we are committed. And 18 million pounds from the Northern Ireland investment fund will be used to improve the infrastructure of our schools – building new schools and improving existing school buildings.

    But 80 per cent of those in employment today will be in the workforce in ten years time, education cannot stop at the school gates. There must be a concerted effort to improve skills and enable lifelong learning if we are to achieve the productivity gains we want in the years to come. We must have a stronger relationship between education and business in charting the way forward.

    The new University for industry will enable people from their homes all over urban and remote and rural areas to benefit from education from home, on a range of areas beyond the university level courses catered for by the open university.

    14 million pounds from the Northern Ireland investment fund will be used to support lifelong learning. More I.T. will be available to support the national grid for learning and capital investment in further education colleges.

    Adam Ingram has commissioned a skills audit in Northern Ireland to consult employers, to look at whether our education and training systems are equipped to meet the changing skill demands of business, and to identify mismatches between the skills we have in Northern Ireland and the skills we need for the future.

    And today I can announce a 14 million pounds investment in skills – targeted on the needs of business in Northern Ireland:

    conversion courses for graduates and new apprenticeships;
    technician-level training in the software and I.T. industries,
    in engineering and in hospitality – designed to meet the needs of inward investors and other employers.
    These industries are key to Northern Ireland’s future economic prosperity.

    The challenge we face is to get people back to work and equip people with the right skills. Many of you are employers who know the damage that long term unemployment can do to motivation and employability, and you know too the right skills which people need to succeed today. So we need to work together to make the new deal a success and to provide Northern Ireland with the right skills base.

    Northern Ireland has a growing reputation in research and development. But for too long great scientific advances here have gone on to become the manufacturing successes of other countries. We want the inventiveness and creative talents of Northern Ireland to flourish. But we want to ensure that ideas created in Northern Ireland are turned into successful businesses based in Northern Ireland. So we must invest in innovation, and this is the fourth building block for prosperity.

    We will therefore be inviting proposals for a new science park to provide a centre of excellence for businesses spun out from the universities and from our enterprise excellence programme.

    10 million pounds has been set aside as part of the Northern Ireland innovation fund to create the science park.

    The new university challenge fund which I announced in my budget will help convert today’s ideas in universities across the United Kingdom, into innovative businesses that will create wealth and jobs tomorrow.

    In addition a challenge fund of up to 5 million pounds will be made available to meet the funding gap faced by innovative spin-off firms at the science park and elsewhere in Northern Ireland.

    The final building block is the direct help we can give to business to boost investment and help small businesses turn themselves into large and growing businesses.

    Economic success will depends on the vision and ambition of entrepreneurs setting up businesses and making them grow.

    We must encourage these ambitions and give everyone the chance to realise them.

    So today I can announce a series of measures to encourage entrepreneurs and entrepreneurship in Northern Ireland, a Northern Ireland enterprise fund to help Northern Ireland businesses invest and grow.

    In the last two budgets we have cut tax on profits, cutting the main rate of corporation tax from 33p to 30p. And because we know that jobs and prosperity will come, not simply from having a small number of large businesses, but from a large number of small and growing businesses we cut the corporation tax rate for small companies from 23p to 20p. And to encourage investment in small and medium size companies we increased their first year capital allowances.

    It is upon this stable platform for business that we must build. So i want to announce an additional boost to investment in small and medium size companies in Northern Ireland.

    Every pound invested in plant and machinery in the coming four years will be fully offset against tax and therefore be wholly tax deductible.

    This extra tax help, to speed up investment for the rest of this parliament, will be an 100 million pound investment in the economy of Northern Ireland , 99% of businesses in Northern Ireland will benefit, including the tourism and service industries.

    Modern business investing in Northern Ireland will therefore benefit from two new sources of help: this special tax relief and the skills measures I announced earlier which will allow them to train and equip their workforce.

    In the United Kingdom our venture capital industry is proportionately much smaller than in the United States. Only 5 per cent of venture capital funds in the United Kingdom go to start-ups and early stage companies. While in the USA, nearly 25-30 per cent goes to these companies. The amount of hi-tech in venture capital is 50 per cent in the USA, but only around 20 per cent in the UK.

    For businesses to start-up, grow and be successful we need a strong venture capital market. This is a challenge facing the whole of the United Kingdom and the whole of Europe.

    I can announce that options for setting up a venture capital fund of at least 15 million pounds are being considered for Northern Ireland as a result of joint work by the department of economic development and the European investment bank. The intention is that the fund will be run on a public private partnership basis and will focus on the development of smaller businesses and the service sector, including tourism.

    Northern Ireland needs more small businesses but it also needs higher value-added businesses with potential to grow into the drivers of Northern Ireland’s future. That is why we are establishing an enterprise excellence programme. It will provide training, advice and access to finance to help today’s senior managers and research academics to become tomorrow’s entrepreneurs.

    Northern Ireland is a place of great natural beauty, a place of culture and history, and of creativity in music and in art. So with peace comes the opportunity to build a thriving tourism industry. And to kick-start the growth in this industry, as well as the tax help for investment, a 4 million pounds challenge fund will be set up together with a wide range of business support measures provided by the local enterprise development unit.

    And following the lifting of the EU ban on Northern Ireland beef there is a chance to boost overseas sales so we are setting up a 2 million pounds overseas marketing programme.

    Northern Ireland has been very successful at attracting inward investment which has helped to create many new jobs and reduce unemployment to its lowest level for a generation. 1997 was Northern Ireland’s best ever year for inward investment creating 5,000 new jobs. Fujitsu and Nortel have both located their software development facilities in Northern Ireland – bringing in 250 R&D jobs this year alone – and bringing the total jobs provided by these two companies to 700. This success at attracting inward investment must continue to grow.

    Mo Mowlam is already looking at how best to co-ordinate the work of the existing agencies, the industrial development board and the local enterprise development unit, including the possibility of creating an economic power house offering a wide range of support and services for businesses looking to invest in Northern Ireland.

    Later this year I will accompany Mo Mowlam on the first stage of a ten city tour of the United States and Canada, taking the case for investing in Northern Ireland to the captains of North American industry.

    The package I have announced today amounts to a 315 million pounds investment in the renewal and modernisation of Northern Ireland. The challenge we face is to build on economic and political stability, to promote enterprise and inward investment, to get people back to work and equip them with the right skills, and to build the infrastructure for a modern economy. And this is a challenge that we must face together – government, business and citizens, public and private sectors in partnership.

    The Northern Ireland agreement offers peace for Northern Ireland. A fresh start that offers a way out of 30 years of violence. This package offers faith in the future, the chance to build peace with prosperity, an economy of opportunity for all.

    And out of the dark days of recent years I believe we can look forward with new hope to an era of opportunity, leading Northern Ireland to a new age of achievement.

  • Gordon Brown – 1997 Statement in the House of Commons on EMU (Economic and Monetary Union)

    Gordon Brown – 1997 Statement in the House of Commons on EMU (Economic and Monetary Union)

    The statement made by Gordon Brown, the then Chancellor of the Exchequer, in the House of Commons on 27 October 1997.

    With permission, Madam Speaker, I want to make a statement on Economic and Monetary Union.

    Since the end of the Second World War Britain has faced no question more important and more contentious than that of our relationship with Europe.

    Divisions within governments of both parties, and hence indecision, have made British policy towards Europe, over many years, inconsistent and unclear.

    The economic consequences of these weaknesses have been a loss of international initiative and influence, recurrent instability and continuing questioning of our long-term economic direction.

    To break with this legacy, and to establish clear national purpose, which has eluded us for decades, economic leadership is essential, and Britain must now make the difficult decisions on Europe, however hard.

    The decision on a single currency is probably the most important this country is likely to face in our generation. Yet until now, there has been no detailed examination by government of the practical economic issues of EMU. There has been no proper preparation for a decision, because no previous Government could agree on whether they supported it in principle, nor whether there was an overriding constitutional objection on grounds of sovereignty or not; nor whether, even if a single currency worked and worked well, the Government would wish to be part of it. Forms of words like ‘keeping the option open’ – while no preparations were ever made to render the option practicable – have similarly served as a pretext for postponing the hard choices

    Now is the time to make these hard choices and set a long-term direction for our economic future in Europe.

    So I will deal, in turn, with the question of principle, the constitutional implications of EMU, and the economic tests that have to be met. In each area, I will set down the Government’s policy.

    When we came into Government I asked the Treasury to carry out an assessment of the economic tests that have to be met. Accompanying my statement is this comprehensive and detailed Treasury assessment which I am publishing today, copies of which are available in the Vote Office.

    ISSUES OF PRINCIPLE

    I start with the question of principle. The potential benefits for Britain of a successful single currency are obvious: in terms of trade, transparency of costs and currency stability. Of course, I stress it must be soundly based. It must succeed. But if it works economically, it is, in our view, worth doing.

    So in principle, a successful single currency within a single European market would be of benefit to Europe and to Britain.

    Secondly, it must be clearly recognised that to share a common monetary policy with other states does represent a major pooling of economic sovereignty.

    There are those who argue that this should be a constitutional bar to British participation in a single currency, regardless of the economic benefits it could bring to the people of this country.

    In other words, they would rule out a single currency in principle, even if it were in the best economic interests of the country.

    That is an understandable objection and one argued from principle. But in our view it is wrong. If a single currency would be good for British jobs, business and future prosperity, it is right, in principle, to join.

    The constitutional issue is a factor in the decision, but it is not an over-riding one. Rather it signifies that in order for monetary union to be right for Britain the economic benefit should be clear and unambiguous.

    So I conclude on this question of principle: if, in the end, a single currency is successful, and the economic case is clear and unambiguous, then the Government believes Britain should be part of it.

    There is a third issue of principle – the consent of the British people. Because of the magnitude of the decision, we believe – again, as a matter of principle – that whenever the decision to enter is taken by government, it should be put to a referendum of the British people. So whenever this issue arises, under this Government there will be a referendum. Government, Parliament and the people must all agree.

    So we conclude that the determining factor as to whether Britain joins a single currency is the national economic interest and whether the economic case for doing so is clear and unambiguous.

    THE FIVE ECONOMIC TESTS

    I now turn to the Treasury’s detailed assessment of the five economic tests that define whether a clear and unambiguous case can be made.

    These are:

    Whether there can be sustainable convergence between Britain and the economies of a single currency.

    Whether there is sufficient flexibility to cope with economic change.

    The effect on investment.

    The impact on our financial services industry.

    Whether it is good for employment.

    I. Economic Cycles

    Of these, the first and most critical is convergence: can we be confident that the UK business cycle has converged with that of other European countries so that the British economy can have stability and prosperity with a common European monetary policy? That convergence must be capable of being sustained and likely to be sustained – in other words, we must demonstrate a settled period of convergence.

    Currently Britain’s business cycle is out of line with our European partners. Interest rates here are 7 per cent. This is the level the Bank of England has set in order to achieve our inflation target. But in Germany and France interest rates are close to 3 per cent. Across the continent, because business cycles are more coincident, short-term interest rates have been converging for some time.

    This divergence of economic cycles is, in part, a reflection of historic structural differences between the UK and other European economies, in particular the pattern of our trade and North Sea oil. These differences are becoming less distinct as trade with the rest of Europe grows and the single market deepens.

    But divergence is also a legacy of Britain’s past susceptibility to boom and bust: the damaging boom of the late 1980s and the severe recession of the early 1990s.

    Since coming into office, the Government has introduced long-term measures to ensure that we are capable of maintaining stability by giving operational responsibility for interest rates to the Bank of England and by implementing our deficit reduction plan for public borrowing.

    We will need a period of stability with continuing toughness on inflation and public borrowing. The Treasury’s assessment is that, at present, the UK’s economic cycle is not convergent with our European partners and that this divergence could continue for some time. To demonstrate sustainable convergence will take a period of years.

    II. Flexibility

    To be successful in a monetary union, countries will need even more flexibility to adjust to change and to unexpected economic events once the ability of countries to vary their interest rates and exchange rates has gone and the Euro and a single European interest rate are in place. Flexibility may be particularly important for the UK if there is any risk that our business cycle has not fully converged with those of the other EMU members.

    The Treasury assessment of the second test is that, in Britain, persistent long-term unemployment and lack of skills – and in some areas lack of competition – point to the need for more flexibility to adapt to change and to meet the new challenges of adjustment. The Government has begun to implement a programme for investing in education and training, helping people from welfare into work and improving the workings of our markets.

    Of course, other European countries need to tackle unemployment and inflexibility to make sure Europe as a whole is able to withstand any shocks that arise. The government will continue to argue that employability, flexibility and stronger competition policies must be a top priority so that monetary union can be successful.

    III. Investment

    The third test is investment: whether joining EMU would create better conditions for businesses to make long-term decisions to invest in Britain. The Treasury assessment is that, above all, business needs long-term economic stability and a well-functioning European single market. It concludes that membership of a successful single currency would help us create the conditions for higher and more productive investment in Britain.

    But the worst case for investment would be for Britain to enter EMU without proper preparations and without sufficient convergence and with all the uncertainty that would entail.

    IV. Financial services

    The fourth test asks what impact membership of the single currency would have on our financial services industry. EMU will affect that industry more profoundly and more immediately than any other sectors of the economy.

    The Treasury’s assessment is that we can now be confident that the industry has the potential to thrive whether the UK is in or out of EMU, so long as it is properly prepared. But the benefits of new opportunities from a single currency could, however, be easier to tap from within the Euro zone. This could help the City of London strengthen its position as the leading financial centre in Europe.

    V. Employment

    For millions of people, the most practical question is whether membership of a successful single currency would be good for prosperity and jobs. The Treasury assessment is that our employment-creating measures, and welfare state reform, must accompany any move to a single currency. Ultimately, we conclude that whether a single currency is good for jobs in practice comes back to sustainable convergence. A successful single currency would provide far greater trade and business in the Europe.

    The Treasury assessment is that in vital areas the economy is not yet ready for entry and that much remains to be done. The previous policy of keeping options open, without actively making preparations, has left parts of the economy un-prepared.

    Our overall assessment is that Britain needs both a period for preparation and a settled period of sustainable convergence. Both require stability.

    THE GOVERNMENT’S CONCLUSIONS ON EMU

    Applying these five economic tests leads the Government to the following clear conclusions.

    British membership of a single currency in 1999 could not meet the tests and therefore is not in the country’s economic interests. There is no proper convergence between the British and the other European economies now. To try to join now would be to accept a monetary policy which would suit other European economies but not our own. We will therefore be notifying our European partners, in accordance with the Maastricht Treaty, that we will not seek membership of the single currency on 1 January 1999.

    The issue then arises as to the period after 1st January 1999. We could simply leave the options open, as before, but with no clear direction either way for the rest of the Parliament. That would be politically easy but wrong.

    There would be instability, perpetual speculation about “in or out”, “sooner or later”, which would cause difficulties in the financial markets and for business and industry.

    It would make it harder to prepare for the possibility of a single currency because every step in preparation, every time the issue was discussed, would feed fresh bouts of speculation.

    It must be in the country’s interest to have a stable framework within which to plan.

    And we are fortified in this because on the economic tests we have set out, the practical difficulties of joining a single currency in this Parliament all point to the same conclusion.

    There is no need, legally, formally or politically, to renounce our option to join for the period between 1st January 1999 and the end of the Parliament, nor would it be sensible to do so. There is no requirement under the Treaty for this. What is more, no government can ever predict every set of economic circumstances that might arise.

    What we can and should do is to state a clear view about the practicability of joining monetary union during this period. Applying our economic tests, two things are clear. There is no realistic prospect of our having demonstrated, before the end of this parliament, that we have achieved convergence which is sustainable and settled rather than transitory. And Government has only just begun to put in place the necessary preparations which would allow us to do so. Other countries have for some years been making detailed preparations for a single currency. For all the reasons given, we have not.

    Therefore, barring some fundamental and unforeseen change in economic circumstances, making a decision, during this Parliament, to join is not realistic. It is also therefore sensible for business and the country to plan on the basis that, in this Parliament, we do not propose to enter a single currency.

    There are those who urge us to seek consent, in principle, in a referendum now or soon, but with a view to entering sometime later. Any serious gap between the referendum and the actual entry date would undermine the conclusions of the referendum.

    Because the essential decision is economic, it can be taken only at a time when government and then the people can judge that sustainable convergence has been established.

    So in our view the interval between the decision to join and our joining must not be unduly protracted.

    PREPARATIONS

    I have said that if a single currency works and is successful Britain should join it. We should therefore begin now to prepare ourselves so that, should we meet the economic tests, we can make a decision to join a successful single currency early in the next Parliament. At present, with no preparation, it is not a practical option. We must put ourselves in the position for Britain to exercise genuine choice.

    The questions of preparation are immense – practical questions for business, as well as for government. Euro notes and coins will, for example, be circulating across Europe from January 1st 2002. Some companies, like Marks and Spencer, have already decided to prepare to accept Euros in Britain. Others, will want advice on what is best for them.

    Because both the Government and business must prepare intensively during the next years, we will:

    commence work on the detailed transition arrangements for the possible introduction of the Euro in Britain, including the introduction of notes and coins, should we wish to enter;

    step-up the work on what business should do now to prepare for the introduction of the Euro in 1999, whether we are in or out; work with business on what government must do to prepare for EMU, should we decide to join it in the next parliament.

    To help with essential preparations, I have invited the Governor of the Bank of England and Sir Colin Marshall, the President of the CBI, to join me and the President of the Board of Trade in leading a standing committee on Preparations for EMU. I am pleased to say that they have agreed. I am also inviting the President of the Association of British Chambers of Commerce to join us. I can also announce that, from January a series of regional and sectoral conferences on preparations for monetary union will be held.

    Also, the Prime Minister has today decided to extend Lord Simon’s Treasury responsibilities to include European Business Preparations in the government, covering the long-term planning of the new standing committee.

    In addition to these practical preparations, there are reforms we can take which are both right in themselves, in the national economic interest, and which will help us to meet the five economic tests.

    We will promote greater flexibility in the UK economy and in Europe through our “Getting Europe to Work” initiative;

    We will be introducing new competition legislation, which draws on the best of European and wider international policy and practice as well as continuing to negotiate to secure the best interests of our financial sector and for the opening up the single market in financial services.

    We will set as one of the key objectives of our EU Presidency completion of the European single market.

    In my Mansion House speech I said that if we succeed in strengthening the ability of the British economy to sustain growth with low inflation, and if international conditions permit, I would hope to lower the inflation target. So we will monitor our inflation target and do so in the light of the European Central Bank;

    And we will ensure that our fiscal rules, and our deficit reduction plan, continue to be consistent with the terms of the stability pact, thus underlining our commitment to avoid an excessive deficit under Article 104c of the Treaty, and supporting greater coordination in ECOFIN;

    In Britain’s interests, we need to keep inflation low and public borrowing firmly under control.

    The single currency will affect Britain, in or out of it. It is in the British national interest for it to work. Vital decisions will be made during our EU Presidency in the first half of next year. We will use our position constructively and supportively and we will play a full part in ensuring its launch is successful – something that is in Britain’s interests as well as Europe’s.

    CONCLUSIONS

    To sum up:

    we believe that, in principle, British membership of a successful single currency would be beneficial to Britain and to Europe; the key factor is whether the economic benefits of joining for business and industry are clear and unambiguous. If they are, there is no constitutional bar to British membership of EMU;

    applying the economic tests, it is not in this country’s interest to join in the first wave of EMU starting on Ist January 1999 and, barring some fundamental and unforeseen change in economic circumstances, making a decision, this parliament, to join is not realistic;

    but in order to give ourselves a genuine choice in the future, it is essential that the Government and business prepare intensively during this Parliament, so that Britain will be in a position to join a single currency, should we wish to, early in the next Parliament.

    On Europe, Madam Speaker, the time of indecision is over. The period for practical preparation has begun. Today we begin to build a new consensus – modern and outward looking – for a country that throughout its history has looked outward to the world.

    We are the first British government to declare for the principle of monetary union. The first to state that there is no over-riding constitutional bar to membership. The first to make clear and unambiguous economic benefit to the country the decisive test. And the first to offer its strong and constructive support to our European partners to create more employment and more prosperity.

    The policy I have outlined will bring stability to business, direction to our economy, and long term purpose to our country. It is the right policy for Britain in Europe. More important it is the right policy for the future of Britain and I commend it to the House.