Tag: Speeches

  • Theresa May – 2008 Conservative Party Conference Speech

    theresamay

    Thank you Michael for that kind introduction and also for your excellent session earlier today. It’s good to know that our education policy is in such good hands.

    And thank you to Hillary and to Elizabeth Burton Phillips for your presentations. I think you’ll all agree that they really made us think about families today, the pressures they are under and the problems parents have to deal with.

    I would just like to say this about Elizabeth. She is a constituent of mine so I have known her now for some years. I am a patron of her charity Drug Fam. I have heard Elizabeth speak on a number of occasions. Her speeches always get to the heart of the matter because what she says is not theoretical. It’s not some academic work; it’s not the product of bureaucrats in Whitehall. What she says is real life. That’s what happened to her and her family and it is happening to too many families up and down this country.

    Elizabeth has set down her story in her book, ‘Mum Can You Lend Me Twenty Quid?’ She went through a personal tragedy. What has come out of it is a charity helping many thousands of other families to deal with drugs and we hope avert the tragedy that befell Elizabeth’s family.

    Her visit to the Four Dwellings High School and the work to set up family support on the Welsh House Farm Estate will I hope leave a lasting legacy that will help countless families.

    And we must help them, as Elizabeth is doing, to deal with addiction when they meet it face to face, but we must also do more to take people off drugs and to make sure they don’t get sucked into the downward spiral of drug addiction in the first place. It is ruining too many lives.

    Supporting families has been a long standing principle for us as Conservatives. Families today come in all sorts of shapes and sizes, the problems they face have changed and we must adapt our policies to make that principle work in today’s world.

    Maria spoke about how we would support relationships and families in the home. But that’s not all we need to do. Our aim is to make Britain the most family friendly place to do business. People want to have more scope to manage the balance between their work and home life better. They want to be more in control. To make Britain truly family friendly the workplace has to change. For young people today – Generation Y as they are known – there are no longer the same boundaries between work and home. They expect to be able to vary their hours at work, but they might also do work from home late into the evening. Technology makes this easy. Today’s generation demand more flexibility in how they work and in the workplace.

    But it’s more than that. Flexible working isn’t some woolly liberal politically correct policy thought up by a focus group. For many, flexibility is an economic necessity. Many families need that extra second income to pay the mortgage and Brown’s stealth taxes. And how many older people find that their pension won’t support them in the way they expected so they have to carry on working long beyond when they had planned to retire. They look for flexible working too. And if we are serious, as Chris Grayling said, about getting more people off benefits and into work then we must accept that for some, say with certain long term health conditions, that’s only possible with flexible working.

    So it’s time to explode the myths about flexible working.

    First the myth that flexible working means part time work and part time work means part time commitment. Flexible working covers a wide range of work. It includes part time but it also covers job sharing, using flexible hours, working from home and all sorts of other arrangements. And by the way, people who work part time aren’t giving part time commitment. You often find that part time workers with flexible working arrangements or job sharers put far more into the job than someone working so called normal hours.

    The second myth is that flexible working is only for mothers. Yes, flexible working can benefit women with children but it also benefits those caring for older relatives. It helps the father separated from his children who needs some flexibility so he can have regular access to them. It enables people with disabilities to access a wider range of jobs.

    And the final myth we must explode is that flexible working is only ever costly and bad for business. That flies in the face of the facts. Studies have shown that those employers who use flexible working benefit from better retention, better productivity and a happier workforce.

    In these difficult times, businesses need the best people for the job and across the country companies who recognise this are rolling out better working practices improving choice, promoting fairness and increasing profitability.

    There doesn’t have to be a conflict between helping business and helping people.

    We need a revolution in the workplace, accepting that its not just mothers who want to spend more time with their children but fathers too. That’s why at the Party’s Spring Forum George Osborne and I announced our policy of flexible parental leave. Under these plans, parents will have 52 weeks of leave on the birth of a child which they will be able to divide between them as they see fit. So if fathers want to take more of a role they can, if mothers feel the need to return to work earlier they can. If both parents want sometime at home together at the birth of their child, helping each other out in those first few weeks then they can. What matters is that they have the choice.

    Likewise with our proposal to extend the right to request flexible working to all parents with children under the age of 18. Having children is one of the most important and challenging roles in an adult’s life and we want to support parents in that role. And that means both parents, not just mothers. More and more fathers want to take an active part in bringing up their children and so our flexible working policy is a step to help them achieve that.

    If the culture of the modern workplace could adapt to accommodate the culture of the modern life then I believe we could all benefit. And choice would be at the heart of those changes. A choice to be a stay at home mum – or dad. The choice to look after your elderly parents or volunteer for a few hours a week. The choice to manage your business in the best way that suits you, your clients and your staff.

    But there is more to be done to improve the workplace particularly for women. We’ve still got to address the shameful pay divide between men and women in this country. That’s why earlier this month I launched a campaign to tackle the pay gap. It’s on facebook – Theresa May for Equal Pay. If you agree then sign up to my group. We aim to introduce a bill in December that would strengthen the law against discrimination on pay and we’re calling for cross party support. Because this issue isn’t about party political point scoring. It should cross party lines. This is about treating women fairly.,.

    How we can hope to raise the low levels of aspiration amongst young women in this country if they think they won’t get treated fairly when they get to the work place? We need to encourage young women to go down the path of work and career rather than the path of benefits and dependency. And that means being positive about the role women play in business, in politics, in the public sector. Let’s stop talking about the problems women face and start talking about the enormous benefits women bring to business and politics.

    The demands of modern life are changing and the challenges we face are changing too.

    As Conservatives, we want to remove the barriers to achievement for everyone. We want to give people the choice to live their lives the way that suits them best.

    Labour talk about being family friendly.

    They boast about their achievements. They claim they are the only party that understands women today.

    But we know better.

    We know it is the Conservative Party that has led the debate on flexible working.

    It is the Conservative Party that is leading the campaign on equal pay; and it is the Conservative Party that has taken up the challenge and will bring in flexible parental leave.

    Because only the Conservatives know the importance of personal choice and only the Conservatives are willing to propose the new policies that take us forward in the 21st century, confident in the decisions made by women and families and willing to trust the people.

  • Theresa May – 2004 Speech to Guild of Business Travel Agents

    theresamay

    Below is the text of the speech made by Theresa May to the Guild of Business Travel Agents on 20th January 2004.

    Mr Chairman, I am honoured that the Guild of Business Travel Agents has invited me to speak at this lunch. Members of this Guild play an important role in our economy – and a role that is very often forgotten. When the term travel agent is mentioned most people think only of tourism and leisure travel forgetting that business travel plays a key role in underpinning our economy. For a trading nation like ours business travel is an essential aspect of business life.

    With some 75% of corporate travel spend going to members of this Guild you do indeed have a central role to play and as such the standards of your industry are very important. I know from my own past experience in the City where I did quite a lot of business travel the importance of being able to rely absolutely on the travel arrangements made. And I was pleased to learn that this Guild certifies the only professional qualifications in the industry.

    Members of this Guild along with others in the travel sector have been at the forefront of an often unremarked but indeed remarkable revolution over the last fifty years, the revolution in people’s freedom to travel.

    As a result of this revolution people have more choice than ever before over where they live, spend their leisure time and holidays and where they conduct their business. As an example of the choices people make today which would have been unheard of in the past, I met a constituent on Saturday who lived in Maidenhead but who had worked for a number of years in Bradford. He flew to and from Bradford every week. Proximity to Heathrow was doubtless a benefit as it indeed is to many of my constituents.

    This element of choice is important not only in opening up opportunities for people, but also in giving them the freedom of more control over their lives and of offering enhanced economic opportunities. But it is this very element of choice that is too often the first casualty when governments decide to interfere.

    Your job is to make sure that wherever people live and work and wherever they want to do business they are able to travel to where they need to be in a way that is cost-effective and fits their individual circumstances. You want the transport system that meets people’s needs. Yet too often government policy is trying to do the opposite. It tries to fit people to the transport system rather than the other way round. Government wants to decide how people should travel and change their behaviour where necessary, rather than asking what people need and trying to deliver accordingly.

    Of course there are areas where Government needs to play a role and there are always balances to be struck. For example, I believe that more people should be able to travel by air in the future. I also believe that a balance needs to be struck between further growth in opportunities to travel by air and the need to preserve the quality of our environment. But the need to strike a balance in this and other cases does not mean that government of whatever hue should be given carte blanche for centralisation and political interference.

    If I may be allowed to spend a moment or two musing on the wider aspects of the industry, as living standards have risen, people have chosen to spend more of their time and money on travel. And the travel revolution has broadened the horizons of us all. While this is true of all forms of travel it is perhaps most true of air travel. In the last half-century air travel has been transformed from a luxury available to a few to a service available to all. In 1952 air travel accounted for just 0.1% of all travel, today it is almost 8%. Today 90% of us have flown at least once in our lives and half of us took a flight in 2001 alone.

    This revolution has also made an enormous contribution to our economy. It has been estimated that aviation generates and supports more than half a million jobs in the UK. But as members of the Guild will know, the economic benefits of air travel are also indirect. The benefits of air travel to tourism which is one of the two biggest contributors to Britain’s invisible earnings might be obvious, but the other major contributor to our invisible earnings is the financial services sector which also benefits from air travel.

    That travel is something people enjoy and is vital to our economy may seem obvious. Yet, substitute the word ‘transport’ for ‘travel’ and a very different picture comes to mind. The word transport conjures up images of traffic jams, delays and cancellations. The very word ‘transport’ suggests that rather than being a matter of personal choice and pleasure and in providing economic opportunities, travel is actually nothing more than a logistical chore.

    The current government’s ’10 year plan for transport’, with its targets for almost every aspect of travel, was the logical outcome of such an approach. Evidence of the government’s failure confronts us on a daily basis, yet the Government still puts much effort into trying to suppress it. Last week, it blocked the publication of a report by the Strategic Rail Authority. A leaked copy catalogued, in depressing detail, the true state of our rail network.

    The Commission for Integrated Transport, the very body the Government set up to further its 10 year plan for transport, has been stripped of its power to monitor progress after making it clear that the government was failing to deliver.

    Air travel has generally provided a refreshing contrast to the growing problems that beset surface transport. This is largely because it has had the freedom to respond to increases in consumer demand that government direction has denied elsewhere. In fact, air travel has shown the fastest growth of any type of travel in recent years with dramatic reductions in fares and charges. These improvements have been the result of increased competition made possible by liberalisation of the European air market.

    The London to Glasgow route is a good illustration of the impact of these changes. The advent of low-cost operators meant that the number of carriers on this route doubled between 1995 and 2001 and the total capacity on the route has increased by around 80%. In fact, competition has become so intense that some passengers find they pay more in airport charges and taxes than they do for their ticket.

    That air travel has been so successful undermines the fallacy behind Labour’s policy that transport must be subject to planning and centralisation. Indeed, one could not think of a more complex and decentralised form of travel than air travel. Many different carriers compete for passengers. Services are provided by an array of travel agents, airport operators, national air traffic systems and others. Even though the amount of people handled by British airports almost doubled between 1990 and 2000, there was no related increase in accidents and air travel remains by far the safest way to travel.

    I believe there are important lessons from the experience of air travel that should be applied elsewhere, but recent actions suggest that the long period of certainty and stability that has resulted is now under threat.

    The publication of the Aviation White Paper in December was due to give a long-term coherent view of the development of air transport in the UK. I fear that far from doing that it has introduced yet more uncertainty.

    As you know the first new runway in the South East is to be at Stansted. Most of the growth at Stansted has been in the kind of low-cost flights that have done so much in recent years to increase people’s opportunity to travel. Yet a new runway at Stansted will mean higher charges, which may drive away these low-cost operators. Indeed, it is not clear that a new runway at Stansted is commercially viable.

    At the same time we are told that Heathrow may also get another runway, but not yet. A new runway at Heathrow depends on action to reduce emissions to meet EU standards. That requires action on road traffic as well as in the air. Yet the Government has given no indication of whether it is going to do anything towards meeting the target. Moreover Stansted will need improvements to rail access and any expansion at Heathrow would if not require then certainly benefit from improved rail access certainly to the west and south. Here again Government has given no indication of any firm plans to do anything – and the Strategic Rail Authority doesn’t have the money to make the improvements needed. The airport operator is being asked to provide funding – but there undoubtedly will be a limit to the extent to which they are prepared to fund rail improvements that are of more general use. With possible legal challenges on the Government’s proposals there is still much uncertainty about the future.

    Another area where Government is impacting on air travel currently is the whole area of safety. We support the Government’s plans to introduce armed ‘sky marshals’. We must do everything we can to improve security on flights and to reassure passengers. Yet the way the Government chose to announce this move was disappointing and again symptomatic of its bureaucratic and centralist approach.

    Alistair Darling told the House of Commons that Government had announced they were going down this route a year ago. If so why was it that when they made their announcement after Christmas they had not had or completed the necessary discussions with airlines and pilots. They had a year why weren’t the protocols in place? For passengers to feel more secure they need to know that pilots are happy with the scheme.

    The issue of safety is one where Government needs to balance the issues carefully. They have a duty to citizens to provide for their security. But there is of course a need to examine carefully the impact of any new measures and assess their benefits. The passenger flying out for a two week holiday may not mind some extra delay in the name of security. But the business traveller for whom time is usually of the essence may take a different view. It is the business traveller who may well decide to use technology to access their client or supplier rather then flying to meet them if the delay is too great.

    I therefore welcome the moves being made by the Guild to take a more active role in lobbying government, in putting the case for business travel. It is important that Government understands the impact of its decisions not just on air travel but on issues affecting surface travel too.

    The Guild has an important role to play in that and I wish you the best in all that you do in future.

  • Theresa May – 2004 Speech to Conservative Party Spring Conference

    theresamay

    Below is the text of the speech made by Theresa May to the Conservative Party Spring Conference on 6th March 2004.

    What an extraordinary year it has been since we were last here – for you, for me, and for the Conservative Party.

    Now of course we all know that politics can be a rough old ride. And sometimes we even find ourselves asking, “Why do we do it?”

    But then you have days like yesterday. Yesterday, I visited All Saints Junior School in Maidenhead. I sat in with a class of ten-year-old boys and girls. The class was persuasive writing. The childrens’ project had been to write an advert for products they wanted to be invented in the future.

    I heard about the ‘sugar sprouts’ – all the goodness of sprouts – but with a sweet taste! I heard about ‘dinner gum’. A traditional roast dinner in a single bubble gum. And then I heard about the ‘Zippo car’. The Zippo Car would get you to Australia in just 60 seconds.

    Imagine the possibilities! Of course, there had to be a question or two. What would your question have been? I know what mine was – how much would this amazing car cost? A fortune surely? Well not for these children.

    Rather than ask how much it would cost or how many would be available, the first question was – does it pollute? The answer by the way was sadly yes, the Zippo car does pollute – it emits chocolate!

    But the answer does not alter the fact that the most important question was about the environment. These young primary school children already understand what’s really important.

    They truly care about the environment we live in. And they will expect us to tackle their concerns. So there you are. We don’t have to guess what it is that future generations want. We should just ask them. But you can’t just listen to what they want. You have to understand it.

    And that’s the problem with Labour. They listen, but they don’t understand. They don’t know what it would take to improve our environment, sustainably, for all time. Tony Blair ‘proved’ his green credentials by signing up to endless European Environmental directives that he has no idea how to implement.

    That’s why today there are mountains of fridges piled up across the country – because we don’t have the systems to dispose of them. That’s why our towns are scarred by fly tipping and abandoned cars that Labour do nothing about, while our countryside is being blighted by the construction of ten thousand wind turbines.

    Of course, the headline was Labour’s commitment for 10% of Britain’s energy to be from renewable sources. But Labour doesn’t understand that it isn’t helping the environment if you ruin the natural beauty of our countryside in the process. And you see, there’s the problem.

    Labour say they are environmentally friendly, but they don’t know the half of what really makes up our environment.

    It’s the air that we breathe. The land we walk on. The view we look at. The place we live. It’s our quality of life! If you fail to protect, or worse still destroy, parts of it as you improve something else, then you are achieving nothing.

    And we cannot afford to gamble with our future. That’s why we have a right to demand honesty from this Government over GM crops.

    Of course, we know that this Government doesn’t understand our rural way of life either. They know what they think is most important for our countryside – they’re going to ban hunting.

    This is a government that doesn’t know and doesn’t care what matters for our countryside.

    We’ve got to make Tony Blair understand.

    You don’t create a better planet, a better environment, a better countryside just by generating better headlines. Labour’s 20th Century approach to Government – controlling, interfering, narrow-minded, just isn’t working.

    Not on health and education.

    Not on crime.

    Not on the economy.

    Not on our society.

    And certainly not on the environment.

    If we are to deliver the sustainable future for generations to come, we, 21st century conservatives – we will have to find a new way.

    A way to start treating the planet as if we intended to stay. Not as if we were just passing through. And we are working hard to do just that. Not only me, but also my excellent Environment team.

    I would like to say thank you for all the work they do – Caroline Spelman, James Gray and Anne McIntosh on environment.

    John Whittingdale, and Owen Patterson on Agriculture.

    And of course Damian Green, Chris Chope, and Greg Knight on transport.

    We have only been up and running for a matter of months, but already this new team is working hard to tackle these difficult issues.

    Sometimes it’s things that aren’t always sexy or exciting, but just sometimes plain necessary if we are going to put together a credible plan for tackling the challenges we will face in government.

    And it’s not just them, but also our MEPS in the environment and agriculture committees out in Brussels, who are playing such an important part in the Conservative Environment team.

    And finally of course there are our Conservative councillors across the country, who are daily forced to deal with the raft of targets and requirements forced on them by this Government.

    It will be no surprise to anyone in this room to learn that 8 out of the top 10 councils across the country for recycling are Conservative ones. And it should be no surprise to hear the Conservative Party focusing so seriously on the environment.

    After all, it was our leader, Michael Howard, who represented Britain at the landmark Rio Summit back in 1992.

    And we’re going to keep doing it.

    There are issues we must tackle, as a Party and as a country, if we are to secure a better future for the generations to come.

    What we do about GM crops. How we deal with mounting problems of waste. The creation of a roadmap to a sustainable balance of environmental priorities.

    Under the leadership of Michael Howard, we have embarked on the most radical and wide-ranging consultation this Party has ever engaged in on the environment.

    And we want your views too so please get involved today.

    Ladies and Gentlemen, we all know that we are the party of the countryside.

    We must continue to be that.

    But we must demonstrate too that we are the party of the environment.

    Because we can be. And we should be.

    We must capture the imagination and respect of the children like those in All Saints Junior School.

    Young people are the voters of tomorrow, the voters of the future. They live in a world of aspirations and dreams. Our job, as Conservatives, is to work to realise those dreams.

  • Theresa May – 2003 Speech to Conservative Spring Conference

    theresamay

    Below is the text of the speech made by Theresa May at the 2003 Conservative Spring Conference on 15th March 2003.

    Today, we meet in the shadow of great and terrible events.

    The situation currently unfolding in the Gulf dominates all our thoughts.

    British servicemen and women are preparing to risk their lives to disarm Saddam Hussein and to uphold the rule of international law.

    The debt we owe them is immense.

    Let us send them a message today: we’re thinking of you. We back you. We believe in you.

    But while we support what our armed forces are doing, we shouldn’t kid ourselves. There is widespread concern about war. Many people feel the Government’s actions should be opposed and they ask us why we aren’t doing it.

    The reason is because we believe Tony Blair is taking a risk to make the world safer. And as a matter of principle, he deserves support.

    But I know we need to continue to make the case. Leadership isn’t just about embarking on a course and expecting others to follow. It’s also about explaining. It’s about taking people with you. It’s about being open and honest.

    We must set out point-by-point why this conflict is necessary.

    And we owe it to the people of this country to take their concerns seriously and explain why it is right, indeed it is moral, for Britain to act.

    So let’s firstly be clear about what this war is not about.

    This is not about oil and profit.

    If it were we could achieve our aims far easier by striking a trade deal with Saddam Hussein.

    This is not a war against Islam.

    Many Muslims would like nothing more than to see the back of this evil dictator.

    And above all this is emphatically not about American global domination.

    Critics often accuse Americans of being isolationist. Now they accuse them of Imperialism.

    But can anyone really question why – today – Americans are determined to act against those who have shown a willingness to do them harm?

    No. When people ask what this conflict is about, we must be clear and honest.

    This is about forcing Saddam Hussein to comply with international law.

    This is about forcing him to disarm.

    Above all, this is about the safety and security of Britain.

    On September 11th, billions of people around the world saw for the first time the immense destructive power of the new terrorism.

    We now all know, in a way that many didn’t realise before, that there are people and organisations that have no moral limits, who are prepared to butcher totally innocent people, however young, however helpless, just to advance their own fanatical cause.

    The new terrorists are well organised, lavishly funded and highly motivated.

    They are actively seeking terrible new weapons of mass destruction.

    And, let’s not kid ourselves, we are a target.

    Not because of anything we’ve done. But because of who we are.

    The new terrorists of Al-Qaeda are at war with the West because our free societies are everything they hate.

    The question we must ask ourselves is this:

    Should we wait…

    Or should we take action now to stop it happening?

    You only have to ask the question to know the answer.

    The western democracies must have a proactive strategy for identifying and neutralising terrorists.

    And not only those who carry out the atrocities – but those who have the means, the mentality and the motive to help them.

    I believe Saddam Hussein is such a man.

    Any objective observer attempting to identify those who might have the means and the motivation to supply weapons of mass destruction to Al-Qaeda or other similar groups would have his name right at the top of their list.

    He has shown he does not recognise the rule of international law.

    Some people say we have known about his evasion for years. Why act now?

    To them I would say one thing: Remember September 11th.

    ‘Why now’, cannot – and should not – mean not now.

    Resolution 1441 didn’t just ask Iraq to work with the weapons inspectors. It demanded full compliance and active cooperation so there could be no conceivable doubt.

    Since that Resolution was passed, Saddam Hussein has done everything in his power to resist full compliance and delay active co-operation. His time is running out: of that, there can be no conceivable doubt.

    It is time for him to disarm by choice or by force.

    Our policy on Iraq is based above anything else on this country’s national interest.

    And over the past months, we have been fortunate to be led by Iain Duncan Smith who has shown the capacity to look beyond passing newspaper headlines and tackle the big challenges of our time.

    Iain has been warning of the threat from Saddam Hussein since 1995. He has consistently advocated strong international action to force him to disarm.

    After I have finished speaking, Iain will address the international situation. We’re lucky to have as our Leader a man who is not afraid to take a stand of principle on the really big issues.

    At times of crisis like this people expect their politicians to be able to put aside short-term party advantage in the country’s interests.

    But, the problem for most people is why, when major crises pass, do politicians go back to point-scoring rather than working together…

    Bad mouthing rather than supporting others when they know they’re right…

    Mud-slinging when what people want are ideas and solutions.

    Britain is changing. The public have become more discerning. A world in which most people are automatically Labour or Conservative no longer exists.

    We could just accept this as a new fact of life in the 21st Century.

    But I believe this is an opportunity – an opportunity to show people we have solutions to their problems.

    And we must seize the opportunity to build a bridge to the millions of people who feel their voice is simply not being heard.

    People who hope that by paying extra taxes they will get the operation they need when they need it – but fear they will not.

    People who hope their savings will provide them with a secure future – but fear their pension will be worth nothing.

    People who hope their child’s hard work will be rewarded by a university place – but fear they won’t be able to afford it.

    People who hope that their children are safe going out at night – but fear that they are not.

    These are the voiceless millions who hope for a party to speak for them.

    We must be their voice.

    We must be that Party.

    This Government has dashed people’s hopes and played on their fears.

    We must show that we are a credible alternative to this Labour Government.

    That means working together as one party united.

    It means talking the people’s language – living in their world.

    It means showing that we agree with them that everyone should have a fair chance to fulfil their potential.

    It means showing that we care passionately about the things they care about.

    It means being 21st Century Conservatives.

    Conservatives who are open and honest, clear about where we stand, and ready to take the tough decisions necessary to make this country better.

    It means challenging the artificial divisions that have built up in politics in this country and that have so bedevilled our chance to get things right.

    There is no contradiction between helping young criminals off the conveyor belt to crime and putting more police on the streets.

    There is no contradiction between supporting businesses and helping the vulnerable.

    There is no contradiction between a low tax economy and better public services.

    You see, we understand how to improve public services without wasting taxes, because that is what Conservative Councils do.

    Over the past few months, I have seen a great example of the Conservative Party in action at its very best. Our councillors at work.

    They’ve been working hard to provide a fair deal for local people.

    But don’t take my word for it. Look at what the Audit Commission has to say. Conservative councils are the best. They take less of your money but deliver better services than others.

    A real record of success. Conservatives in Government delivering results.

    Our Conservative councillors record helps us show that Conservatives in government can make people’s lives better.

    It will be a great help when it comes to persuading people of our case at the general election.

    But it won’t be enough.

    We have to show in everything that we believe, say and do that we are 21st Century Conservatives.

    Conservatives whose belief in freedom makes them cherish the diversity it brings.

    Conservatives who know the virtue of paying your own way but believe in helping those who can’t.

    Conservatives who believe in their country and recognise that Britain is at its best when it is helping to build a better world.

    The people who have supported this party through thick and thin know these things in their hearts. But this Party has always been at its best when our appeal has extended beyond those who think of themselves as life’s Conservatives.

    When our hopes have matched people’s hopes and we’ve worked together to realise them.

    Helping people from across the spectrum, because the right policies give a fair deal for everyone – regardless of background, income, gender, religion or race.

    The Conservative Party is at its best when at its broadest.

    We must show people now that we have the policies and the commitment to deal with the problems of today.

    Challenges where Conservative values point the way forward.

    Challenges in health.

    The challenge of one million people on waiting lists.

    People waiting for hours in accident and emergency when they would be seen much quicker in other parts of Europe.

    But only Conservatives have the vision to learn from abroad how those values could be better delivered.

    Challenges in Education.

    The challenge of one in four children leaving primary school unable to read, write and count properly.

    30,000 children finishing school without a single GCSE.

    It’s the Conservative belief in standards, discipline and effective teaching methods that points the way out.

    Challenges in law and order.

    The challenge of a crime being committed every five seconds.

    Criminals with only a one in forty chance of being caught.

    It’s the Conservatives who are looking at innovative ways to help young people off the conveyor belt to crime.

    And trusting local people when they say they want more police on their streets.

    In every area of our lives, Conservative values can deliver results.

    That’s why people in today’s Britain should be at home with today’s Conservative Party.

    People who are determined to help the poorest in society, and who believe that penalising the rich for being rich helps no one.

    People who believe they have a duty to pay their taxes, and who believe that the Government owes it to them not to waste their money.

    People who want a successful NHS for everyone, and who believe that people let down by the NHS should be helped to go elsewhere.

    People who hope the best possible schools for their own children, and for everybody else’s.

    People who believe that Britain is a force for good in the world and that we can learn from other countries too.

    That’s what people in 21st Century Britain believe, and what we as 21st Century Conservatives believe.

    Our job now is to build a bridge between us.

    And the careful and sensible way we have been developing our programme over the past 18 months helps us to do just that.

    We have begun to build that bridge.

    We have an ambitious and progressive agenda for government.

    Our country faces huge challenges in the years ahead.

    We must be open, honest and clear.

    Clear about who we are and what we stand for.

    Clear about what we can deliver and what we want to achieve.

    To those people who feel the country is going in the wrong direction…

    To those who feel let down or betrayed…

    To those who feel they are being ignored…

    We say simply ‘join us. Come with us.

    We will be your voice’.

    Together we can build a bridge to a better future.

    Let’s show them we can do it.

  • Sir Nicholas Macpherson – 2014 Speech on the Economy

    Below is the text of the speech made by Sir Nicholas Macpherson, the Permanent Secretary to the Treasury, on 15th January 2014.

    Some years ago, I was asked by a senior colleague whether the Treasury was that most political of institutions, willing to embrace the latest political fad and blow with the wind of the prevailing orthodoxy. Or was it unbending and unchanging, forever wedded to the “Treasury view”, much maligned by Keynes and others from the 1920s to the present day.

    It was a good question. But like many good questions it contained a false dichotomy. The Treasury exists to serve the government of the day: to promote and achieve its objectives in the financial and economic field. In doing so, it needs to understand, interpret and apply the philosophy and agenda of the governing party (or parties). But it will inevitably also bring to the process the experience and insights of the officials who work within it – an understanding of what works and what does not and an appreciation of previous successes and failures in economic policy.

    I entered the Treasury in early 1985, as the recovery was gaining momentum from the recession of the early 1980s, and Nigel Lawson was embarking on a programme of tax reform rarely seen before or since. As I begin my 30th year at the Treasury, I would like to set out some propositions on economic policy, drawing partly on my own experience and partly on the Treasury’s longer history as the nation’s leading economic and financial institution. The propositions partly reflect the age in which we live. And to each of them a greater or lesser ideological spin or emphasis could be applied. But I would like to think they also reflect a certain timelessness. A Treasury view for our time.

    First, a belief in free trade links seamlessly the Treasury of William Gladstone to that of George Osborne. The Treasury has always taken the view that the United Kingdom is a small country with few natural resources. Its prosperity rests on trade. And the fewer the impediments there are to trade, the more the economy will grow and the greater the prosperity of the nation.

    The Treasury has always been opposed to protectionism and mercantilism. From the repeal of the corn laws to the present day, it has tended to favour consumers over producers, supporting a cheap food policy and thus the living standards of the ordinary citizen. But there is a wider reason for the Treasury’s adherence to free trade: a level playing field for trade reduces distortions, enhances competition and weakens special interest groups.

    Historically, the Treasury opposed bilateral trade deals: in the 1890s, the Treasury supported the view that tariff bargains with the likes of Spain and Portugal, promoted by the Foreign Office, were a “commercial sin”. As Chamberlain’s proposals for tariff reform gathered momentum in 1903, my distinguished predecessor Francis Mowatt[1] “was literally in despair … [claiming that] half the cabinet did not appear to understand basic economics.”[2]

    And when that great Chancellor, Philip Snowden, finally resigned from the National Government of Ramsey MacDonald, it was over the policy of Imperial Preference and protectionist tariffs agreed at the Ottawa conference. As he had written to MacDonald the previous winter: “some of us are perturbed about the rapidity with which we are drifting into a full protectionist policy … including food taxes … I cannot go on sacrificing beliefs and principles bit by bit until there are none left.”

    Since the 1930s, trade policy has become more nuanced, not least because of our membership of the European Union, where the UK has had to accept the vagaries of the common agricultural policy in exchange for being able to shape and access the single market. The Treasury has continued to be a strong advocate of free trade within Whitehall, resisting the siren calls for greater mercantilism and protectionism. The abolition of exchange controls in 1979 was one of its greater triumphs. In recent years, the department has used its influence to advance the case for free trade internationally and in Europe, whether through a stronger focus on trade liberalisation or CAP reform or in the debates around commodity price spikes and what to do about them. And Britain has played a critical role in resisting modern forms of protection, in the form of regulation, and in setting out the case for better functioning international markets and the critical importance of trade.

    And just as the Treasury has played a leading role in setting out the implications of Scotland leaving the free trade area that is the United Kingdom, so would I expect it to play a critical role in setting out the economic implications of the options of staying in or leaving the EU, should there be a referendum on our membership in the next Parliament.

    My second proposition is really the flip-side of the first, and it is that markets generally work. This may appear a brave proposition following the worst financial crisis in eighty years. And I am happy to acknowledge that there is a legitimate role for the state to step in to correct market failure. The challenge for the Treasury of course is to be clear where intervention will change things for the better.

    Now is not the time to give a lecture in classical economics.

    But efficient product markets create the competitive pressures to help keep prices down, encourage firms to innovate and to minimise their costs of production – combining factor inputs in the form of labour, capital and land in the most efficient way.

    Well functioning capital markets ensure that firms have access to the capital they need, enabling them to finance investment and to expand operations to meet demand. They enable shareholders to place incentives on firms to maximise the efficiency of their operations, and people to maximise their productive potential by borrowing against their future earnings to pay for the acquisition of skills and training.

    Well functioning labour markets are also vital for generating growth. Increased labour supply allows employment to rise to meet the demands of a growing economy for increased output. The more flexible the labour market is, the more easily the economy is able to adjust rapidly to take advantage of new opportunities. And well functioning labour markets reward workers according to their performance and skills.

    In short “fair and efficient product, capital and labour markets provide the best means of ensuring that as many of the economy’s resources as possible are available to generate economic growth and well being”.[3]

    Most change in recent decades has been in the direction of making markets work better. If I compare the market for telecommunications now with when I first moved to London in 1981 – when I had to wait several months to get a telephone installed – it really is a different world. Enhancing competition in other regulated sectors – for example, rail and energy – has posed a greater challenge. However, even in these sectors the extent of competition is significantly greater than it was thirty years ago.

    But perhaps the best example of greater efficiency is the labour market. When I joined the Treasury the alternation between Incomes Policy and “free collective bargaining” was firmly embedded in the department’s consciousness. It did not seem to matter which policy was in place: at the end of each cycle, the equilibrium rate of unemployment was higher. The trades union reforms of the 1980s, the move to more active labour market measures in the 1990s, as well as wider structural changes to the composition of the economy, have changed all that. Moreover, there is greater awareness of work incentives at the lower end of the earnings distribution. Over the last fifteen years, the increase in the personal allowance, national insurance changes and the introduction of tax credits and the national minimum wage have all played their part in making work more attractive than welfare. The UK now has one of the most dynamic labour markets in the developed world, reflected in a transformation in the relationship between output and employment. Employment has held up much better in the recent downturn than it did in the 1980s and 1990s.

    For me, the lesson of the financial crisis is not that we had too much competition but that we did not have enough. For example, the lack of a suitable bank resolution regime led to the “too big to fail problem”. Barriers to entry led to oligopolistic practices, not least the “LIBOR” scandal and a suboptimal approach to remuneration, itself compounded by a lack of shareholder pressure. And market failures and a lack of competition in the provision of individual current accounts and SME lending have led to a lack of effective consumer pressure. Throw in government failure – the collective underestimation of the build up of risk in the financial system by the Bank of England, FSA and Treasury and the inability of the authorities to work cooperatively to address the crisis as it began to emerge in 2007 – and it is easy to see with the benefit of hind-sight how the crisis came about.

    My third proposition relates to an abiding Treasury obsession: the provision of sound money. Price stability enhances citizens’ ability to plan their lives, facilitating basic economic decisions around whether to consume now or to consume later via saving. It enables people to plan their retirement with a degree of certainty. It makes it easier for firms to plan whether to expand or contract, to invest or to save. And at a macro level, it minimises the risk of devaluation of the currency.

    It may be that I was excessively influenced by my late teenage years. It is certainly etched in my memory that prices rose 16 per cent in 1974, 24 per cent in 1975, 16 1/2 per cent in 1976 and 16 per cent in 1977. For me the provision of price stability is tantamount to a moral issue; it goes to the heart of the fundamental duties of the state. And it is for this reason I disagree with those economists who have argued in recent years that the authorities should seek to encourage consumption by generating excess inflation. For much of the post war period price stability has proved remarkably elusive. I have seen a number of anti-inflation regimes come and go. First, incomes policy. Then monetary targets. Then shadowing the Deutsche Mark informally in the late 1980s and then formally through membership of the exchange rate mechanism of the European monetary system. Each regime had its advantages and arguably represented an improvement on the one before. But each turned out to have its flaw. The relationship between monetary aggregates and inflation broke down the moment the Treasury targeted them (what came to be known as Goodhart’s law). Exchange rate targeting, even when fully supported by the Prime Minister, ultimately had interest rate consequences which undermined the credibility of a policy designed to improve credibility. An unwillingness of the authorities to contemplate realignment within the ERM added to the problem. And the rapid growth of international capital and foreign exchange markets meant that interventions which still just about worked in the 1950s and 1960s became increasingly ineffective, meaning that exchange rate targeting became impossible without much greater economic and political integration.[4]

    In the end, the Treasury hit upon a regime which would deliver price stability through inflation targeting. A regime which was developed almost on the hoof in response to Black Wednesday has proved remarkably durable: first, through the monthly monetary meetings chaired by Norman Lamont, Ken Clarke and Gordon Brown, and then through the creation of the Monetary Policy Committee under operational independence of the Bank of England.

    Of course, one of the lessons of the financial crisis is that price stability on its own will not deliver stability in output. With the benefit of hindsight a greater focus on credit might have prevented the build up of risk in the system before 2007: the creation of the Financial Policy Committee at the Bank of England with new macro-prudential tools should certainly make the macroeconomic framework more robust in future.

    But looking back to the last decade, I think senior Treasury officials – myself included – became mesmerised by the length of the upswing – a record 66 quarters of unbroken growth – and overestimated the power of macroeconomic policy to reduce the amplitude of the trade cycle. As Sir Steve Robson has argued there was “a failure of imagination”[5].

    That takes me to my fourth proposition, which is that there are limits to what the state can do to regulate demand. The fact is the United Kingdom is a very open economy. And Sterling long ago stopped having the reserve status now enjoyed by the US dollar. If the economy deviates from trend, the authorities should of course act and they do. But a degree of realism is necessary: the British economy is unlikely to grow rapidly for a sustained period if its main trading partners (the US and EU) do not.

    Under successive governments, the Treasury has tended to see monetary policy as the first port of call when it comes to demand. This is because monetary policy is set monthly and can respond quickly, as demonstrated in the financial crisis when the base rate was cut by 475 basis points over the course of a year followed by a programme of quantitative easing worth some 25 per cent of national income.

    Monetary policy’s effectiveness has been much enhanced when buttressed by interventions to address credit conditions, whether through the credit guarantee scheme, or more significantly the funding for lending scheme. This reinforces another conclusion, drawn from my time at the Treasury, which is that you can become too hung up on “money” when it is “credit” which matters.

    That does not mean the Treasury denies a role for fiscal policy. Successive governments have acknowledged a role for the “automatic stabilisers” – those tax receipts and areas of expenditure, primarily social security, which tend to vary with the economic cycle. In the late 1990s, one of “the key objectives for fiscal policy [was] to allow the automatic stabilisers to play their role in smoothing the path of the economy”[6]. And more recently, the current Chancellor, George Osborne, has told the Treasury Committee: “by not chasing the debt target we have allowed the automatic stabilisers to operate and that is a sensible economic decision, in my view. That supports the economy in that sense, during a cyclical downturn.”[7] And I would emphasise that the automatic stabilisers in the UK have a greater impact than in many advanced economies: the OECD estimates that their impact is over a third greater in the UK than in the United States.

    And so fiscal policy can be effective. But in setting it, I would highlight two points.

    First, as with many other economic variables, it is important to take into account the stock of debt as well as the flow of borrowing. The last government recognised this by setting a debt rule of 40 per cent of GDP; the current one by seeking to get debt on a downward path. Capital markets may be more open than they used to be and so at the margin an increased public sector deficit may be less likely to crowd out private sector borrowing and investment. And it is a long time since the UK experienced a ‘gilts strike’. But in my view there will always be inflection points where a further increase in borrowing will result in a much bigger increase in funding costs as a number of Eurozone countries have found to their cost. Ex ante it is difficult to know where these inflection points are, which makes the case for erring on the side of caution.

    And secondly the Treasury has tended to be sceptical about the efficacy of “fiscal fine tuning”. It is all too aware of the practical obstacles to switching fiscal demand on and off. The mythical “shovel ready” infrastructure project is precisely that – a myth. The lead times in getting public investment up and running are long and variable. Increases in current spending are even more difficult to switch on and off, not least because they involve increases either in public sector employment or in entitlements which are notoriously difficult to reverse. And although some taxes can be changed through the flick of the “regulator” switch, the vast majority have a longer lead time. For example, it can take over six months to implement a 1 per cent change in the rate of national insurance. There is also an economic cost to using fiscal programmes as a regulator of demand: investment projects generally provide a higher return if planned over the medium term as part of a wider infrastructure programme. There is at least a theoretical risk that economic agents see through temporary measures anticipating the future tax increases or cuts in spending needed to reverse them: so called Ricardian Equivalence. And there is a tendency towards asymmetry: democratically elected governments find it easier to loosen policy than to tighten it, just as they did with monetary policy when they were responsible for it. All of this is a long way of saying that fiscal policy is a blunt instrument, and if used actively it is better to use it to support monetary policy from a position of strength, when public debt is low or non-existent.

    In this respect, Treasury orthodoxy has come a long way since the Treasury view of the 1920s. But it has also moved on from the high water mark of post war Keynesian orthodoxy when Sir Edward Bridges could say: “The [Annual] Budget is second to none in importance, since by its influence on the flow of income it can be used both to sustain a high level of employment and keep total demand within the limits of total supply”.[8]

    Just as the modern Treasury never embraced mechanistic monetarism, so has it never been comfortable with naïve Keynesianism.

    That takes me to my fifth proposition which is that governments in the United Kingdom find it difficult to raise revenues beyond a certain point. This is not a value judgement about the size of the state, on which the official Treasury does not have an opinion. It is purely an empirical point. Over my working life I have seen all sorts of tax regimes. When I joined the Treasury, the top rate of tax was 60 per cent. Now it is 45 per cent. The basic rate was 30 per cent. Now it is 20 per cent. The combined rates of employer and employee national insurance contributions has risen from 19.45 per cent to 25.8 per cent. The main VAT rate was 15 per cent; now it is 20 per cent. I have seen new taxes introduced; old ones abolished. Reliefs and allowances have come and gone.

    But over that period the share of national income accounted for by taxes and national insurance contributions has remained stubbornly stable: 36.4 per cent in 1985-86 and 34.9 per cent in 2012-13. Its lack of variation is particularly remarkable. Never higher than the 36.4 per cent it was in my first year at the Treasury, and never lower than the 31.8 per cent it reached in 1993-94. Perversely, over the last decade when we have witnessed the biggest economic and financial crisis in generations, the tax take has been more stable than ever: with a low of 33.9 per cent in 2002-03 and a high of 35.6 per cent in 2006-07. (Of course, there is more to the receipts side of the public finances than tax and NICs – interest and dividend receipts account for a further 2 per cent of GDP and historically have been much more variable, accounting for 6 per cent of GDP in 1985-86. But on the face of it they are in secular decline.)

    Now, there are all sorts of explanations for the stability of the tax take. It may simply reflect public choice, with taxpayer resistance setting in above a certain point. It may reflect arbitrage domestically between taxes and internationally between tax jurisdictions. It may reflect diminishing returns, in terms of the effectiveness of the Inland Revenue and Customs and Excise, as was, HMRC, as is. It may just be coincidence.

    I don’t want to endow the tax take with mystical significance. And certainly other countries have managed to sustain much higher tax takes than the UK, though they tend to be smaller and more cohesive like Denmark.

    But to understand the public finances, you need to understand how difficult it is to sustain receipts. Historically, the Treasury tended to overforecast revenue and the OBR is only doing a little better. With growth now accelerating, we are likely to see more occasions where receipts surprise on the upside but, unless we discover the holy grail of locking in tax receipts for good, my guess is that we will be running hard to stand still for many years to come.

    That takes to me to my next proposition which is that spending control matters. I covered this issue at length in last year’s lecture and so I will spare you repetition. Suffice it to say, that in a world of constrained receipts, the quality of public expenditure matters as much as the quantity, which is why since the Gershon Review in 2004 successive governments have placed so much emphasis on efficiency and productivity. More recently, the Review of Financial Management carried out by Richard Douglas and Treasury Second Permanent Secretary, Sharon White, will help ensure we can “maximise the value secured for every pound we spend”[9].

    My seventh proposition, the importance of the supply side, is a long standing Treasury obsession, and not surprisingly, if you take the classical economist’s view that in the long run the nation’s income is determined by the supply of labour and capital and the productivity of each. However, in the modern era it is an area in which the Treasury has played an increasing role. The senior structure of the department itself recognises this with John Kingman, Second Permanent Secretary, heading up the Economics Ministry function.

    I have already mentioned the importance of the labour market and competition – the two areas where probably the biggest achievements of supply-side policy have been made in recent decades. But the modern Treasury also sees itself as having a critical role in terms of encouraging enterprise and entrepreneurialism, for example through changes to the corporate tax system. The Treasury has also prioritised innovation – reflected in the priority attached to science spending over the last decade, and new reliefs to support research and development.

    And it has also sought to support interventions to improve the skills base of the country – generally, by seeking to encourage policies which promote choice, encourage access and improve functioning of markets. Looking back over thirty years, I would not want to exaggerate the Treasury’s influence – education has tended to be dominated by the Department of Education, under various guises, and by the professionals. However, the Treasury’s influence has perhaps been greatest in relation to changes in funding of higher education, an area where the UK still has a comparative advantage. The Treasury may no longer directly fund the universities, as it did up until the early 1960s, but it can still change the rules of engagement: for example, the Chancellor’s recent removal on the cap on student numbers.

    But perhaps the supply side area where there has been the greatest change in attitude during my time at the Treasury is investment in the nation’s infrastructure. I would highlight a number of changes. First, the separation of the capital and current budgets, and the decision of successive governments to target the current budget. Secondly, persistent Treasury pressure to free up the planning process. A further change has been the decision in the 2010 and 2013 spending reviews to allocate a growing proportion of capital spending according to the economic return of individual projects. And finally there has been the institutional change of setting up Infrastructure UK in the Treasury. IUK’s role in drawing up the National Infrastructure Plan, supporting projects through guarantees and advising departments on individual projects has begun to have a real impact on the delivery of new infrastructure.

    That brings me to my next proposition which is that institutions matter. The granting of operational independence to the Bank of England has done much to enhance the credibility of macro-economic policy. The Debt Management Office is much acclaimed internationally and has sold £1.35 trillion of debt since it came into existence. The independent UK Statistics Authority has enhanced the credibility of economic statistics, while the independent Office of Budget Responsibility has improved the quality of economic and fiscal projections. All these changes have strengthened the macroeconomic policy framework and therefore the Treasury. Thus, the Bank of England’s operational independence both over monetary and macro-prudential policy has enabled the Treasury to concentrate on its ‘principal role’, whether in setting the monetary policy remit, for example through the publication of the new monetary policy framework at last year’s Budget, or substantive changes to taxes and spending. This has been much on my mind in recent weeks. In previous times, with an impending date with the electorate, all the pressure from Number 10 and even Number 11 would have been to come up with reasons why underlying growth was higher and thus the deficit lower, the better to justify a letting up on consolidation.

    My penultimate proposition is that you need rules but you should never become fixated by them. Over the last thirty years, I have seen a number of monetary and fiscal rules come and go. All have been well intentioned, and based on observed relationships between one economic variable and another. Historically, the Treasury has tended to become mesmerised by the framework it has created, whether the Gold Standard or monetary targets or more recently the “Golden Rule”. Of course, rules are there to be observed and targets are there to be hit. But there is also a risk that economic policy makers become so fixated by the intricacies of targetry, that they cease to see the woods for the trees. Treasury officials should never become evangelists or missionaries; they should always retain a healthy scepticism, the better to see when a policy framework is producing perverse results. That is why it is important to focus on the substance. Is the deficit too high or too low? Is it falling at a credible speed? Are prices broadly stable? That is not to deny a role for economic concepts such as cyclical adjustment. Quite rightly, successive governments have tried to incorporate the cycle in the setting of policy. But ultimately economic policy will be judged by real world results rather than statistical or economic constructs. This is one reason why I subscribe to a Gladstonean[10] way of measuring economic activity: the receipts which come into the Treasury day by day do not lie.

    My tenth and final proposition is that the Treasury is only as effective as the people within it (or, as Lord Bridges somewhat archaically put it, “in the end men matter more than measures”[11]). The financial crisis placed a high premium on expertise and experience. And, although Treasury staff did a great job, after a faltering start with Northern Rock, the crisis has led us to review how we recruit and retain talent. The Treasury continues to attract very high quality recruits. The last graduate recruitment attracted over 1000 applicants for some 40 posts. But, as Sharon White’s review of the Treasury’s management of the financial crisis made clear, we need to be better at developing and then retaining the professional expertise needed to wrestle with challenging issues, for example around tax, financial services and corporate finance; and also economics where Dave Ramsden, the Chief Economic Adviser, has built up a much stronger macroeconomics function than was in place in 2007.

    We have sought to place greater emphasis on bringing in expertise at senior levels: I would highlight the recruitment of Charles Roxburgh from McKinseys, and Indra Morris from Accenture. But we can also attract the best from Whitehall. The Treasury is not a monolithic institution. There is an extraordinary level of debate which has always gone on in the Treasury and I hope always will do – there is a long tradition, unusual in bureaucratic institutions, which sees it as healthy to expose debate between officials, irrespective of seniority, in front of Ministers. Staff surveys indicate that officials feel more “safe to challenge the way things are done in the Treasury” than in any other department in Whitehall – a really important barrier to group think. Indeed, the proportion of staff answering positively to this question is a full 10 percentage points higher than the next most positive department, the Department of Energy and Climate Change.

    What sort of qualities do we look for in Treasury recruits? A former permanent secretary put it to me that “you need a first rate mind supplement by a certain toughness”. A former special adviser, now a front bench politician, once said to me that what he was looking for in an official was “judgement”. For my part, I look for a healthy scepticism – but never cynicism – which will challenge anything and everything, while also demonstrating creativity – an ability to come up with solutions on the basis of limited information in conditions of uncertainty. I would also add that you need to handle and manage people, and above all be patient. If you are an official and you have a good idea, you need to be able to sell it. That’s partly about the age old art of persuasion. But it’s also about knowing when to deploy the idea, and grabbing opportunities when they arise.

    Peter Hennessy once put it to me that the lot of the Treasury official is to deal with disappointment. As he put it, consolidation and recovery in the post war period has been “routinely punctuated by the greatest orgy”. I am an optimist. Disaster is not inevitable. Treasury officials should always be prepared for the worst. But, drawing on some of the propositions I have set out this evening, they should also hope for the best.

     

    Footnotes

    [1] Mowatt’s other claim to fame is that his step son was that extraordinary poet Count Stenbock described by Yeats as “scholar, connoisseur, drunkard, poet, pervert, most charming of men”. Stenbock was mentally ill, his condition not helped by his addiction to opium and alcohol. In 1895 he allegedly attacked Mowatt with a poker: Stenbock died in the ensuing struggle.

    [2] Free Trade Nation, Frank Trentmann (2008) p86

    [3] Productivity in the UK: the evidence and the government’s approach (HM Treasury, 2000).

    [4] See also Dave Ramsden on “The Euro: 10th anniversary of the five economic tests” (MEG98)

    [5] BBC, Great Offices of State, Episode 3.

    [6] Pre-Budget Report, November 2000: Building Long term prosperity for all, p18

    [7] Oral evidence to Treasury Committee, 13 December 2012

    [8] Treasury Control (the Stamp Memorial Lecture) 1950

    [9] Chief Secretary’s foreword to the Financial Management Review, December 2013

    [10] “The best mode of making an estimate of the rate of increase in the wealth of the country is to resort to the income tax. No other criterion is comparable to it, for, though it may not be an exact index of the truth in this matter, yet, as between any one period and another, I believe it is an index on which we may safely rely” Mr Gladstone’s Budget Speech, 10 February 1860

    [11] The Treasury, The Rt Hon Lord Bridges, 1964

  • Sir Nicholas Macpherson – 2013 Speech on the Origins of Treasury Control

    Below is the text of a speech made by the Permanent Secretary to the Treasury, Sir Nicholas Macpherson, on 16th January 2013 in London.

    Some 60 years ago, Sir Edward (later Lord) Bridges gave the Stamp Memorial lecture, in which he described the many ways in which the Treasury had changed since the end of the First World War.  He chose Treasury Control as the lecture’s title.

    Tonight, I plan to roam a little more widely and to consider the origins of Treasury control itself.  But, as a preface to my lecture, I cannot put it any better than Bridges himself:

    To those of you who may regard this as an arid prospect, I would say … that having spent nearly all my working life in this business, I find in it today more of interest, indeed at times of excitement, than I did as an apprentice thirty years ago.

    The rise of the Treasury

    The Treasury’s origins lie back in the mists of time.  It is younger than the Royal Mint but older than any other department.  The Treasury’s role in the Middle Ages almost certainly merits a separate lecture.  I do not propose to go into it tonight.

    Instead, I shall confine myself to the modern era: the period since the post of Lord High Treasurer first went into Commission, four hundred years ago last June.  Tonight, I want to examine how the Treasury became the dominant institution within Whitehall; to what it owes its power; and why it is more than just a common or garden Finance Ministry on the continental model.

    I would attribute the rise of the Treasury to three factors, which played themselves out in the two hundred year period from the Civil War to the rise of Gladstone:

    – war as a spur to financial innovation;

    – the Treasury’s inextricable links to Parliament;

    – and its ability always to be just ahead of the rest of Whitehall in terms of quality of administration.

    I will then touch on how Treasury control evolved in the 20th century, and finish with some contemporary observations.

    First, war.

    The Second Dutch war of 1667 perhaps did more to strengthen the Treasury than any other.  The war itself was a disaster, culminating in the Dutch raid on the Medway, during which some fifteen English ships were destroyed, with the flagship HMS Royal Charles being captured without a shot being fired and towed back to Holland as a trophy.  But above all it was a triumph of Dutch finance and administration.  This was a country whose population was a quarter of Great Britain’s, but which managed to deploy more money to finance the war.

    Charles II realised it was time to reform the Treasury.  Out went the Lord High Treasurer, the Earl of Southampton.  In came, a new Treasury Commission.  The King had been much influenced in exile by the administration by committee he had seen in Holland and France.

    Charles II faced down his Lord Chancellor, Lord Clarendon, in insisting that “he would choose such persons, whether Privy Counsellors or not, who might have nothing else to do, and were rough and ill natured men, not to be moved with civilities or importunities in the payment of money”.  Lord Ashley as Chancellor of the Exchequer had a good understanding of finance; Sir Thomas Clifford had been a Commissioner of the Navy and Sir John Duncombe one of the Ordnance Commissioners, while Sir George Downing – the Secretary – was a skilled financier, as well as a property developer.

    The new Commission was quick to assert its authority over the Privy Council and Secretaries of State.  Within a week of their appointment, they demanded to be informed of every petition which would involve a charge on the revenue, and the right to give their opinion on the petition itself and the state of the revenues as a whole.  The King agreed.  Eight months later, when one of the Secretaries of State had presented a warrant for hay for the deer in New Park without the Treasury’s knowledge, the Commissioners demanded yet more power.  As a result, all money warrants for the Navy, Household, Guards and Garrisons were now to be countersigned by the Treasury Lords, and Warrants for the regulation of the revenue were to be passed by the Treasury.  Moreover, as the Order in Council of January 1668 made clear, “no free gifts or pensions might be granted until the petitioner had set forth the value of the thing sued for, and the Treasury Commissioners have reported thereon”.

    The strengthening of the Treasury over the next forty years was reflected in the relative ease with which it funded the War of the Spanish Succession, the most expensive war Great Britain had fought to date and which more than doubled the national debt.  The rapid development of the City of London, combined with the setting up of the Bank of England with the First Lord’s support, ensured a much more favourable funding environment.  Indeed, Marlborough’s victories could be funded on the back of relatively benign interest rates.  Not all were happy: Swift’s History of the Last Four Years of the Queen contained forceful condemnation of Godolphin and the whole system of “Dutch finance” – that is “the pernicious counsels of borrowing money upon publick funds of interest”.  Unfortunately, the Treasury blew some of its hard won credibility by a cunning plan to convert floating government debt into stock in a chartered trading company – the South Sea Company.

    The Napoleonic Wars represented a further ratcheting up in the role of the state increasing the share of national income accounted for by public spending temporarily from 12 per cent to 23 per cent.

    But more importantly, the size of the national debt rose inexorably: from £2 million or about 5 per cent of GDP in 1688 to £834 million in 1815 (twice national income).  This put a high premium on the Treasury’s ability to finance wars, both through borrowing and innovations in taxation (Pitt introduced the income tax in 1799): the Treasury’s success on both these fronts was instrumental in Britain’s eventual victory.  Debt interest payments accounted for a half of public spending between 1820 and 1850.

    Secondly, the Treasury’s influence in the House of Commons was critical to its ascendancy.  The most potent symbol of this was the emergence of the First Lord of the Treasury as Prime Minister in the early 18th century.  To this day, if you knock on the door of No 10 Downing Street, it is not the title of Prime Minister which is on the name plate but First Lord of the Treasury.  Only the Marquess of Salisbury of modern Prime Ministers has declined to be First Lord.  But Salisbury always had a particular aversion to the Treasury: in 1900, he could say:

    “by exercising the power of the purse, [the Treasury] claims a voice in all decisions of administrative authority and policy.  I think that much delay and many doubtful resolutions have been the result of the peculiar position which, through many generations, the Treasury has occupied.”

    Alongside the First Lord, the Second Lord (the Chancellor of the Exchequer) became increasingly important as the 18th century progressed.  The Parliamentary Secretary or Patronage Secretary, as the Chief Whip is known to this day, was also of critical importance given the importance of sinecures to 17th and 18th century public life.  And the junior Lords of the Treasury were important cheerleaders for the Treasury’s agenda.  And so the influence of the Treasury in the House of Commons grew; to this day, the Government still sits on the Treasury Bench.  As Henry Roseveare put it:

    “with every extension of the financial basis of government, the Treasury’s access to the roots of power grew more secure.  At best, ambition to control the largest departmental empire – at worst, a desire to have some fingers in the till – ensured the attractiveness of the ‘place the money groweth’.  It was plausibly rumoured in 1690 that two members of the Treasury Commission had paid £200,000 ‘upon the nayle’ for their places”.

    But the Treasury’s role in Parliament was not confined to personnel.  Until the 17th century, Parliament’s role was to agree to taxes, often to finance war.  But the King had considerable freedom to spend the revenue pretty much how he wanted.  The Civil War, Restoration and Glorious Revolution changed all that.  Again, it was the ubiquitous Downing who was the author of a change in procedure, introducing the principle of “appropriation of supply”.  He persuaded Charles II to incorporate in the bill which sought to finance the Dutch war in 1665 a provision appropriating the £1¼ million exclusively for the pursuit of the war, and through the rest of Charles’ reign this became a device which increasingly curbed the royal prerogative.  Admittedly, it took time for the principle of appropriation to become embedded, largely because expenditure financed by the Civil List – which included the small domestic departments of Whitehall as well as the King’s personal expenses – remained outside the system of annual votes.  However, during the course of the 18th century Parliament steadily chipped away at the Civil List, with the result that more and more expenditure became subject to annual votes.  By the time William IV came to the throne in 1830, the Civil List only covered the expenses of the Royal Household.  More recently, the Sovereign Grant Act of 2011 completed the process by bringing financial support to the Royal Household into annual estimates for the first time.

    At the same time, Parliamentary control of the revenue side of the budget became increasingly regularised, which also strengthened the role of the Treasury.  House of Commons resolutions of 1706 and 1713 conceded the right of financial initiative to the representatives of the Crown – in short Treasury ministers.  And the setting up of the Consolidated Fund in 1787 – “a fund into which shall flow every stream of the revenue, and from which shall issue the supply for every public service” – made it impossible for revenue to be diverted to expenditure not covered by votes.

    Thirdly, the Treasury tended to be ahead of other public institutions in terms of the quality of its administration.  My point here is that for the Treasury to be in control it did not need to be at the cutting edge; it just had to be ahead of the Whitehall pack.  Under Downing’s Secretaryship, the Lord Commissioners improved the organisation of the Treasury: introducing basic principles of administration such as record keeping and “Treasury minutes”.  They also used exhortation to get better service from the Exchequer – which dealt with payments and accounts: thus, the Treasury minute book of 3 June 1667 records:

    “The officers of the Exchequer called in and told that their ordinary hours of attendance are not sufficient and… they are to take care that there be no further occasion of complaint of …a refusal to attend longer”.

    G M Trevelyan concludes in his England under Queen Anne that the best modern traditions of the permanent Civil Service emerged in the Treasury at this period.  However, progress was slow.  It was not until 1776 that  that much maligned Prime Minister Lord North introduced a series of reforms designed further to improve the performance of the Treasury : in particular, the principle that each Treasury official should “personally transact the business assigned to them”, thus ending the prevalence of pluralism or absenteeism; the introduction of training; and the principle of merit informing promotion – or as the relevant Treasury minute puts it “ability, attention, care and diligence of the respective clerks, and not their seniority”.  In effect, the age of sinecurism was over.

    Gladstonean reforms

    In many ways, the forces behind the inexorable rise of the Treasury came together under William Gladstone, who dominated the Treasury of the 19th century.  He was Chancellor, four times, and First Lord, four times, combining the two posts both in 1873-4 and 1880-2.  According to his biographer HCG Matthew:

    “Gladstone acted independently [as Chancellor].  He also acted aggressively.  His years at the Treasury coincided with reform of that institution from within, which Gladstone both shared and encouraged.  The Treasury was asserting its right to control the activities and personnel of the Civil Service as a whole.  Gladstone asserted the political position of the Chancellor in the Cabinet, in Parliament and hence in the country generally”.

    To this day, Gladstone’s influence still dominates the Treasury.  The current Chief Secretary – the first Liberal Treasury minister since Sir John Simon – has a picture of Gladstone on his wall.  And Gladstone’s image also dominates the Chancellor’s study at 11 Downing Street.  Gladstone’s economic principles of sound money and free trade have endured in the Treasury for 150 years.  And at a time of austerity Gladstone’s focus on candle-ends lives on.  The context of Gladstone’s original reference still has a certain resonance: when the Hon F A Stanley (later 16th Earl of Derby) was appointed Financial Secretary to the Treasury in 1877, Gladstone wrote to Sir Algernon West:

    “Stanley is clever but can an heir to the Earldom of Derby descend to the saving of candle-ends, which is very much the measure of a good secretary to the Treasury?”

    Writing in 1950 Sir Edward Bridges was a little defensive about Gladstone’s approach:

    “It recalls at once the wish believed by many to be still endemic in Treasury Chambers, to refuse all proposals of expenditure however worthy the object.”

    And preferred to interpret it “as a sign of the exceptionally prudent housekeeping appropriate to those who are handling other people’s money”.  To this extent, the fabric of the Treasury has always contrasted with other great institutions, such as the Foreign and Commonwealth Office and the Bank of England.  I think Gladstone would have been proud of the Treasury’s recent adoption of cheaper paper and the reduction in the size of desks, and a move to desksharing, the better to maximise rental income here at 1 Horseguards Road.

    It was Gladstone who commissioned the Northcote-Trevelyan report of 1854 which ushered in recruitment by open competition and promotion on merit.  Indeed, it was Gladstone who pressed Trevelyan to recommend open competition when his early drafts showed signs of compromising on this principle.  Not for the last time in Whitehall, there was considerable foot-dragging about implementation – between 1854 and 1868 only six departments made use of open competition in relation to 28 posts in all.  But Gladstone’s Chancellor, Robert Lowe gave it renewed impetus in the late 1860s.  According to Hennessy.  Lowe was “a tormented soul … [whose] deeply unappealing manner and striking albino appearance had not endeared him to his contemporaries”.  Nevertheless, he insisted that all Treasury posts were open to competition  and sought to impose the same principle on all other departments, though the Foreign Office and Home Office exempted themselves on the grounds that performance in those departments hinged on character and not intellect.  And other departments like the Department for Education failed to honour the agreement.  And so the Treasury tended to be the main beneficiary of a reformed university system.  This resulted in the Treasury attracting a more able – though not a more diverse – intake.  For all his support of meritocracy, Lowe had a curious obsession with the social composition of his elite, telling the Select Committee of Civil Service Expenditure in July 1873, that he valued:

    “The education of public schools and colleges and such things, which gives a sort of freemasonry among men which is not very easy to describe, but which everybody feels.  I think this is extremely desirable”

    And when challenged by his inquisitor that it might be

    “a great hardship upon [a naturally intelligent] man [that he] should find that because he has not the good fortune early in life to be at a public school, or to have learned Greek iambics he is to be debarred from the highest departments of the public service”

    Lowe replied:

    “He accepts the situation with a knowledge of what it is, and I see no hardship whatever in it…. And very likely with all his qualifications and merits he might be found wanting in the very things to which I attach very great value in the upper class; perhaps he might not pronounce his ‘h’s’ or commit some similar solecism, which might be a most serious damage to a department in case of negotiation. “

    It was Gladstone who provoked by the Lords’ rejection of a Paper Duties Bill in 1860 brought budget procedures into the modern era.  He determined that all tax proposals should be consolidated annually into a Finance Bill.  But more importantly, in terms of theatre, it was Gladstone who perfected the modern Budget speech, with its attendant rituals and traditions.  Central to a Gladstone budget speech was a focus on what the country could afford.  As he put it in 1860:

    “it would not be fair to speak of the great increase in the expenditure of the country without considering the great extension of the means by which that increase is supported …  We ought to have a clear knowledge of the proportion which our wealth bears to our expenditure, in order that we may be able to take a comprehensive view of our financial position”.

    And when his increasingly fragile Budget box was finally pensioned off in 2010, it is no coincidence that the National Archive – to whom the box belonged – chose to present the Chancellor with a new box modelled on Gladstone’s, albeit updated for the Elizabethan era.

    Gladstone’s reforms to Treasury control were themselves a response to the increase in expenditure arising from the Crimean War.  Of course, the Treasury did not control everything.  Sir Charles Trevelyan could still complain to a Select Committee in the mid-19th century that though the Treasury had managed to get the War Office and Admiralty to use cheaper stationery, the Foreign Office and Home Office continued to use paper of a very expensive quality.

    In 1861, Gladstone set up the House of Commons Select Committee on Public Accounts – a crucial ally to the Treasury in ensuring that public money is spent wisely and as Parliament intended.  And the Exchequer and Audit Departments Act of 1866 brought together the procedures of Estimates, Appropriation, Expenditure and Audit into one coherent system.  The inefficient and unwieldy Exchequer was finally swallowed up by a strengthened Audit Office under an independent Comptroller and Auditor General.  In 1872, the Treasury introduced the system whereby permanent heads of departments would be nominated as ‘Accounting Officers’: they would sign off the Appropriation Accounts submitted to the Comptroller & Auditor General in effect taking responsibility for the economy and efficiency of spending, as well as accounting accuracy.  And, although there were subsequent attempts to diminish the role of the Accounting Officer, for example by making the Principal Finance Officer rather than the Permanent Secretary responsible, the Treasury has always resisted any change to the core principles of the Accounting Officer regime.  As Warren Fisher, Permanent Secretary to the Treasury between the wars told the PAC in April 1921:

    “it should not be open to any permanent head … to say “please, sir, it wasn’t me” … Pin it on him in the last resort and you have got him as an ally for economy’.

    There have been subsequent revisions to this mid-19th century settlement.  For example, the Resource Accounts Act of 2000 replaced cash accounting with modern accounting practices and opened the way to Whole of Government Accounts.  More recently the Clear Line of Sight project has sought to create even better alignment between planning, control and accounting for public spending.

    We have also seen substantial changes to how public expenditure is planned.  First, through the Plowden reforms of the early 1960s, which sought to replace annual control of supply with volume planning of functional programmes on the basis of a multi-year public expenditure survey.  And more recently through the adoption of a top down approach to public expenditure planning in 1992, and the adoption of fixed multiyear spending totals under Gordon Brown, Alistair Darling and now George Osborne.

    But the basic Gladstonean principles of spending control and accountability remain in place.  The Treasury is accountable to the House of Commons for the stewardship of public spending.  But through its alliance with the Public Accounts Committee – formalised through the Concordat of 1932 and more recently through the modern bible for Accounting Officers, Managing Pubic Money – it effectively delegates responsibility for the efficiency and effectiveness of public spending to departments.  As Warren Fisher put it, rather than the Treasury acting as:

    “the single handed champion of solvency keeping ceaseless vigil on the buccaneering proclivities of Permanent Heads of departments”, “the Heads of Departments should work together as a team in the pursuit of economy in every branch and every detail of the public service”.

    To this day, the Treasury relies on the implicit threat of a Public Accounts Committee appearance and potential censure of an Accounting Officer if a department spends in excess of the estimates voted by Parliament.  And also on the National Audit Office’s powers to carry out value for money studies of particular areas of public spending, ranging from the award of national rail franchises to the sale of Northern Rock.

    Very occasionally the guild of permanent secretaries will grumble about the NAO and PAC, either for missing the point or trivialising complex issues.  But I would tend to attribute this to the discomfort of being held to account.  I am in no doubt that the PAC, under the chairmanship of Edward Leigh and Margaret Hodge, supported by Amyas Morse the C&AG, have made a real difference to the quality of public administration.  And I speak from experience, having appeared before the Committee some eleven times over the last two years.  I welcome and endorse the Committee’s determination to “follow the pound” from the Treasury through to the front line of public services, whether in a Jobcentre or an Academy school.

    The Treasury in the 20th century

    If Gladstone established the main principles of control, they have continued to evolve since his retirement in 1894.  Most importantly, the size of the state grew in the 20th century.  Indeed, there were incipient signs of this in his last administration when Harcourt reformed the estate duties.

    But – in succession – rearmament in the run up to the First World War; the creation of the welfare state under Lloyd George; the First World War itself; Neville Chamberlain’s further extension of the state into social security and housing in the 1920s and the great depression changed the role of the Treasury inexorably.

    Treasury control evolved in two ways.

    First, its finance ministry role became more strategic, particularly in the second half of the 20th century.  Not only did the Treasury  retreat from managing the civil service – the Fulton report on professionalising Whitehall led to sponsorship and leadership of the Civil Service moving first to the Civil Service department and then to the Cabinet Office.  But the Treasury also delegated the setting of pay to departments in the early 1990s, and has tended to increase delegations on more general spending.  For example, when I joined the Treasury in the 1980s I had to approve Forestry Commission spending on a hut in the Lake District costing just £15,000.  Today, the relevant delegation for Treasury approval is £100 million.

    The Treasury has pulled back from other areas too: from running the central catering organisation of the civil service; the telecommunications agency; and more recently from sponsoring the Office of Government Commerce an organisation dedicated to achieving better procurement.  We have been happy to transfer the latter to the Cabinet Office, whom under the Paymaster General, Francis Maude, is doing an excellent job in driving forward the efficiency agenda.

    And it is not as if these changes have made the Treasury less effective in controlling public spending.  Over the last fifteen years or so, the Treasury has been much more effective at delivering public spending outturns in line with plans than it was in the 1970s and 1980s.  It has been the planning of revenue – reflected in continued shortfalls in tax for a given level of national income – which has been the perennial problem of the public finances.

    But almost in parallel with its abdication of control of the civil service, the Treasury acquired a new role to supplement its finance ministry responsibilities: that of an economics ministry.  To some degree, this happened by stealth.  Bridges detected a change emerging during the 1920s where “the Treasury staff began to think of expenditure rather less in terms of the prospect of the spending of so much public money and rather more in terms of the employment of resources”.  It was the Second World War which really changed the Treasury.  First, through the enlisting of a staff of distinguished advisers including Keynes, Catto, Robertson and Henderson.  Secondly, through a new approach to macroeconomic policy and demand management: as Bridges put it “1941 marks the date when a new theme was introduced to the making of the Budget, namely the inflationary- deflationary scheme, a conscious attempt to use fiscal measures to hold the balance between the money in people’s pockets and what they could buy with it…It is now a well established and important feature of the general aims of Treasury control”.

    However, the Treasury’s dominance of economic policy making was largely fortuitous.  Until the 1950s, economic planning responsibilities resided in the Cabinet Office.  It was that department which had serviced Ramsey MacDonald’s Economic Advisory Council.  And during the war it was the Cabinet Office – through its Economic Section – which was responsible for planning and forecasting.

    It was only when Sir Stafford Cripps became Chancellor in 1947 that responsibility for coordinating functions on economic policy moved to the Treasury, the Economic Section moving over from the Cabinet Office some six years later.  This change, along with the nationalisation of the Bank of England in 1946, the adoption of a Keynesian approach to demand management and the creation of the Bretton Woods system meant that the Treasury was not only responsible for the macroeconomic policy framework but also for operationalising it.

    Of course, some areas of economic policy remained more contested: in particular, those relating to microeconomic policy and the supply side.  Harold Wilson took a dim view of the Treasury’s capacity arguing that “the only thing we need to nationalise in this country is the Treasury, but no one has ever succeeded” .  His creation of the Department of Economic Affairs with a remit to prioritize economic growth reflected the view that the Treasury was too laissez-faire and that its commitment to controlling public spending was somehow antithetical to the promotion of growth.

    As Sam Brittan said even before he took up a post as an “irregular” in the DEA:

    “the snag in most … plans for … an economics ministry is that there is something called finance quite apart from economics or production.  In fact the instruments by which production is influenced … are the budget, monetary policy, exchange rate policy and one or two very general controls”.

    But it was far from inevitable that the DEA would fail.  Other countries – in particular, Germany – have managed to create strong Economics Ministries alongside strong Finance Ministries.  But fail it did not least because the National Economic Plan could not withstand the pressure on sterling through the mid-1960s.  And it fell to the Treasury to pick up the pieces.  As Sir Douglas Wass said in the 1970s:

    “as the attempt of the DEA failed … so it fell on the Treasury to fill that gap and to concern itself with the supply potential of the economy”.

    And thereafter the Treasury has progressively built up its role on the supply side – not least because of the recognition that ultimately it is microeconomic policy which is most likely to promote growth.  As Nigel Lawson said in his Mais lecture of 1984:

    “The conventional post-War wisdom was that unemployment was a consequence of inadequate economic growth, and economic growth was to be secured by macro-economic policy … Inflation, by contrast, was increasingly seen as a matter to be dealt with by micro-economic policy … But the proper role of each is precisely the opposite of that assigned to it by the conventional post war wisdom”.

    Privatisation, labour market reform, and growth policy – whether through innovation, infrastructure, deregulation, and skills – have all become a focus of Treasury activity in recent decades.  This perhaps accelerated under Gordon Brown, with the Treasury setting up the Enterprise and Growth Unit in 1997, and bringing together work on personal tax, labour market and distributional issues.  Both groups live on to this day, as does the Treasury’s enhanced role on tax policy – transferred from the Inland Revenue and Customs and Excise in 2004.

    The abolition of exchange controls in 1979 began a process which would transform the City of London, and the Treasury has had to play a bigger role in relation to the financial sector.  The 1979 and 1987 Banking Acts put banking supervision on a statutory basis.  Responsibility for securities services and insurance moved from the DTI to the Treasury in the 1990s.

    The financial crisis itself has had a big impact on the structure of the Treasury – with significantly more officials working on financial service issues.  The banking interventions have had serious finance ministry implications, not least on the Treasury’s own finances – with its balance sheet ballooning and – for a time – dwarfing all other activities.  But more important still is the economics ministry role of shaping a financial service regime which better suits the needs of the economy.  Financial service legislation both here and in the EU has become a hardly perennial.

    The financial crisis also raised important questions about the Treasury itself.  Like the Bank of England and many others, the Treasury underestimated the build up of risk in the financial system.  And although the Treasury ultimately assumed a leadership role in resolving the British banking system in the autumn of 2008, it had a faltering start reflecting limited capacity in financial services following the run on Northern Rock in 2007.  It is important that we learn the lessons from that period.  We are currently implementing the recommendations of Sharon White’s review of the Treasury’s management response to the financial crisis.  And I am particularly pleased that Charles Roxburgh is joining us from McKinseys as Director General to lead our work on financial services.

    And it is in recognition of the Treasury’s enduring and intertwined role as an economics and finance ministry that I recently restructured the senior team with the creation of an additional second permanent secretary, with Tom Scholar and John Kingman respectively in charge of the Treasury’s finance and economics ministry functions, supported by the Chief Economic Adviser, Dave Ramsden, whose group of economists roam across both areas.

    As Alistair Darling put it in 2008, “macro and micro policy are not only indivisible – they reinforce each other”, and more recently George Osborne has said:

    “My experiences at the Treasury have made me even more convinced that Wilson was wrong to think that finance ministry objectives and economic growth are natural enemies.

    The Treasury must be more than just a finance ministry – it must be the driver of economic reform across the government…

    When I look back at the decisions I have taken, I ask myself.

    Would a finance ministry faced with a huge budget deficit have reduced corporation tax to boost growth?

    Would a finance ministry looking for Whitehall budgets to cut have protected science spending, even though it’s one of the easiest taps to turn off?

    I believe it would have been more, not less difficult to make these tradeoffs if there was an institutional split – and it’s right that the Chancellor of the Exchequer is accountable for getting that balance right.”

    However, for those of you who think that the Treasury’s power has become excessive, it is worth taking you back to the early 1960s.  Then it not only managed the whole Civil Service, but directly funded the overseas aid programme, higher education, museums and art galleries – these cultural institutions were deemed too important to be entrusted to ordinary Whitehall departments.  At the same time, the Treasury of those days was not only creating the macroeconomic framework, it was also operationalising it by setting interest rates when and how the Chancellor saw fit.  And it was presided over by five permanent secretaries and seven deputy secretaries.

    I would argue that the Treasury of today is much more strategic.  It tends to work through others.  For example, it sets the monetary policy target.  It delegates its operationalisation to the Bank of England.  It determines the regulatory framework, but delegates its operation to the FSA soon to be succeeded by the Prudential Regulatory Authority at the Bank.  It sets the public expenditure totals: it falls to the departments and the Cabinet Office through the Efficiency and Reform Group to drive forward the efficiency improvements necessary to maintain services at a time of falling public spending.  It determines that there should be two economic and fiscal forecasts a year.  But it leaves it to an independent Office of Budget Responsibility to provide them.  Growth policy is developed in partnership with the Department of Business and others, and operationalised through a number of departments and agencies.  Indeed, it has no choice if the Treasury is to remain a lean and agile department of around 1000 officials.  And to underline this, its senior management structure is half the size it was in the 1960s.

    Treasury control has evolved.

    But I believe it remains something which Downing and Gladstone – if they came back today – would recognise.

    As George Osborne said at a dinner to celebrate the foundation of the Treasury Board in 1612:

    “… The people assembled here today – serving under different administrations and different policitcal parties – have understood that the responsibility for the health of the public purse and the stability of the economic system is heavy one, fraught with difficulty and beset by competing claims and often requiring the answer no.”  But “The spirit of the Treasury created 400 years ago –born of a desire to bring order to the public finances, managed by persons of merit – survives to this day”.

    I could not put it any better than that.

  • Sir Nicholas Macpherson – 2011 Demos Speech

    The below speech was made by the Permanent Secretary to the Treasury, Sir Nicholas Macpherson, made at Demos on 8th March 2011.

    The Treasury has had an extraordinary few years: a banking crisis followed by recession and a ballooning budget deficit.

    But, even by those standards, the last year has been a defining one.

    We delivered two budgets, in March and June.

    We have been through only the second political transition in thirty years.

    We delivered a Spending Review.

    We have navigated through a sovereign debt crisis in Europe.

    And we have embarked upon the biggest reform of financial regulation since 1997.

    On top of this, we have made a number of institutional and organisational changes, in particular the creation of the Office for Budget Responsibility.

    At the same time, the Treasury is getting smaller. Staffing levels which peaked at 1420 in September 2009 currently stand at 1260 on a like for like basis.

    In my view, the Treasury will enter the new financial year with greater credibility as the nation’s finance and economics ministry.

    This is partly because of what the department has achieved: in particular, the sheer scale of the fiscal consolidation. But also its associated outcomes: long gilt yields have fallen by 30 basis points over the last year, while they have increased by 130 basis points in Spain.

    It is also partly about the way in which we have gone about these tasks. The official Treasury forged a strong working relationship with the new Government and quickly learned how to work with the first coalition in 65 years. I would like to think this was down to careful planning on our part. But credit should also go to the open and constructive way in which the new administration approached the civil service. Similarly, the successful delivery of the Spending Review relied not only on classic Treasury skills of analysis and negotiation, but also on an inclusive approach, both within and beyond Whitehall. And we are adopting a similarly open and consultative approach to the reforms to financial regulation: it is critical that any reforms are built to last.

    And it is also because organisational changes have strengthened the Treasury’s influence.

    The creation of the Office for Budget Responsibility is a good example. Its clear remit and independent status makes its forecasts that much more credible. And it strengthens the Treasury’s hand on fiscal policy since adjusting the forecasts to avoid difficult decisions is no longer an option.

    We have also managed to effect this change in a way that minimises the duplication of work between the Treasury and the OBR. This is not only a good thing in terms of saving the taxpayer some money, but it also means we can maintain the macroeconomic analytical capacity that we need to be effective. For example, these changes have allowed our Chief Economic Advisor, Dave Ramsden, to spend much more time on analysis and policy advice, building up economic capacity across Whitehall, because it is now Robert Chote and colleagues that spend their time worrying about the forecast.

    Other institutional changes have further strengthened policy making and the Treasury. The creation of the Office of Tax Simplification has created a force against unnecessary complexity; the absorbing of the Office of Government Commerce in the Efficiency and Reform Group by the Cabinet Office has enabled the Treasury to concentrate on its core objective of public spending planning and control; and the abolition of the National Economic Council has addressed the risk of the Cabinet Office becoming an economics ministry, which would have led to duplication and potentially confusion of policy responsibility.

    The Treasury’s strength derives from its institutional and strategic coherence and the breadth of its oversight. As Britain’s economics and finance ministry, it is perhaps the only national institution that has a genuine interest in both public and private finances and in the economic success of households, businesses and public services.

    The Treasury’s finance ministry role is clearly central. Only the Treasury can plan, control and account for public spending, and set the strategic direction of tax policy. And it has been doing it for eight hundred years.

    But the Treasury also has an important economic policy role, on financial services, in the international arena, in steering macroeconomic policy, and in improving the supply side.

    The Treasury’s effectiveness also derives from its small size. This requires the Treasury to be agile and to focus relentlessly on its core functions.

    The Treasury is set to become smaller still. I expect staffing levels to be around 1000 in 2014, the smallest in my time at the Treasury (once machinery of government changes are taken into account).

    We have recently carried out a Strategic Review of the Treasury – the first fundamental examination of the department’s role in two decades. It concluded that the department’s finance ministry role is vital, and none more so than in the coming period when making the consolidation stick must be the department’s number one priority. However, the economics ministry role remains as relevant as ever. But in carrying it out, the Treasury works best when it is operating at a strategic level: creating the framework or legislation, and leaving it to others to put it into operation. And so the challenge is to define clearly the boundary between the Treasury and its partners which maximises alignment and minimises duplication.

    One example of this is public service reform. The Treasury needs to focus on the big strategic risks, rather than spread itself too thinly, interfering in what should be the responsibility of departments.

    Another example is financial regulation. With the enactment of the forthcoming legislation, it will be the Bank of England which is responsible for macro-prudential policy, as well as prudential regulation and for the resolution of banks in a crisis. But we will still have responsibility for the framework as a whole and will need to retain a capacity to be an intelligent interlocutor and to take charge in a crisis when taxpayers’ money is put on the line. This is not new; the monetary policy framework follows a similar model, but the Strategic Review pushes us to be more rigorous in applying this approach across the Treasury’s other areas of business.

    And it is right that responsibility for the financial services framework remains in the Treasury, as it has since the 1990s.

    The banking crisis underlined the linkages between financial and economic policy. That is informing the Government’s reforms to the Bank of England; and it has also reinforced the importance of the Treasury’s historic relationship with the Bank. Moreover, most new regulation emanates from Brussels, it is finance ministers who take the important decisions on financial service issues whether in the EU Council of Economic and Finance Ministers, or in the G20 at a global level. And the Government’s interventions in the banking sector in recent years have involved fiscal as much as economic policy judgements.

    Another good example of our focus on creating clear partnerships is tax. The Treasury is best placed to ensure tax policy decisions are taken in the context of wider financial and economic policy: and its proximity to Ministers means that it is well placed to take into account the fundamentally political nature of tax raising. But Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs have a critical role in ensuring that tax policy is informed by operational and implementation issues. They are inevitably closer to the detail and data. The relationship works best when the comparative advantages of each institution are exploited, and where the two institutions can challenge each other from a position of mutual respect. The relationship is not a contract: it is more like a marriage than an arms treaty.

    But the Treasury’s effectiveness is not just about the way we are organised, or about how we work with our main partners. It is also about the people we have working here.

    The events of recent years have demonstrated the need for a flexible workforce that can move quickly and effectively into new priority areas, with a set of skills that allows them quickly to deliver.

    This is not to say that our staff should be moved around so frequently that they cannot develop expertise in critical areas. And in the past the Treasury may have celebrated youth a little too much over experience.

    Recent events have also placed a high premium on expertise. Here, I think we have made real progress. We now have a critical mass of tax professionals. Our economist cadre is strong. And we have strengthened financial management expertise, as well as attracting people with operational experience of delivering public services. We are managing staff’s careers more proactively. And our best staff are increasingly going out of the Treasury on secondment to deepen their experience, whether working in a local authority or a front line department or the Bank of England. In my view, we now have a much more plural workforce which is better placed to deliver the right mixture of challenge and experience, as well as mitigating the risks of mono-cultural group think.

    The areas where expertise has made the most difference are those most directly affected by the recent crisis: debt management and financial stability. Of course, we need to learn the lessons of the causes of the crisis. And that is informing the Treasury’s painstaking approach to legislation. But the professionalism with which the Treasury handled the crisis from the autumn of 2008 onwards has been recognised by external commentators. Only last week, Lord Myners said

    “the analysis, advice and support I received from…[Treasury] officials… was as good as any I experienced in 30 years in the private sector and at least as good as that received from commercial parties advising the Treasury”

    We have so far been successful in retaining expertise and that allowed us to deal more effectively with the sovereign debt crisis in Europe and the subsequent loan to Ireland. And the challenge will be to retain the right staff as our headcount declines.

    It’s been a challenging few years for the Treasury, as it has been for the global economy. But I believe the Treasury has come through stronger as the nation’s economics and finance ministry and is well placed to deal with whatever lies ahead.

  • Iain MacLeod – 1950 Maiden Speech

    Below is the text of the maiden speech made by Iain MacLeod in the House of Commons on March 14th 1950. MacLeod later became Chancellor of the Exchequer in June 1970 although died a month after whilst still in office.

    I think the only thing that draws new Members of this House to their feet to take part in these Debates is the sure knowledge that they can rely, as I rely tonight, on the traditional courtesy and kindliness of Members of this House.

    We are today considering an Amendment which has been put down arising out of Supplementary Estimates amounting to about £148 million. Of that vast sum something like two-thirds, or nearly £100 million, is attributable to the National Health Service. All hon. Members are very familiar with the growth of the cost of this scheme from its first presentation to this House in 1946, when the House discussed it on the basis of a scheme costing £152 million a year, or about £3 per head, until the proposed Estimate for next year, which is about £400 million, or some £8 per head.

    The first point I should like to make is that, formidable though these figures are, they are net figures and they do not show the full cost of the Health Service scheme, partly because of the transfer payments from National Insurance and partly because of various recoveries, and also because of the superannuation scheme, which shows inevitably in its first few years a surplus which will have to be repaid later, but which at the moment disguises the true cost of the scheme. It is true to say that when an announcement is made, such as the Chancellor made this afternoon, that there is to be a ceiling put on this scheme, we must remember that, in the absence of drastic action, the cost of this scheme will inevitably increase, for, apart from the reasons I have given, we are an ageing population, and for the next generation, in the absence of dramatic scientific or medical discoveries, the demands of sickness will inevitably increase.

    It follows that the Chancellor of the Exchequer and the Minister of Health have got themselves at the moment into the position of Alice and the Red Queen. The House will remember that the inhabitants of Looking-glass Country had to do all the running they could do to stay in the same place, and if they wanted to get somewhere else they had to run twice as fast. If our resources — and this has come from both sides of the House — are inadequate — and they are and they will be for a long time to come — then it follows that we must establish priorities as between the social services and also within the social services. On this theme of priority I am quite certain there is general agreement on both sides of the House. The Minister of Health last year at the Socialist Party conference said that priorities were the religion of Socialism, and last night, speaking in this Chamber in the housing Debate, he returned to the theme of priorities, about which we have heard both from the hon. Member for Stoke-on-Trent, Central (Dr. Stross) and from my hon. Friend the Member for Luton (Dr. Hill). We should look for a moment on this scheme to see if, in fact, the correct priorities are being observed.

    I should first like to refer to a matter that has been touched on already, and that is the bill for the general dental services, which at the moment is exceeding the bill for the general medical services. If we include Scotland, that means that some 10,750 dentists are being paid more in terms of gross income than some 21,000 doctors. Even if one makes all the adjustments in favour of the heavier cost of practice expenses that dentists have to bear to the full 52 per cent., which is I believe the amount allowed, the dentist at the moment is paid by the State far more in terms also of net income than is the doctor. I have no hesitation in saying that that is an indefensible position.

    I am myself both the son and the grandson of a doctor. I believe that relative to their training, their qualifications, their ability, the load of responsibility that they ceaselessly shoulder, and above all the hours during which doctors are at their patients’ service — in my father’s house as in every other general practitioners that was 24 hours of the day and seven days of the week — doctors are by far the worst remunerated profession in the service. I have not the slightest doubt that there is no question, and there never will be of a doctors’ strike, for it is unthinkable for doctors to have anything remotely resembling a strike, but I think we should be wise not to presume too far on the infinite and most statesmanlike patience which the medical profession has shown in these last two years.

    The second point I wish to make has also been touched upon. In Section 22 of the parent Act and in the White Paper which preceded it, and in the speeches of the Minister of Health on Second Reading and in Committee, stress was laid over and over again on the need for priority dental treatment for certain classes. Quite obviously that is a sound principle, for if the teeth of expectant mothers and those of infants and young children be sound, then in a generation we will have dentally a sound nation. Hon. Members know that, in fact, these priority classes — I am not arguing about the responsibility; I am stating a fact — are being neglected today, and there are many areas in this country in which the school dental service has virtually broken down. Wherever the responsibility may lie—and I know it causes the Minister of Health, the Minister of Education and the Secretary of State for Scotland great concern — the fact is inescapable that almost the only thing that was made deliberately by the Government a priority in the Health Service has failed.

    The third point and the last on priorities which I should like to make is — there is a small Supplementary Estimate put down under research, presumably referring to the Minister’s powers under Section 16.

    Dr. Morgan (Warrington) : Too small.

    Mr. MacLeod : Too small perhaps, but I remember reading last year that the Minister of Health stated that he was awaiting information from the Peckham Health Centre to enable him to determine whether he could make a grant under his powers under Section 16. I do not know whether that has been done or not, but I know that on the same day that I read about these Supplementary Health Estimates for nearly £100 million I also read that the Peckham Health Centre was closed because it could not collect £20,000, which is one five-thousandth part of the amount to be passed in this House tonight. I suggest there is something sick at heart in the service, something desperately wrong with the priorities in a service in which that sort of thing can happen.

    If it has been agreed that these figures are formidable, all thinking people, whether they are inside or outside the House, and everyone concerned with the future of this service are also agreed that the priorities are clearly in many cases unsound. Is it possible for us to suggest what has gone wrong? Very diffidently in a sentence or two before I sit down I should like to give my view on what has happened. The traditional function of the social services, as I understand them, is to rescue the needy from destitution, the sick from ill-health, and the unfortunate from the consequences of their misfortunes. It is a principle that was expressed very clearly by my right hon. Friend the Leader of the Opposition at our Brighton conference two years ago when he said this: The scheme of society for which we stand is the establishment and maintenance of a basic minimum standard of life and labour below which a man or woman of good will, however old and weak, will not be allowed to fall. I should like to take with that something said by my right hon. Friend the Member for Warwick and Leamington (Mr. Eden) in this House on 26th October, which was very badly misrepresented in the course of the recent election. This is what he said: Has not the time arrived when we must, as a nation, recognise that the principle of the social services ought to be that the strong should help the weak, and not to try to aid everybody alike indiscriminately? That is the whole basis on which I want the examination of this problem.” — [OFFICIAL REPORT, 26th October. 1949; Vol. 468, c. 1366.] I agree that that is the basis on which we should examine this problem of the minimum standard, and, secondly, of the duty of the strong to help the weak.

    Today — and this is what I think has gone wrong—the conception of a minimum standard which held the field of political thought for so long, and in my view should hold it still, is disappearing in favour of an average standard. To an average standard, the old-fashioned virtues of thrift, industry and ability become irrelevant. The social services today have become a weapon of financial and not of social policy. This may sound Irish, but it is both true and tragic that, in a scheme where everyone has priority, it follows that no one has priority. This principle goes deep in the difference between the two sides of the House.

    Perhaps I may sum up my argument in one sentence. I would put it like this: I believe that the conception of the minimum standard and the duty, which ought to be a proud duty, of the strong to help the weak, not only forms a nobler and juster basis for our social services but is a basis that is infinitely better matched to the independence and the character of our countrymen.

  • Kenny MacAskill – 2011 Speech to SNP Party Conference

    Below is the text of the speech made by Kenny MacAskill, the Cabinet Secretary for Justice in the Scottish Parliament, to the SNP conference in October 2011.

    Ladies and gentlemen, fellow delegates.

    What a difference a year makes. Well, in some respects. You may remember last year, whilst expressing how privileged I was to serve as Justice Secretary I lamented that whilst Cabinet colleagues went to India and South East Asia I went to Belfast – and was very pleased to do so.

    So much so that while my colleagues have been or are going back to China, India and America, I went back to Belfast once again.

    This time highlights included visiting the Police Board Headquarters, followed by a visit to the Police Service of Northern Ireland  HQ and a visit to PSNI station in loyalist East Belfast.

    I know what you are thinking – why should I have all the fun? True. That’s why Roseanna is getting to go too!

    There are considerable upsides to my privileged position. When I came back last week from visiting my son abroad, before I had even got through passport control I had been identified and acknowledged by the visible police presence. It wasn’t just the rest of the passengers, but me that began to wonder what I had done!

    Delegates, last year I stood before you and stated the record upon which we sought re-election – 1,000 additional police officers into our communities and they in turn delivered a 33-year low in recorded crime. But it wasn’t just the outcome of the election that got better.  Because ladies and gentlemen this year we have 1,100 additional officers and a 35-year low in recorded crime. We were returned as a majority Government because we are making Scotland stronger and safer.  We are moving Scotland forward.

    But it’s not just on recorded crime that we are moving forward.  Violent crime is down by just under a fifth since we came to office and the possession of knives and other offensive weapons is down by almost 40% since we took office. But for those who transgress, there is no hiding place, because sentences are up for the fifth consecutive year.

    We are not just  making Scotland safer, but making Scottish communities feel safer. People are more positive about the crime rate in their local area than at any time in the last ten years and the risk of becoming a victim of crime continues to fall and is lower than south of the border.  It’s a record upon which we were re-elected and it’s a record that we can be proud of.

    But we are not complacent. We do know that there’s still far too many tragedies caused by knives in our country. We are taking action on the booze and blade culture that causes so much mayhem and too much misery in too many parts. The No Knives Better Lives scheme is making progress. In Inverclyde knife crime down by 35%.  In Renfrewshire down by 29%.

    We have extended it into Edinburgh, Glasgow and Clackmannan and, later this month, I will be announcing it’s extension still further. There’s a long way to go, but we are moving forward.

    However, we recognise as a Government that it’s not just about dealing with the consequences of crime, but stopping crime occurring.  That’s why since we came to office, over £44 million has been spent on the Cashback for Communities Scheme – providing opportunities for over 600,000 young people.  Football, basketball, rugby, have all benefitted as well as arts, drama and other outlets for young folk’s energy. Earlier this week, I announced £360,000 to be invested into boxing in Scotland.  It’s not my sport – I’m a football man – but I tell you this – because the police tell me it – it works for the some of the hard to handle kids as well as many others. Some may go on to be a Ken Buchanan or a Jim Watt, but for many others it simply keeps them out of trouble, on the straight and narrow, and fit and healthy.

    But we do face challenges. None perhaps more so than the severe financial challenges wrecked upon us by Westminster. The cuts are deep and severe. Notwithstanding that, John Swinney has done a fantastic job in ensuring that we protect as much as possible the police budget. But, ladies and gentlemen, I can’t ask officers to do more with the same or even less.  It is for that reason that there requires to be police and fire reform.

    We will ensure the maintenance of the outstanding police service to Scotland’s communities through a single police service. The status quo is not an option. The alternative is what’s happening south of the border.  According to their Inspector of Constabulary, up to 30,000 officers could be lost and in Greater Manchester alone between 2,000 and 4,000 are to go.  We will not countenance. Nor will we countenance tearing up the terms and conditions of the police officers who do such a fantastic job for us, as is happening down south as a result of the Winsor review – not now, not ever.

    Let me challenge some of the hypocrisy from those who opposed a single service.  The Liberal Democrats criticised reform that was taken to protect the outstanding forensic science service we have in Scotland. We have consolidated, but protected it. Ensuring not just that there will be state of the art premises in Dundee and Gartcosh, but a continuing service in Edinburgh and Aberdeen.  But what have the Liberal Democrats been doing in the coalition south of the border?  They are privatising the service lock, stock and laboratory.  Their claims on the police service were equally hypocritical and they got the election result that they deserved.

    There have been some legitimate concerns raised but they are being addressed. We will ensure that there’s neither centralisation, lack of accountability or interference in governance.   It has been suggested that a single service will see a reduction in officer numbers in our communities.  Let’s look at the historic facts.  In 1975, when we last saw police reform here in the north there was once 3 police services. After reform, there was just one. There were 2 Chief Constables less, but equally 300 additional officers more.  As the First Minister said, bobbies before boundaries.

    Our police force and prosecution service will continue to serve us both at home and abroad. The events in Libya in the last 24 hours may have brought one issue to a conclusion.  But, as we have always made clear, the Lockerbie investigation remains a live inquiry.  Our police and prosecutors – as they have done diligently for the 23 years since the atrocity – will take whatever action is necessary and follow any lines of inquiry in the interests of justice.

    That will be one of the major pieces of legislation and it will lay the groundwork for a safer and stronger Scotland.  But there’s much more work to do. As the First Minister has correctly said, not just Scotland’s national game, but parts of Scotland are tarnished by sectarianism.

    My colleague Roseanna Cunningham is taking through what is a short, but very important Bill through parliament.  And I can assure you ladies and gentlemen that neither Roseanna, the First Minister, nor myself will shirk from taking the necessary action.

    When I was in Belfast at the Strandtown PSNI station, I saw footage from the riots that occurred in the summer in East Belfast, violent and hate-filled.

    Back in Glasgow, a few weeks back, the First Minister and I attended the national police memorial day. We met Nuala Kerr, the mother of PC Ronan Kerr murdered by a terrorist bomb.  A young man 4 months into his police service killed for being a Catholic in the PSNI.

    When people say it’s just a bit of banter, it’s just a song that doesn’t hurt anyone.

    These are songs of hate and there is no place for them in a modern Scotland.

    When people say it’s just a political chant – tell that to Ronan Kerr’s mother.

    It is for that reason that Roseanna will lead this Bill through Parliament. It’s not about the Boyne in 1690 or Dublin in Easter 1916 it’s about dragging a small minority of folk in our country into the 21st century.

    There are other challenges we face.  We need to protect the integrity of the High Court in Scotland.  It is for that reason we welcome the report from Lord McCluskey and other eminent lawyers.  Scotland has long cherished it’s distinctive criminal justice system and we will protect it.

    Equally, until such time as there is further constitutional change, we have always recognised that civil matters are different. It’s for that reason that I am delighted that the UK Supreme Court vindicated the actions of our SNP Government and validated the Court of Appeal in Scotland by upholding justice for the victims of pleural plaques.

    We have to embark upon legal reform, whether driven by Europe or by financial challenges.  For that reason we will take action to make whatever changes are necessary once Lord Carloway returns with his report on criminal procedure.  We will take action to protect the integrity of our legal aid system in a time of austerity.  We will ensure protection for those who need it most. However, the days of  the victim of domestic violence having  to contribute to the cost of getting protective orders whilst the perpetrator  got criminal legal aid with no contribution have to change. It can’t be afforded, but it’s also not right. Those who can afford to contribute to criminal legal aid must do so.

    However, when we talk about Courts and procedures, lawyers and judges, we must never forget the victims of crime.  For too long it seemed it was so. Thankfully the former Lord Advocate, now Dame Elish Angiolini, made considerable strides to address that.  That good work is being continued by her successor as Lord Advocate Frank Mulholland, and Roseanna and I will deliver it in Parliament through a Victims Rights Bill.

    So, ladies and gentlemen – a record upon which we sought re-election, a record that saw us re-elected, and a record that we can be proud of.  It hasn’t been simple to date, and the journey ahead won’t be easy. There will be turbulence and there will be challenges.  But we are making a Scotland a safer and stronger place. We can be proud of our record as a minority Government. Proud of the actions we are now taking as a majority Government.  We are moving Scotland forward.

  • Peter Mandelson – 2009 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    Below is the text of the speech made by Peter Mandelson, the then Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills, to the 2009 Labour Party Conference.

    Conference, let me say after these years away – it’s good to be back home.

    When the Prime Minister asked me to return to the Cabinet last October I felt a lot of things.

    Shock. I think I was as shocked as most of you were.

    Surprise. My network of informants had let me down on this one.

    Apprehension.  Returning to the goldfish bowl of British politics – and all my fans in the media. It made me pause.

    I had been in this movie before – and its sequel – and neither time did I like the ending.

    But I did not hesitate for too long.

    The pull was too great.

    The pull of coming back to serve my country when it was in the midst of the global whirlwind that had hit us.

    The pull of coming back to serve this Prime Minister, our leader, Gordon Brown – who was gripping this financial crisis, leading the fightback against it when so many others seemed caught in the headlights.

    But there was something else. It was the pull of coming back to serve our party.

    I did not choose this party.  I was born into it.

    It is in my blood and in my bones.

    I love working for this party and those who work so hard for it – even if, at times, perhaps not everyone in it has loved me.

    I understand that.  I made enemies, sometimes needlessly.  I was sometimes too careless with the feelings and views of others.

    But please accept this. It was for one reason only. I was in a hurry to return this party to where it should be – in government to help the hard-working people of our country.

    I know that Tony said our project would only be complete when the Labour Party learned to love Peter Mandelson.

    I think perhaps he set the bar a little too high.

    Though I am trying my best.

    But the fact is our project is far from complete.

    A Labour Government has never been more needed.

    Needed to fight back against the recession.

    Needed to build and secure our future economic strength.

    And needed to ensure we pay down debt in a way that is fair and protects jobs, homes and our frontline public services.

    And yet, we must face facts.

    Electorally, we are in the fight of our lives.

    And, yes, we start that fight as underdogs.

    But conference let me say this.

    If I can come back…, we can come back.

    I came into politics to help remake the Labour Party as a party of Government.

    My relationship with Gordon was forged when people said we’d never form a government again.

    It made us not just modernisers, but fighters… and certainly not quitters.

    That spirit still burns as brightly within us now as it did then.

    Gordon, I am proud to serve in your Government as you lead the fightback against the global recession.

    The policies conceived and executed over the last year have now begun to pull our economy back onto the long road of recovery.

    When it mattered, Gordon Brown and Alistair Darling have made, and are making, all the right calls.

    Of course, they could have made different choices.  They could have taken David Cameron and George Osborne’s advice to let the recession take its course.

    Can you imagine if we had?

    I hope these two can find the humility to acknowledge that at every point Tory policy would not just have put the recovery at risk but have made this recession deeper, longer and far far worse.

    As we get closer to the election, I want to see them and Tory candidates across the country explaining why they wouldn’t provide the money to help small businesses and families in this recession when they needed it most.

    No extra money to boost family incomes.

    No money for the tax deferment for business and no VAT cut.

    No additional money to help those who have tragically lost their jobs.

    No funding for the car scrappage scheme.

    They got it plain wrong at every step along the way and I say to every Labour member and campaigner across the country.

    Do not let them off the hook.

    I certainly will not.

    Conference, the foundation of all that we want to achieve is a strong economy.

    So what does that mean?

    It means continuing to limit the recession’s damage to our economy because when private demand plummets governments must step in.

    It means, once we are through the recession – and only when this is clearly the case –  we will tackle the deficit without eating into the fabric of people’s lives.

    And it means investing in future growth.

    On all three counts, the Tories are on the wrong side of the argument.

    I tell you.  Withdrawing our help for the economy now as Mr Osborne demands would choke off recovery before it has even properly begun.

    Not for the first time, Boy George is sailing close to the wind.

    There are encouraging signs that the economy is picking up.  But recovery remains fragile and uncertain, especially in manufacturing and one of its cornerstones, the car industry.

    Our car scrappage scheme has been so successful the money is running out.  The industry has asked that the scheme be topped up.  Conference, we cannot do everything but that does not mean doing nothing.  So today I am extending our popular car scrappage scheme with extra money for an additional 100,000 cars and vans.

    In support of our car industry too, this government will stand behind Vauxhall workers in Ellesmere Port and Luton where the workforce themselves have been the main driver of change.

    And the same goes for Jaguar Land Rover too.

    But all of this only makes sense if we continue to invest in our country’s future growth.  It is growth that will see off recession. It is growth that is key to paying down debt.

    More than ten years ago I spoke to this conference as Trade and Industry Secretary about how we needed to renew the British economy and build it around knowledge, science, innovation and enterprise.

    But this isn’t 1998. This is a different world.

    China and India are undergoing the greatest revolution in the economic history of the world.

    The greatest financial crisis of modern times also requires us to rethink our growth model for Britain.

    Of course, we should be proud of our record.

    Production is up by a third.  More businesses. More research. More people than ever at university.   More people learning new skills although still not yet enough technicians being recruited for our new industries at the heart of our growth strategy.

    Some people think that Britain is a post-industrial country that doesn’t make anything anymore.

    Well, someone needs to tell them that we are still the world’s sixth biggest manufacturer.

    And we will remain a modern manufacturing nation as long as I and the Government remain in our jobs.

    But we do need to accept that, during this time, we have not got everything right.

    The truth is growth was so strong we started to take it for granted. We nurtured finance – not wrongly, but we should have done more to nurture our other strengths as well.

    The potential is there in Britain – we know that. In the services sector, the creative sector, the biosciences sector and in hi-tech advanced manufacturing.

    But to release this potential we need a clear plan for growth and this is my mission.

    First, with Labour in office, there will be no cap on talent in this country.   People with university degrees and skills earn more, climb higher and create more value.

    The Tories think that more means worse. We don’t agree.  Britain gains when every person who is capable can get the chance to go to university, get an apprenticeship or a new skill.

    But to make this possible in a tough public spending environment we all need to contribute – government, individuals and employers.

    Second. I want to see an innovation nation. Science is one of the jewels in the crown of Labour’s years in office. And we want closer links between businesses and universities so that good ideas don’t stop at the research lab or the library door.

    We’re one of the world’s biggest investors in Research & Development. But we still do the R better than the D and that must change.

    Third. We’re going to do more to put finance at the service of industry by building up new public channels to deliver private funds to innovative and fast growing companies.

    Less financial engineering and a lot more real engineering.

    Fourth – no more saying: the market on its own will always sort it out, like some kind of dogma.

    Instead, in my department, over the last eight months, we’ve said: “this is viable, and it’s important, but the market alone won’t get it off the ground. And we can help make it happen”.

    We’ve committed three quarters of a billion pounds to new manufacturing innovation in Britain.

    Investing in low carbon cars and aircraft. New digital platforms. Plastic electronics. Life sciences. Industrial biotechnology. Wind turbine development and wave power.

    This isn’t us picking winners as happened too often in the 1970s, when more often the losers were picking us.

    This is us giving public support to new technologies without which they may never get off the drawing board.

    Finally, we’re committed to making sure that the benefits of investment in growth are felt in every part of this country.

    The Tories say abolish the Regional Development Agencies.   We say “go for growth, let’s see what you can do.”

    This is the industrial activism we need more of in this country and I am determined to provide it.

    Where are the Tories on all this?  When did you last hear David Cameron or George Osborne last say anything about Britain’s industrial future?

    I would ask Ken Clarke but his mobile phone and blackberry always seem to be turned off.   Or given that he keeps privately agreeing with me, perhaps David Cameron has cut it off.

    The truth is these Tories have nothing to say about an active government economic role because their dogma prevents them.

    They just don’t get it.

    This failure, I believe, speaks to a wider truth about our opponents.

    David Cameron has been pursuing a strategy not of real change, but of concealment.

    Yes, they have made changes to their presentation.  The image-making department has done its work and done it well.  Who am I to criticise?

    But the Tories seem not to realise that change has to be more than a slogan.  The first rule of any marketing strategy is that it must reflect the product it is selling.

    And what is becoming more evident by the day is that, in their case, it doesn’t.  The two faces of the Conservative Party are increasingly on show. The one they want to present to the public of a revamped Tory party. And the other that betrays the reality of traditional right-wing Conservatism.

    You know, the Tories seek to give the impression that somehow they have learnt the lessons from New Labour and our party’s march back to the centre ground.

    Well, the Tories may have skimmed the headline summary of the New Labour manual.  But they never bothered to read the book.

    If they had they would know what real change involves.  They would know what a painful process it is.

    We in this hall know what it took to make the change. Show me what has really changed in the Conservative Party.

    The truth is that the old Tory right that was rejected in 1997 are quietly feeling at home again with David Cameron.

    At home with his tax plans.

    At home with the barely disguised glee a new generation of Conservatives is showing at the prospect of deep and savage cuts to public services.

    And at home with a position on Europe that sees them aligned with extremists and sidelined in Britain’s biggest market.

    That is not change.  Its the same old Tory policies.

    So lets take on the arguments about change.

    This will be a “change” election.  Either we offer it, or the British public will turn to others who say that they do.

    Of course, we must celebrate our record and be proud of defending it.  We did fix the roof while the sun was shining.

    We can look at the way we have turned around our public services, our record on tackling poverty at home and abroad, our role as a force for progressive social change.  The minimum wage and the new rights for working mothers and fathers.  And we can feel proud.

    But let us remember that you win elections on the future, not the past.

    Do not make the mistake of sitting back and expecting people to be grateful.

    We must not translate the pride we feel in what we have achieved into a defence of the status quo.

    Just as we fight against a Conservative Party that is still steeped in the old Tory attitudes of the 1980s, we must not allow ourselves to fall into old Labour thinking.

    The British people have their eyes on the future and so must we.

    We are the true progressives.

    We must be restless for change, impatient to do more for the hard-working people we serve, unafraid to embrace new reform, new policies and new thinking where it is needed.

    We need to think like insurgents, not incumbents.

    To challenge. To argue for change. To campaign.

    To be the real change-makers in British politics.

    This is our task.

    We need to fight back.  Of course we do.

    But to do so successfully it is up to us to explain – with confidence, clarity and conviction – what the choice is.

    The choice between a Conservative party whose judgements on the credit crunch were wrong, or a party providing leadership in the toughest of times.

    A choice between a party that lurches to the right the second it sees a chance of doing so, or our party that is resolutely in the progressive centre.

    A choice between a party that does not understand the new world we live in or even what has happened in the last year, or a Labour Party that knows the world has changed and we have to change with it.

    Experience and change with Gordon’s leadership.

    Or the shallowness of David Cameron.

    In one way or another I have been part of the last five election campaigns this Party has fought.

    Let me tell you a secret.  Deep down in my guts I always knew who was going to win. Even, sadly, in 1992.

    This time, it is not cut and dried.

    This election is up for grabs.

    So conference, we may be the underdogs.

    But if we show the British people that we have not lost the fighting spirit and appetite for change which has defined this party throughout its history then we can and will win.

    Win for our Party.

    Win for our country.

    Win for the British people.