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CHANCELLOR Brown, in testimony to the Treasury
Select Committee, has announced that he is bending
his much vaunted golden rule
that the government must balance its expenditure
with its revenues over the economic cycle.
Brown told a startled committee that the Treasury
is planning to lengthen the economic cycle to
nine years to avoid breaching the golden
rule on balancing the budget.
The Chancellors new rule is that if one
cannot balance the books over the economic cycle,
just add two more years to it; two years when
the governments finances were in the black,
to make up the difference, and to try and postpone
a settlement of accounts.
The new, revised position of the Chancellor is
that the economic cycle began in 1997, not in
1999 as the Chancellor had previously declared
to the House of Commons and the whole world.
Brown also announced that he was postponing the
next spending review for one year, from 2006 to
2007.
The fact is that the Chancellor, who had previously
sought glory as the man who had abolished the
tendency of capitalism to go from boom to bust
and vice versa, has been hit hard by the developing
world crisis of the capitalist system, and the
way that it is destroying the British capitalist
economy.
Previously, the Chancellor had banked on a policy
of robbing the poor to pay the rich as the way
to keep British capitalism afloat.
He provided the bourgeoisie with Bank of England
control over interest rates, very low taxation,
a complete deregulation of the economy, the encouragement
of a flexible labour force, and a 48 hour plus
week. He also allowed hundreds of thousands of
migrant labourers into Britain as cheap labourers
on individual contracts, and he made Britain the
easiest country in the developed world
for the bosses to shut down plants and move entire
industries to Asia or Eastern Europe, giving many
thousands of manufacturing workers the opportunity
to become cheap labourers in service industries.
The battle cry of Labour Ministers was Let
them work in Tescos.
For the poor there was the ruthless cutting of
benefits, while 100,000 civil servants have been
lined up for the sack, and 1.5 million public
sector workers told that their final salary pension
schemes had to go.
At the same time billions have been raised in
privatisation programmes. In a perversion of the
NHS, a large percentage of the NHS budget, has
been handed in big contracts to private medical
companies, so that they could grow out of the
public purse, bringing NHS privatisation much
closer.
What economy there is was encouraged by Labours
policy for the middle class. This was borrow,
borrow, borrow in order to spend, spend, spend.
This put the middle class into over £1 trillion
of debt to the banks, and created the biggest
British trade deficit in history.
This is the economic miracle, the pack of cards
that the developing word crisis is now undermining
at a rapid rate, and about to crash.
The US, facing huge downward pressure on the dollar,
is putting its interest rates up, while in Britain
the call is to cut rates and risk a collapse
of sterling so as to further cheapen credit,
to try and boost High Street spending.
Meanwhile, unemployment is rising, government
revenues are falling, basic commodity prices including
oil are leaping, at the same time as North Sea
oil is drying up.
Chancellor Browns response is to ditch his
own golden rule, and postpone the spending review,
to try to buy two years of time to prepare for
the savage cuts programme that will have to be
launched, raising taxes, further cutting benefits
and sacking many more public sector workers to
try and save bankrupt British capitalism.
However, the world crisis is developing so rapidly
that the wolf, now at the door, will be inside
the house in months, not years. This means that
the trade unions must have their own crisis programme
to defend the interests of the working class.
There must be action to bring down the Blair government,
to go forward to a workers government that
will nationalise the banks and the major industries
under workers control.
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