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Writing in the Barnet Times this week, MP for Chipping Barnet, Theresa Villiers, reflects upon the cost of cutting interest rates on savers and pensioners...
The miserable weather we have experienced recently in Barnet has added to the gloom about the economic situation. After two consecutive quarters of economic decline, the country is now officially in recession and the outlook is grim and thousands of families in Barnet who are worried about keeping their jobs and paying their bills. One of my constituents told me orders at his business were down 70%.
The recent cut in interest rates to just one percent, their lowest in 300 years, is understandable, given the deeply worrying slowdown in the economy. However, it inevitably signals bad news for savers – the people who have done the right thing and handled their money responsibility. As consumption continues to decrease, hitting savers hard will do little to encourage them to part with their money to kick start the spending which is so important for getting the economy moving again. The cut in interest rates will also make life even more difficult for pensioners living on their savings.And while the interest rate reduction will bring down the cost of borrowing, there is still a desperate shortage of credit, loans and mortgages because confidence in lending has collapsed.There can be no doubt that Labour’s plans to revive the economy have failed. Their VAT cut cost £12 billion but has done nothing to stop the slide into recession or stem the flow of job losses. After we proposed a National Loan Guarantee Scheme to get lending to business flowing again and deal with the crisis of confidence, Labour dithered for weeks before announcing they would introduce a pale imitation of our ideas.
And they have yet to catch up on our proposal to help savers and pensioners by abolishing tax on savings income for all basic rate taxpayers and raising the pensioners’ tax allowance by £2000 to £11,500, paid for by efficiency savings in government. Labour’s answer to the debt crisis has been yet more borrowing.
Britain is trapped in a downward economic cycle; savers are being penalised but lending is still as frozen up as the bitter winter weather we experienced in Barnet last week. As Gordon Brown’s slip parliament last Wednesday suggested, there is a real danger now that the country will slide from recession into depression.