Britain slashes spending, raises retirement age

LONDON, (Reuters) – Britain will cut half a million  jobs, slash the welfare state and raise the retirement age as  part of an unprecedented cost-cutting drive that will test the  strength of both the economy and the ruling coalition.

Conservative finance minister George Osborne’s spending  review yesterday turned up the heat on the Liberal Democrat  coalition partners and kept alive a debate about whether  Britain’s economic recovery can survive the cuts.

Unions reacted angrily but public protest in Britain in  Britain has so far been muted compared with France, where unions  are trying to force a retreat on pension reform with protests  including blockades of fuel depots.

“Tackling this budget deficit is unavoidable. The decisions  about how we do it are not. There are choices. And today we make  them,” Conservative finance minister George Osborne told  parliament.
The fiscal squeeze over the next four years will total more  than 100 billion pounds ($157 billion).
Analysts are not convinced, however, that the government  will be able to see through the cuts through especially given  that it has moved more of the burden on to the welfare budget,  lopping off an extra 7 billion pounds on top of the 11 billion  of savings previously announced.

As a result of the welfare raid, budgets for government  departments outside protected areas like health and overseas aid  would shrink by 19 percent, not the quarter announced in the  budget.

Capital spending, Osborne said, would be 2 billion pounds  higher per year than originally planned because of the  difficulty of getting out of contractual obligations.

Osborne said that the state pension age for men and women  will rise to 66 by 2020. “Raising the state pension age is what  many countries are now doing, and will by the end of the next  parliament save over 5 billion pounds in a year.”

Around 490,000 public sector jobs are likely to disappear  over the next four years.
French protesters are resisting a rise in their retirement  age to 62 and British rail union leader Bob Crow urged Britons  to look “to the kind of resistance being mobilised by the French  trade unions … as an example of how to repel austerity cuts.”

There have also been protests against the austerity budget  that Spain’s parliament was due to approve yesterday, while in  Portugal unions have called a general strike for Nov. 24 as the  minority government bargains for support in parliament for  measures needed to shore up investor confidence.

The British government is braced for an uproar but Osborne  said he had no choice given the need to cut a  record budget  deficit of 11 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) — the  highest in the G7 — to around 2 percent in 5 years, a fiscal  tightening of some 113 billion pounds ($178 billion), a quarter  of which will come from tax rises.

No previous British government has tried anything as  ambitious and the National Institute of Economic and Social  Research think tank said on Wednesday it thought the government  could only push through half the planned cuts.

The latest Reuters/Ipsos MORI political monitor on Tuesday  showed 38 percent of people believe the centre-right  Conservatives have the best economic policies compared to a  quarter who preferred the opposition Labour Party’s stance.

The Liberal Democrats have seen their support plummet in  most polls as they have become party to policies they did not  support before May’s election.

Much will depend on how the economy copes with the fiscal  tightening. For now, the consensus is that Britain will achieve  slow growth for a couple of years as the private sector picks up  the baton from a deflated public sector.