Unions and business divided on Osborne cuts

BUSINESS leaders said they understood the need to make drastic savings to tackle the UK's huge deficit, but unions described the cuts in the Comprehensive Spending Review as a "brutal assault" on public services.

Spending review in full

Half a million public workers axed and pension age raised as Osborne drags Britain back from brink

John Walker, chairman of the Federation of Small Businesses, said: "We all know we are living in an age of austerity and that these cuts will affect us all, but our members understand that to reduce the public sector deficit, these cuts had to be made.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

"The small business community continues to have a vital part to play in driving a credible recovery and taking on new members of staff to help tackle unemployment, so it is now vital the Government puts a small business programme for growth into action immediately.

"As our research shows, small firms are at tipping point and lack the confidence to take on the 500,000 people that will be made redundant as a result of these cuts. So it is up to the Government to incentivise the small business community - through extending the National Insurance contribution holiday to existing firms and cutting VAT to 5% in the construction sector - to promote growth and help small firms take on new staff."

Paul Kenny, general secretary of the GMB, said: "After this review, the broadest shoulders will still have the fattest wallets.

"The price for George Osborne's day of reckoning will be paid by the economy, in the public and private sectors, and those unemployed, for a decade to come.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

"In a well leaked, well crafted ideological speech, arrogantly delivered, the demise of public services and the welfare state was laid out in front of us.

"As this plan unfolds and its impact is felt in homes and communities up and down the country, the Tory/Liberal authors will find life increasingly difficult at the ballot box."

Bob Crow, general secretary of the Rail Maritime and Transport union, said: "These cuts represent the most brutal assault on public services, jobs and living standards since the 1930's and show that the ConDem government are prepared to force working people to carry the can for an economic crisis cooked up in the boardrooms and on the trading floors. This is all-out class war with its roots firmly planted in the playing fields of Eton."

TUC general secretary Brendan Barber said: "Right across Government the Chancellor has announced eye-watering cuts that will have a desperate impact on communities, business and hard-pressed families, but he has not had the guts to spell out the detail, and instead tried to talk up a few crumbs of good news.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

"Worst of all, to score a cheap party political point about Labour spending plans, he has loaded cuts on to benefits and welfare payments. Those who have not had a minister fighting their corner but who are most vulnerable to cuts have lost the most today. The poorest have become the victims of a political jape."

Unite's joint leader Derek Simpson said: "This is not a spending review - it's a massacre. It's totally perverse to claim that cutting half a million jobs and razing our public services to the ground is good for this country.

"No matter how often they repeat that their actions are fair, this Government is making a political choice to attack the public sector and, by doing this now, damaging the whole of the economy long into the future.

"There is no evidence that public sector workers who lose their jobs will find alternative work in the private sector. In fact these cuts will destroy nearly as many private sector jobs as public sector ones."

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Richard Hawkes, chief executive of disability charity Scope, said: "Despite the continuing rhetoric that spending cuts will be fair the Chancellor's announcements today are anything but.

"Local government will lose 28% of its funding over the next four years, compared to just 14% reductions to the royal household, and this will hit disabled people and their families particularly hard."

David Hillman, spokesman for the Robin Hood Tax campaign said: "These cuts are not inevitable, they are a political choice. A fair Robin Hood Tax on the financial sector would allow George Osborne to avoid the worst of his cuts.

"The Chancellor said today he will impose the maximum possible tax on banks, but words are not enough. As ordinary workers and families feel the pain of the cuts, he must go further than the dismal 2.5 billion bank levy. Banks can afford to pay 20 billion more a year."

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Matthew Sinclair, director of the TaxPayers' Alliance, said: "It's great news that the Government is going ahead with necessary spending cuts to get the deficit under control and that politicians are finally setting out clear plans to deal with the fiscal crisis.

"Many wasteful programmes are being cut and that will mean savings for taxpayers now and in the future. Unfortunately a number of measures that would save significant amounts of money while minimising the impact on services haven't been taken, like a freeze in the International Development budget or pay cuts for the best paid public sector staff. Sensible and necessary cuts have been announced today but more can be done to deliver good value for hard-pressed taxpayers."