Bold Seagull
strong and stable with me, or...
Not all but a very substantial part of the problem was caused by the last government which, amongst many other things, created employment in the public sector where such a move was certainly not indicated given that productivity in the non-manual areas of public sector are far lower than in the private sector. Presumably, or possibly, that was done to massage the employment or unemployment figures.
Suggest you read Bozza's post (and technically I acknowledge that we do not necessarily have a Conservative government), a coalition at that point in time was probably the best result for the electorate. Indeed the coalition have involved some Labour MPs in the process.
Given that, post-election, the Labour adminisistration even admitted they had spent the cupboard bare, it is unimaginable what they would have inflicted on this country had they somehow retained power.
Further, much has happened since the election outwith UK control to make the situation worse than it might have been.
It would be nice, if following 18 months of power we could discuss this administration on the decisions it has made. Not on party politics, not on your team is better than my team, but on the decisions and strategy they are taking. Frankly at the moment, they appear to be missing all their targets, and it is looking frighteningly obvious that any growth potential of 6-9 months ago has evaporated.
The question here is not to blame a previous administration, but to ask whether the budgets set by this administration have achieved the goals for which they have been set - I think the answer is no. There is credit in believing that less savage cuts, would have meant more people in work, more people paying tax, more people buying stuff and using services, would have led to similar borrowing levels that we're facing anyway. The cuts had to be made, no doubt about that, but as deep as they have, that is surely the debate.