When Cameron suggested to companies yesterday that based on the oil price fall they should look to pay better salaries, it didn’t sound right to my cereal bowl for several reasons; to begin with not every company benefits directly from cheaper oil, no company should increase fixed costs due to volatile commodity prices near recent price low, and as so close to a very uncertain election in May with god knows what tax rises after, I’d be currently considering how I could CUT fixed costs for the next 5-years.
But what really stuck in my porridge was the sheer hypocrisy of Mr Miliband criticising another leader, based on Labour’s record prior to 2010, and their abject failure since, TO TELL THE ELECTORATE EXACTLY HOW LABOUR WOULD GUARANTEE TO BOOST LIVING STANDARDS, apart from the tax cuts the Coalition have made so far.
For Miliband to accuse Cameron for not listen to ‘cost of living’ pressures, when he served in the last Labour administration and their financial/economic recession - and oversaw a 5% drop in ‘real’ earnings from 2007 to 2010, and answered that by TAKING AWAY the 10p income tax rate and RAISING National Insurance for workers and companies – is frankly dishonest, politics in the gutter.
Indeed for the past 5-years Labour’s two Ed’s have criticised the Coalitions economic plan from Day 1, initially scoffing at PMQT etc that Labour’s plan, similar to Mr Hollande’s in France, to pray the recovery comes soon and raise taxes to penal rates in the meantime – and the result are in, and France proves that for a UK with a far larger deficit than France, following the French plan, economically by now we would be in the merde, worse than the French.
www.i24news.tv/en/news/international/europe/55561-141225-france-strikes-record-unemployment-high-again
Here is Labour’s 2010-205 economic plan,
“At-a-glance: Labour (2010) election manifesto”
news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/election_2010/8615297.stm
• Secure the recovery by supporting the economy and halving the deficit by 2014 through growth, fair taxes and cuts to lower priority spending
• National Minimum Wage to rise in line with average earnings by the end of the next Parliament.
• Promise to keep business taxes "as low as possible"
In 2010 what did “fair taxes” actually mean when relative to Labour’s (then) £157 billion overspend, when their tax rises to the rich would raise what, £7 billion, £10 billion, what? Who gets hit next and sees their living standards reduced by the government?
In 2010 “keep business taxes as low as possible”, or other words, with businesses still reeling from the worst recession in over 80-years, a Labour government was going to RAISE the costs of them doing business, but also expecting them to hire a few million employees to replace those lost under them from 2008 and pay better salaries as well. What country has that incompetent economic planning ever worked?
How can anyone ever trust a Labour Party campaigning on the ‘cost of living crisis’, already falling under their watch, who’s last ‘help’ prior to the election was to PUT A TAX ON EMPLOYMENT, that cynically for damage limitation, was legislated to hit voters AFTER the general election they knew they’d lose?
“Labour’s plans to increase national insurance next year will cost jobs, Alistair Darling has said.”
www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/labour/7539343/Labours-planned-National-Insurance-increase-will-cost-jobs-Alistair-Darling-admits.html
“In his evidence, Mr Darling defended his plans to increase national insurance, saying it was necessary to raise extra money to reduce Government borrowing, which will be £167 billion this year.”
No published plans for the budget deficit in 2010 other than to raise taxes, and their 2015 manifesto has the same lack of detail, yet pretending you’ll be better off under Labour when all they know is to RAISE taxes for all.