No, no, no.
A year ago, we had a balanced plan: people paid their fair share, there were spending cuts and there were tax rises, but it was cautious and was not a pre-ordained political timetable or a headlong lunge. That is what the Chancellor should be doing now. He should be adopting a more sensible approach to deficit reduction, which would allow him temporarily to reverse the VAT change right now. He should also reopen the spending review and have a steady approach to spending cuts. A 20% cut in police budgets, front-loaded, is complete criminal justice madness. He should take up our plan to repeat the bank bonus tax, build houses and get young people back to work. As I have said, a temporary VAT cut now would put money into people's pockets, boost confidence, push inflation down and give our flat-lining economy the jump-start it urgently needs. That would be a better way of getting the deficit down.
The Economy
Proceeding contribution from
Ed Balls
(Labour)
in the House of Commons on Wednesday, 22 June 2011.
It occurred during Opposition day on The Economy.
Type
Proceeding contribution
Reference
530 c343 
Session
2010-12
Chamber / Committee
House of Commons chamber
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Timestamp
2023-12-15 16:58:57 +0000
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