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| Monday, November 2, 1998 Published at 04:02 GMT UK Politics Paving UK's euro way ![]() Gordon Brown: "We are committed in principle to the euro" Chancellor Gordon Brown is to announce a new cross-party group to prepare the UK for joining the European single currency.
The initiative will be seen as a "change of gear" in the government's pace of preparations for signing up to economic and monetary union early in the new millennium. In his address, he says: "This government has decisively and unambiguously put this country on a new road of constructive engagement. For the first time we are committed in principle to EMU.
"Our strategy is to prepare and then decide." The next stage would be the publication in January of an "outline national changeover plan" setting out the practical steps that need to be taken if Britain was to join the euro. Tempting to Tories The formation of the cross-party group will be seen as an attempt to re-open Tory Party divisions on Europe. While the leadership is likely to be resolutely hostile, it may prove tempting to pro-Europeans like former Chancellor Kenneth Clarke.
He said member states must push ahead with labour market, capital market and product market reforms to ensure "more competition, more flexibility, more investment and more employment". On the domestic economy, the chancellor plans to repeat his insistence that the government can meet its �40bn spending plans for schools and hospitals despite having to sharply revise its growth forecasts downwards. In his pre-Budget statement on Tuesday, he is expected to announce a revised growth forecast for next year of around 1% compared to the 1.75 to 2.25% predicted at the time of the last Budget in March. 'I know your worries He will also defend the government's economic strategy in the face of complaints by industry and unions that high interest rates and a strong pound have made British exports uncompetitive. The value of sterling has already fallen back 10% from its peak earlier this year, he will point out. "I know about your worries about the pound. I have heard them. "I think that the greater worry would have been to take the wrong action and return our economy to the severity of boom and bust when interest rates were at 15%. "It is because of the reduction in borrowing and the tough action on inflation, which has seen us meet our inflation target for the second month in succession, that Britain is now better placed to steer a path of stability in these troubled times for the global economy." | UK Politics Contents
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