| You are in: In Depth: Budget 2001 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Lib Dems: An honest alternative ![]() Matthew Taylor is Liberal Democrat Treasury spokesman and the MP for Truro and St Austell. By Matthew Taylor MP There I was thinking that the traditional pantomime season normally finishes in January.
But before we get too wrapped up in the election campaign trail, Brown has one last Budget to offer. With a healthy economy, the chancellor knows he can afford spending or tax cuts costing up to �4bn. And the fact is, some real investment is urgently needed. Sadly, it looks more likely he will try to out-Tory the Tories by offering tax-cut bribes instead. Cuts from both sides Labour has actually spent less of the national cake on education, the NHS and pensions than even the Conservatives did in their last years in government.
Recent spending increases as the election approaches have not made up for this. So NHS waiting lists are longer, most class sizes larger, and pensioners got just 75p-a-week in their pension increase last year. Michael Portillo would like to cut spending even more. By a lot more. Just imagine the cuts that would mean. Both of them pretend you can cut taxes without affecting services. Everyone knows that's not true. We need to bring down the curtain on this pantomime. No stealth taxes It's time for a straightforward, honest approach. This week the Liberal Democrats announced our alternative Budget, which proposes just that. Our first guarantee is that taxpayers would not be subject to any new stealth taxes. Partly this is since we explain exactly how we would pay for our policies. But we go further. Put simply, we believe that people who are paying taxes should always know where they stand.
We'll tell you exactly where your taxes go, too. We'll set it all out in a simple notice to every taxpayer, every year. Better services for all So what would the Liberal Democrats do in the Budget? Guarantee high quality education for a start. Cutting class sizes to an average of just 25, training more teachers and abolishing unfair tuition fees for students. The price? Just 1p on basic rate income tax, costing a typical person just �2 a week to deliver vastly better education for all. For the NHS, we can guarantee 3,300 more training places for Doctors, 11,400 more for nurses - and the funding to employ them in order to cut waiting times once and for all. Plus free care for elderly patients so that no one has to sell their home to pay for their long-term care. Pensioners will also get a big increase - at least �5 a week over inflation, in addition to the governments plans, rising to �10 for over 75s and �15 more for over 80s. And there will be 6,000 more police on the beat. The cost? Just a small increase in tax on those lucky enough to earn over �100,000 a year. Individually, no one will pay much more. Even someone earning �100,000 a year would pay just �5 a week more. But put together it would transform our schools, hospitals and pensions, and end once and for all the stealth tax pantomime. |
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