In fact. I'm fed up with the general tenor of the discussion of the budget: here is a fascinating table from the HoC library (page 8), showing government spending between now and 2015-16, current (i.e. non capital) and total:
Current and Total expenditure (£m, real at today's prices)
2010-11: 637.3 696.8
2011-12: 639.0 686.8
2012-13: 637.4 682.1
2013-14: 634.5 675.1
2014-15: 630.6 671.4
2015-16: 630.6 671.5
%change: -1% -4%
Overall, the change in public expenditure 2010/11 - 2015/16 is 4% down in real terms, actually a substantial rise in nominal expenditure. The budget report (page 45) points out pretty clearly that nominal expenditure rises by about £60bn over the period, or around 10%.
Here are the Unions on that today:
- "A savage and opportunistic attack on public services ... [that] goes far further than even the dark days of Thatcher"
- "What they take apart now could take generations to rebuild. Decent public services are the glue that holds a civilised society together and we diminish them at our peril. Cut services, put jobs in peril and increase inequality, that's the way to make Britain a darker, brutish, more frightening place."
- And predictably, Bob Crow has called for a campaign of "civil disobedience"
So I would like to ask politely, could everyone just get a grip on the numbers before they debate them; and if you don't know or cannot understand the numbers, could you just shut up. For I think commenting on economic policy when you can't count does make you worthy of the anathema.
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