Ed Miliband writes:
On Wednesday, when George Osborne delivers his
budget, many people will be asking: is there going to be a recovery that will
help millions of hardworking families like us – or just a few?
In this budget debate, I will remember the voices
of people I meet around the country: the young couple who cannot afford the
deposit for their first home because houses are not being built; the graduate
struggling in low-paid work; the family where both parents work all hours but
still cannot make ends meet; and the small-business owner who cannot get a loan
from his bank.
None of these are among the poorest and most
disadvantaged people in Britain. But nor did they ever dream life would be such
a struggle.
A grim statistic for anyone who hopes our country can make progress
is that average wages for young people getting into work today have fallen back
to the same level in real terms as they were in 1998.
It means that, for the
first time since the second world war, wages paid to young people risk being
below those once paid to their parents.
So while there is now – belatedly – a growing
economy, the key question that any government needs to answer is whether it
will help the millions still caught in the crosshairs of a cost-of-living
crisis.
The evidence from other countries where economic recovery began earlier
is not encouraging.
President Obama has warned of the "cold, hard
truth" underlying four years of growth in the United States: corporate
profit and stock prices have gone through the roof, but average wages have
remained stagnant and inequality has deepened.
The early signs in Britain are
that the greatest beneficiaries of a recovering economy will also be a
privileged few.
Rewards in the banking sector in London grew nearly five times
faster than the wages of the average worker last year. Bonuses
are up at Barclays, Lloyds, HSBC and UBS.
According to the UK Commission on Employment and Skills,
the richest 0.1% currently have around 5% of national income – a proportion
that, on current trends, could rise to 14% by 2030.
There are long-term trends that drive this
inequality. Governments can prevent them overwhelming our economy, but only if
there is a government committed to doing so.
But this government, far from
fighting the causes of a sustained cost-of-living crisis, wants to encourage
them.
David Cameron is fond of talking about a global race. But his is a race
to the bottom in which the only way to win is if the British people lose.
The
Tories think the only way to succeed is through insecure work, zero-hours
contracts, and fewer rights in the workplace.
A recovery for the few is not an
accident of this government's economic policy – this is its economic policy.
This is not just socially unjust, it is also bad
for our economy.
Unless we use the talents of all and see rising prosperity for
all, our productivity risks remaining low, personal debt will remain high, and
our economy will be more exposed.
That is why a Labour government would make the
big long-term changes our economy needs: from a transformation of our
vocational skills to equip young people for future success, and making our
banks more competitive so they properly serve small business, to freezing
energy prices while we reset the market, and preventing the exploitation of
workers from abroad that undercuts those already here.
All these measures would
see us working with business to drive our economy towards the high-skill,
high-wage road that we need, and away from the low-wage, low-skill path.
Labour would make fairer and fully funded choices
to balance the books in the next parliament, including restoring the 50p rate on earnings over £150,000 a year.
We want to introduce a
lower 10p starting rate of income tax, and tax bankers' bonuses to create jobs
for our young people.
There is a big choice at the next election:
between a government that believes it can make our economy work with just a few
succeeding at the top while everyone else is squeezed; or a one-nation Labour
party that knows our country is stronger, more prosperous and more successful
when everyone has a chance to play their part – and that will build the
high-wage, high-skill economy that can power us forward.
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