First of all some background. The Conservatives and Liberals are forming a coalition government. This is the first true coalition in the UK since WW2 and highly unusual. This is a major turning point as far as I am concerned and the best possible outcome from the election as it doesn't make the present moderate Conservative leadership beholden to its more extremist elements.
The Liberals are seen as "progressive" but more importantly have not been in Govt since WW1 and were not expected to be. As a result they are not owned by finance (no-one bothered donating to them unlike the other two parties) and their Shadow Chancellor (Vince Cable)has been against big banks from the start of the crisis and before. He recognized the danger of high personal debt and loose monetary policy, unfair taxation and has stated that the UK needs to unilaterally break up its TBTF banks as they are a danger to the UK itself. He is also the only man who truly seems to realise the desperate situation the UK is in financially with regards to the debt. He is going to be Chief Secretary to the Treasury which will give him a great deal of influence.
With this coalition in place the Govt has a strong mandate to start rolling back govt spending,paying down debt and building a sustainable future.
To secure the coalition the Conservatives have made some serious concessions in accepting some Liberal policy ideas an example of which is below.
a. Income tax on first £10 000 earned to be scrapped (previous threshold was approx £5000.) This will cost approx £16billion but will seriously benefit low earners who can be expected to spend this windfall on the local economy anyway.
b. The initial tax loss will be offset by capital gains tax increases on second home sales and sales of shares (ie tax on assets)
I am positive about the UK for the first time in a long time today, I just hope it lasts longer then the Obama factor did in the US!
The Liberals are seen as "progressive" but more importantly have not been in Govt since WW1 and were not expected to be. As a result they are not owned by finance (no-one bothered donating to them unlike the other two parties) and their Shadow Chancellor (Vince Cable)has been against big banks from the start of the crisis and before. He recognized the danger of high personal debt and loose monetary policy, unfair taxation and has stated that the UK needs to unilaterally break up its TBTF banks as they are a danger to the UK itself. He is also the only man who truly seems to realise the desperate situation the UK is in financially with regards to the debt. He is going to be Chief Secretary to the Treasury which will give him a great deal of influence.
With this coalition in place the Govt has a strong mandate to start rolling back govt spending,paying down debt and building a sustainable future.
To secure the coalition the Conservatives have made some serious concessions in accepting some Liberal policy ideas an example of which is below.
a. Income tax on first £10 000 earned to be scrapped (previous threshold was approx £5000.) This will cost approx £16billion but will seriously benefit low earners who can be expected to spend this windfall on the local economy anyway.
b. The initial tax loss will be offset by capital gains tax increases on second home sales and sales of shares (ie tax on assets)
I am positive about the UK for the first time in a long time today, I just hope it lasts longer then the Obama factor did in the US!
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