What to expect from a Conservative government
1) There was ‘no detail’ on the really big cuts to come
Speaking to Sky News earlier, Paul Johnson of the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) said there was “no detail” of the “really big cuts” the Tories would make in the next parliament:
One thing the prime minister didn’t make too much of but did say, was that he was reaffirming a commitment to getting the overall budget into surplus by 2018. That implies something really dramatic – and we’re talking tens and tens of billions of pounds worth of spending cuts or tax increases even before you start to think about some of the promises that we’ve heard on the National Health Service, on increasing the personal tax allowance.
2) The Conservatives are unlikely to meet the 2 per cent Nato spending target
The manifesto contains only vague wording on this point, saying only that it is meeting the 2 per cent target at present. This is sophistry, for independent forecasts suggest that UK defence spending will fall below the 2 per cent target next year. The manifesto does nothing to assuage those fears. Ironic when David Cameron is playing on fears that Ed Miliband would be incapable of standing up to Russia. Tory austerity might be the real gift to Putin.
3) Free childcare plan and an increase in
From 2017, the Conservatives want to give working parents 30 hours a week free childcare at a cost (according to the Tories) of £350m a year. Labour plans to give parents 25 hours free childcare but has already announced plans to expand Sure Start childcare places by 50,000.
4) People on the minimum wage will be taken out of income tax
In a pitch to coveted ‘hard working people’, the Tories have pledged to introduce a ‘tax-free minimum wage law as well as automatically uprate the basic rate limit with inflation. The Conservatives also plan to increase the higher rate threshold to £50,000 by April 2020. During his speech today, David Cameron said the Tories were “Not just the party of low tax, but the party of no tax.” Which would be fine of course, if the coalition hadn’t already increased VAT in this parliament – a tax which disproportionately hits the poorest.
5) Extending right to buy to housing association tenants
Should they win the election, the Conservatives plan to extend the right-to-buy scheme so that up to 1.3 million housing association tenants in England will be able to buy their homes at a discount. To quote our housing expert Kevin Gulliver (who is well worth reading on this):
Extending the right-to-buy to the country’s 2,000 charitable housing associations, which manage around 2.5m social homes, or around 60 per cent of the total, will confirm the Tories’ aim of furthering the demise of social housing. It will be a part of a wider Tory erosion of the welfare state.
Commenting on the announcement, chief executive of the National Housing Federation David Orr said:
All the efforts of housing associations, local authorities and others are geared towards ending this housing crisis by building new homes and regenerating existing homes where that is the best solution. The right to buy makes that more difficult.
James Bloodworth is the editor of Left Foot Forward. Follow him on Twitter
15 Responses to “Five things we learned from the Conservative manifesto”
Gerschwin
‘We provide evidence-based analysis on British politics, policy, and current affairs’ – balls.
One article extolling the virtues of Labour’s new manifesto.
Another one to say how awful the Tory one is.
You’re just a cheap propaganda mouth piece.
Gerschwin
No one’s reading this.
Confused
Why vote for a range of tiny left-wing parties, many of which are single-issue, when you could vote for an international left-wing party with current representatives at all scales, a proven track record at all scales and a fully-costed manifesto, which is the third largest in the UK – the Greens? Bizarre…
Guest
So much more expensive than you then.
Guest
And you’re no-one, see how that works out?