With the Master safely away on vacation, it's time for the Minion to take over. Casting about for fodder to write about, the Guardian answered my call with a detailed story about announcements made today on the economic front.
Naturally the new coalition government chose a tory for the all important post of Chancellor of the Exchequer, in appointing one George Osborne, who delivered a budget plan that business is quietly supportive of (but still complaining anyway), and unions are predictably upset about.
In announcing cuts of 6.25 billion pounds, this no doubt foreshadows the kind of initiatives we can expect here in Canada in the future, regardless of whether we find ourselves with a conservative or liberal government in the times ahead.
I'm no economist and too many numbers make my head hurt, but I've tried to distil the information into a meaningful snapshot of the kind of cuts that have been imposed so we can try to compare that to our situation here in Canada. I've done my best to get all the numbers right but don't guarantee complete accuracy.
Civil servants will take a hit with a hiring freeze of one year. That's expected to translate into savings of 163 million pounds, and thousands of jobs that will go unfilled. An efficiency and reform group has been formed to ensure the cuts really happen this time, including the use of consultants and job perks like paid travel and other expenses. The Cabinet office has to find savings of only 79 million pounds, which is still better than the funding boost to the PMO that the tories gave themselves in Canada while every other government department was cut back.
The National Health Service was left alone, but Education was cut by 670 million pounds. Some was set aside for increasing apprenticeship programs, and while there were cuts of 780 million pounds to the "Department for Communities and Local Government", an extra 170 million was found for social housing. Grants to local authorities were cut by 1.2 billion pounds at the same time.
The famous Home Office was cut by a modest 357 million pounds, with a mind blowing 135 million coming from police services. Compare that to Canada, where we are criminalizing more and more Canadians with our fake law and order agenda, building more and better jails to house them/us. Our various police bodies rarely have a funding request denied despite the fact that the crime rate has been falling for some years now.
In the "Department for Work and Pensions" (their version of Welfare/Disabilities), cuts to various programs totalled 535 million pounds, with an extra 640 million saved by axing a program called the Child Trust, and cutting "ineffective" job training programs. Funny how no matter which side of the Atlantic you`re on, it`s always the least advantaged who must sacrifice the most.
In Economy and Business, 836 million in unspecified cuts were announced. Likely targets are loans to manufacturing interests, especially the auto sector, although unidentified cuts are the easiest to fall off the butcher`s block.
It kind of looks like the new British version of coalition government is alot like a conservative government, with a few sops thrown in for the Lib Dems to keep them happy. Not too surprising given the election results. After all, this is what the people voted for, and they seem to have been unfazed by the results.
Time will tell how this works out, and what effects will transpire across Europe and here in North America. Hey, it beats reality tv for this watcher of politics.