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Business backing for Brown plummets

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Published Date: 09 January 2009
BUSINESS confidence in Gordon Brown's handling of the economy has crumbled over the past few months, according to a poll released last night.
The survey of 200 leading business figures found just 28 per cent were confident in Mr Brown's ability, compared with 42 per cent in a similar poll last October, while confidence in the Chancellor, Alistair Darling, fell from 25 per cent to 16 per
cent.

The results of the ComRes survey came as Lord Jones, a former business minister and head of the CBI, warned the government's VAT cut "was never going to work", while the Labour MP Frank Field branded the move "fatuous" and "pointless" in his internet blog.

But during a tour of Liverpool, where the Cabinet convened yesterday, Mr Brown made it clear he would press ahead with other measures to revive the economy.

The Prime Minister said he would look at further steps to encourage lending.

"We know now how important banks are to the system, but if they can't supply finance, and if they don't keep the money moving in the economy, and if they are not able to fund new business loans or fund mortgages, then we have lost an important function that is vital to every part of the country," he said.

Although economists warned that banks were unlikely to pass on interest rate cuts because of their precarious balance sheets, Mr Darling said lenders had to respond to yesterday's move.

"We need to make sure that lending is passed on and the availability of credit is available for businesses," he said.

George Osborne, the shadow chancellor, said the rate cut was necessary, but it would not help savers.

Vince Cable, the Lib Dems' economy spokesman, said the cut was only half the solution. "For many borrowers, the problem is not the price of credit but its availability," he said.



The full article contains 315 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

 
1

Jimmy Le Pie,

09/01/2009 00:10:20
Looks like Comrade Broon's world is collapsing around his ears.

Call the election, you useless article!!!
2

Jock Tamson,

Scotland, Caledonia, Alba 09/01/2009 00:39:47
The best thing Broon could do to boost the whole of Britain is resign - that does not include recent voters in Glenrothes.
3

Jock Tamson,

Scotland, Caledonia, Alba 09/01/2009 00:47:07
The remarkable thing about bouncing is that it normally begins from a great height and then emulates vetically what a ripple does horizontally.

It ends in a wee plop.

The Broon Bounce has run its course.
4

Scotindy,

Los Angeles 09/01/2009 01:41:23
Oh please! Roll on Scotlands Referendum on INDEPENDENCE in 2010, and get rid of this bankrupt union. The result of the referendum will be that Scotland will be attending the 2012 Olympic Games as an Independent Country. On the other hand england will not be attending , it will be something else called gb!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
5

,

09/01/2009 01:46:13
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6

livilion,

livingston 09/01/2009 02:22:28
Hey, the economy is going(has gone?) down the tubes! what we need is a good lawyer to put things right, failing that Alistair Darling.

I mean if it only takes a degree in 1920s Labour history to save the world, all Alistair now needs is a decent printer to run off some Brown 'cabbage'.

Failing that, do they know anyone needing a peerage with a few bob to spare?
7

livilion,

livingston 09/01/2009 02:28:37
Just think yourselves lucky we are not part of the Arc of Insolvency like Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, Iceland or Ireland, all of whom are no doubt dead jealous of our PM and Chancellor's magic touch with our economy!
8

Dark Lochnagar,

Symington 09/01/2009 03:11:44
It is a pleasure reading the threads tonight without Rufus and his unionist cronies talking shlte. I wonder why he's not commenting on stories like this?
9

Rodster,

Glasgow 09/01/2009 05:29:50
Oh dear quisling Brown is getting found out awww shame
10

,

09/01/2009 05:36:00
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11

,

09/01/2009 05:42:06
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12

Nikostratos,,

09/01/2009 07:50:44
Business backing for Salmond where is it?



http://www.cbi.org.uk/ndbs/press.nsf/939bc8c78700388480256886003bbeac/d05f2ff625652be4802574f10033d7dd/$FILE/CBI%20response%20to%20consultation%20on%20Scottish%20Govt%27s%20Budget%202009-10.pdf


CBI Scotland’s response to the Scottish Government’s
consultation on its Draft Budget 2009-10


7. Ministers should ensure, while its proposed Scottish Futures Trust funding model continues to be developed, that there are no delays to progressing public sector building projects 'funded through other mechanisms'. CBI members have voiced concerns that the current hiatus in agreeing what the Scottish Futures Trust will do, and how it will do it, is unhelpful to the construction sector


Ministers should resist the use of the tax-varying power as it would place a costly and complex administrative burden on both businesses and public sector employers alike.

9. We endorse the (Gordons)UK Government’s new commitment3 to ensuring that all public agencies pay suppliers within 10 days, and ask that Scottish Ministers ensure a similar commitment is forthcoming from publicly funded bodies and local authorities
north of the border


10. The Scottish Government should seek to obtain better value for the money it spends by adopting a more coherent approach to public sector reform, 'involving far greater private sector delivery' of public services. Market-based reforms to the provision of public services in Scotland ought to be widened and deepened

Similarly, the proposal to ban commercial firms from providing GP services is a step backwards


13. The devolved government should privatise Scottish Water, which would free up £182m of devolved government funds each year - as well as provide a useful one-off capital receipt - which could then be used for GDP-enhancing investments


17. Ministers should scrap proposals for a Local Income Tax. According to the Draft Budget, the LIT is set to cost the Scottish
13

Nikostratos,,

09/01/2009 08:06:14
17. Ministers should scrap proposals for a Local Income Tax. According to the Draft Budget, the LIT is set to cost the Scottish Government £20m5 in 2010/11 in preparatory and set-up arrangements alone. This cash should instead be deployed for GDP-enhancing investments
14

Rev. S. Campbell,

Bath 09/01/2009 08:49:56
#13 Who would the CBI have us vote for, do you think?
15

,

09/01/2009 09:13:51
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16

Scimitar1,

09/01/2009 10:11:05
The business community and the working class are deserting them in their droves. As bad as the economy is, the real issue has been the profound societal transformation. Britain today is not a shadow of what it was in 1997 , and the proof of that is the massive numbers emigrating (often for lower paid jobs).

The broken, fragmented (and sometimes alien) 'communities' they created, and the fear some of us have for our grandchildren growing up there, will be their lasting legacy, not the a failed economy.
17

Beachcomber,

Edinburgh 09/01/2009 11:06:50
From the Independent today
ID Contracts

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/compensation-clause-in-id-card-contracts-angers-tories-1242598.html
18

TWC,

09/01/2009 11:34:34
Brown has also been given the cold Bum by Obama. I must admit I'll feel better when somebody else is in charge.
19

Arbroath1320,

Somewhereelse 09/01/2009 12:13:15
General Election now please!!





No. Didn't think so. . . . . . . Bring it On




Saor Alba
20

Nikostratos,,

09/01/2009 15:24:04
#24


#9. Because these Nationalists know the score and cannot defend the indefensible. All they do is attack labour. They rarely (if ever) comment upon a negative snp story, only anything to do with Gordon Brown. They are a bunch of moronic creeps.
21

it has always been allan,

09/01/2009 15:27:38
Gordon does not have any bounce.
He is just having delusions of confidence and support from the whole world.

Instead of just the same delusions of a certain person at Stalingrad.
22

TWC,

09/01/2009 15:58:00
25 Nikostratos,,
Nothing original here then, Salmond has repeatedly trounced Gray (ElMer) and will continue to do so until Labour btreak away from Westminster and drive their own policies.
Brown is finished, Labour need to save the Scottish party.
23

Beachcomber,

Edinburgh 09/01/2009 16:21:22

From today's Open Europe site:

Poll shows 71% of British against joining the euro. An ICM poll shows that 71% of British people are against joining the euro, and 23% are in favour. (BBC Radio 4 World at One, 1 January)

Weak pound adds £3.6bn to UK's EU budget contribution. The falling value of Sterling has added £3.6 billion to the amount the UK Government must pay in to the EU budget over the next three years. This is on top of a trebling of the UK contribution to the EU budget revealed in a Pre-Budget report in November - from £2 billion this year to £6.5 billion in 2011 - figures that were calculated at a time when £1 was worth 1.4 euros.

Lib-Dem Treasury spokesman Vince Cable criticised the Government for giving away part of the UK's rebate three years ago. He said, "Tony Blair should have insisted on much more far-reaching commitments on agricultural reform, and that failure is costing us in higher contributions now." (Independent on Sunday Sunday Express, 4 January 2009)



EU staff get a free ride for Christmas. An Austrian member of the European Parliament has denounced the EU practice of paying for employees' Christmas travel home, especially at a time of financial crisis. Last year the European Commission and Council spent just under 47 million euros on Christmas travel arrangements, which Hans-Peter Martin MEP denounced as a "shocking privilege." (New Europe Open Europe blog, 17 December)

24

Beachcomber,

Edinburgh 09/01/2009 16:23:15
EU will grab UK gas.

http://www.express.co.uk/posts/view/79059/EU-will-grab-Britain-s-gas
25

Jimmy Le Pie,

09/01/2009 16:37:40
Comrade Broon could hold "Britishness Day" on the day the printing presses in Mumbai, start churning out new pound notes. We could use the notes to make bunting?

It used to be called 'devaluation' in Harold Wilson/James Callaghan's day.

Comrade Darling calls it "Quantitative Easing"

Robert Mugabe uses this style of economics.
The Weimar Republic used this style of economics.
Most South American countries have used this style of economics.

Will New Labour Sleaze and Corruption drop newly printed notes by plane or will they just pay them into their own bank accounts and let the money filter down as the party worthies go on spending splurges???

No more boom and bust?????????????????????
26

,

09/01/2009 16:47:57
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27

Proximaking,

Dundee 09/01/2009 17:10:53
Who cares what a bunch of useless CEOs think. Reminds me of what the CBI chairman said on question time the other day, something along the lines of, "we need to free up credit so that well run companies can raise the money to pay their wage bills." Well run companies who need to borrow money to pay a wages bill!? Are these really the people we should be listening to? I don't think so but if you want to live in a world where the rich don't work and you do then get rid of Gordon but if you want to live in a world where you either work or you get nothing whether your name happens to be Hilton, Battenberg or Brown then keep Gordon on because ultimately that is his aim and to be honest that is where he is headed whether he likes it or not. Even the most dim witted can surely see that by now.
28

,

09/01/2009 21:13:52
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29

Alan B,

10/01/2009 00:01:35
It is pretty obvious to anyone with any understanding of the economy that Brown has ruined the uk economy with sheer incompetence.

30

Newton_Invented_Gravity,

10/01/2009 00:02:04
'Poll shows 71% of British against joining the euro. An ICM poll shows that 71% of British people are against joining the euro, and 23% are in favour. (BBC Radio 4 World at One, 1 January)
'

Interesting, but everything is so up in the air at the moment, that circumstances could easily change that could turn opinion around.
31

livilion,

livingston 10/01/2009 00:52:51
#28 Beachcomber

Any breakdown on how much British people in Scotland listen regularly to BBC Radio4?

Anyway you shouldn't go worrying yourself about the EU getting its hands on Great British North Sea Oil & Gas. It's about to run out and hardly contributes anything to the Treasury anyway, does it?

I mean according to the government a wee country of less than 5 millions couldn't get by with it, what good would it be to a continent with 5 hundred million souls?

That business of giving away gifts at Christmas must be stamped on hard, who knows where this sort of nonsense will lead us?

 

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