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Downing Street Years - Margaret Thatcher [25]

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second meeting the shape of the budget which Geoffrey Howe announced on 12 June had effectively been set.

It was generally agreed to be a dramatic reforming budget even by those opposed to us, like the Guardian newspaper, which described it as ‘the richest political and economic gamble in post-war parliamentary history’. Its main provisions followed closely our discussions at the end of May: a cut in the basic rate of income tax from 33 to 30 per cent (with the highest rate cut from 83 to 60 per cent), tax allowances increased by 9 per cent above the rate of inflation, and the introduction of a new, unified rate of VAT at 15 per cent.

Apart from the budget’s big income tax cuts, however, we were able to reduce or remove controls on a number of areas of economic life. Pay, price and dividend controls had gone. Industrial Development Certificates, Office Development Permits and a range of circulars and unnecessary planning controls were also removed or modified. (Geoffrey Howe’s second budget in 1980 was to announce the creation of Enterprise Zones, where businesses could benefit from tax breaks and rate exemption to attract investment and promote employment in run-down areas.)

But I took greatest personal pleasure in the removal of exchange controls — that is the abolition of the elaborate statutory restrictions on the amount of foreign exchange British citizens could acquire. These had been introduced as an ‘emergency measure’ at the start of the Second World War and maintained by successive governments, largely in the hope of increasing industrial investment in Britain and of resisting pressures on sterling. The overwhelming evidence was that they no longer achieved either of the objectives previously expected of them (if in fact they ever had done). With sterling buoyant and Britain beginning to enjoy the economic benefits of North Sea oil, the time had come to abolish them entirely. They were duly removed in three stages — some at the time of the Budget, a few others later in July, and the remainder in October (with the temporary exception of controls relating to Rhodesia). The legislation itself stayed on the Statute Book until 1987, but no further use was made of it. Not only did the ending of exchange controls increase the freedom of individuals and businesses; it encouraged foreign investment in Britain and British investment abroad, which has subsequently provided a valuable stream of income likely to continue long after North Sea oil runs out.

But not every capitalist had my confidence in capitalism. I remember a meeting in Opposition with City experts who were clearly taken aback at my desire to free their market. ‘Steady on!’, I was told. Clearly, a world without exchange controls in which markets rather than governments determined the movement of capital left them distinctly uneasy. They might have to take risks.

We had also been distracted throughout our budget discussions by the worrying level of public sector pay rises. Here we had limited freedom of manoeuvre. Hard, if distasteful, political calculations had led us to commit ourselves during the election campaign to honour the decisions of the Clegg Commission on those claims which had already been formally referred to it. The issue was now whether to refer the unsettled claims of other groups to Clegg, or to seek some new method of dealing with the problem.

It was quite clear to me that in the longer run there were only two criteria which could apply to pay in the public as in the private sector. The first was affordability: ultimately, it was the taxpayer and ratepayer who had to pay public sector wage bills, and if that burden passed beyond a certain limit, the country’s economy would suffer. The second was recruitment: pay had to be sufficient to attract and retain people of the right ability and professional qualifications. However, the whole bureaucratic apparatus designed to achieve ‘comparability’ between public and private sector pay — not just the Clegg Commission but the Civil Service Pay Research Unit and other bodies — obscured these simple

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