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Downing Street Years - Margaret Thatcher [28]

By Root 2737 0
Clive Whitmore, my principal private secretary, David Wolfson and myself around the dining-table.

This was one of the most dismal occasions of my entire time in government. I enjoy frank and open discussion, even a clash of temperaments and ideas, but such a menu of complaints and negative attitudes as was served up that evening was enough to dull any appetite I may have had for this kind of occasion in the future. The dinner took place a few days before I announced the progamme of civil service cuts to the Commons, and that was presumably the basis for complaints that ministers had damaged civil service ‘morale’.

What lay still further behind this, I felt, was a desire for no change. But the idea that the civil service could be insulated from a reforming zeal that would transform Britain’s public and private institutions over the next decade was a pipe-dream. I preferred disorderly resistance to decline rather than comfortable accommodation to it. And I knew that the more able of the younger generation of civil servants agreed with me. So, to be fair, did a few of the Permanent Secretaries present that night. They were as appalled as I was, and retreated into their shells. It became clear to me that it was only by encouraging or appointing individuals, rather than trying to change attitudes en bloc, that progress would be made. And that was to be the method I employed.*


PUBLIC SPENDING

Such an approach, however, would take years. We were dealing with crises on a weekly basis during the second half of 1979 as we scanned the figures on public spending and borrowing, against the background of an international economy slipping faster and faster into recession. Our first task was to make whatever reductions we could for the current financial year, 1979–80. Ordinarily, public spending decisions were made by government during the summer and autumn of the previous year and announced in November. Even though we were several months into the current financial year, we had to begin by reopening the public expenditure plans we had inherited from the Labour Government. We would announce our new public expenditure plans with the Budget. The scope for cuts was limited, partly because of this, partly because of our own election pledges, and partly because some changes we wanted to make required legislation.

We had promised to increase resources for defence and law and order, and not to cut spending on the National Health Service. We were also pledged to raise retirement pensions and other long-term social security benefits in line with prices — and to honour Labour’s promised pension increases that year. We might have taken cash from the contingency reserve, but if there was to be any cash to take we would have to resist extra claims by government departments — no easy matter. Another possible device would be to squeeze the volume of public expenditure by holding to the existing cash limits, even though inflation had risen since they were set by the previous government. But that in turn would mean holding the line on public sector pay — again, no easy matter. Receipts from privatization might help us to balance the books. But although government-owned shares in British Petroleum could be sold at once, the sale of state-owned assets on a really large scale would need legislation. Much of the work on public expenditure cuts which we had done in Opposition had been overtaken by events, the most damaging of which was the generosity of Professor Clegg. In short, we seemed to be boxed in.

But I was determined that we should make as vigorous a start as possible. I felt that the Treasury’s first proposals for cuts in the current financial year, 1979–80, did not go far enough. Indeed, I had a meeting less than a fortnight after entering No. 10 with Treasury officials at which I told them so very firmly. Accordingly, John Biffen brought forward revised proposals that cut a further £500 million off the total, and I made it clear to colleagues that that was the least we could do.

In the end we were able to announce £3.5 billion of economies

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