Britain’s harsh austerity cuts are a watershed that will change the country forever and mark the start of a dramatic retreat by the state from its citizens’ lives, newspapers said yesterday.
Commentators were also in no doubt the £83 billion (US$130 billion) cuts package, unveiled on Wednesday, was a huge gamble with the Financial Times calling it “Britain’s biggest economic gamble in a generation.”
British Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne announced the deep spending cuts which slashed budgets by around a fifth and will likely lead to the loss of half a million public sector jobs.
PHOTO: AFP
They are designed to tackle a record £154.7 billion deficit. Some observers bemoaned the risk to the economy that Osborne was taking and the deep cuts faced by the welfare system, while others praised the Conservative party minister for tackling a sprawling and inefficient public sector. There was little disagreement on one key point, however — Britain would undergo a dramatic transformation in the coming years.
The left-leaning Guardian daily saw a dark future ahead as the benefits system shrinks and the axe falls “on the sick, the poor and on working parents.”
Cuts to the welfare system were “a truly brutal concentration — amounting to a historic resetting of the welfare state — on those who have little.”
“A chancellor cannot take [tens of billions of pounds] out of the economy, as Mr Osborne did, without the country hurting from it. This will be a different country from now on,” the paper said.
But the rightwing Daily Telegraph heaped praise on the comprehensive spending review, as the cuts program is known, saying it signalled that an intrusive state was at last starting to pull in its tentacles. The austerity measures were “an intelligent, businesslike and brave package,” said the paper, adding that Osborne had “made the right call.”
It praised the minister for his efforts to rein in a “totally out of control” welfare budget and improve efficiency across the state sector.
The cuts would shift “the balance away from the overblown and inefficient public sector created by Labour,” the party in office for 13 years until they lost power in the May general election, the Telegraph said.
The Conservative-supporting Sun tabloid declared “Osborne whacks Britain” — but still backed the austerity measures, saying the country had the chance “to make an historic shift away from the benefits culture to work and self-reliance.”
The left-leaning Independent saw the measures as part of a trend in the developed world, saying government everywhere would have to “try to do more, but do it with less. But it can’t. That is why these spending cuts will come to be seen as a first stage of a wider retreat.”
It added that a decade down the line Britons would live in a world of “diminished ambitions, for politicians as for the rest of us. And it starts today.”
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