Not exact matches
The main concerns are
cutting the budget and our taxes, enlarging the private
sector through either deregulation or
public - private partnership, and encouraging greed, on the belief that
if all persons are sufficiently greedy there will be no poor.
What does stare us in the face and
if you can not come clean then sadly this is just another new Labour rag blog, is that
public cuts are coming with Labour or the Tories, the
public sector will be hit hard.
Even
if the recovery had been progressing as well as ministers might have hoped, we would still have seen the clashes over
public sector pensions, tuition fees and
cuts to
public services - police, schools, the NHS - currently driving the government's popularity downwards.
The
public may not like the
cuts but
if it believes that
cuts were inevitable and the deficit was the consequence of too much
public sector expenditure then we really are fucked.
This is an indication that
if Labour were in power now, while they wouldn't be
cutting so hard and fast, they would effectively
cut the pay of
public sector workers.
«Labour's next leader needs to support
public sector cuts and embrace the Big Society agenda
if they are to be heard by the
public.
«We know they plan to get rid of a million
public sector jobs and
cut the value of
public sector pay every year in the next parliament
if they win the election.
They have asked:
if they are prepared to threaten strike action that could see six airports closed over a one per cent pay increase, what will they do when the
cuts to the
public sector as ushered in later this year?
«
If we do not implement these changes it will be impossible to rally people behind
public sector spending
cuts and any serious attempt to
cut the deficit will fail.»
If the tax cuts are financed by cuts to public sector spending, their net economic effect might be less than if that spending was continue
If the tax
cuts are financed by
cuts to
public sector spending, their net economic effect might be less than
if that spending was continue
if that spending was continued.
Although Miliband told Andrew Marr that «
if Labour was in power now, we wouldn't be making those changes, we wouldn't be
cutting as far and as fast as the government», he said it was right to support the Government's pay freeze for
public sector workers:
Labour will lift the cap, but the Conservatives will instead
cut public sector pay to «a level not seen in (at least) the last 20 years», which is «likely to exacerbate current recruitment and retention problems», warned the
IFS.
MORI's poll asked
if people supported strike action by «people in a numbre of
public sector jobs» over job
cuts, pay levels and pension reductions — they found 48 % in support, 48 % against (Ipsos MORI, 19th June.)
Public sector unions are threatening «co-ordinated industrial action»
if ministers try to implement
cuts as deep as 40 %.
At a time when pressure on school places and buildings is increasing, and the
public sector is being asked to make more
cuts on spending, it is critical that school providers understand current issues on planning
if they are to make best use of their built assets, according to Karen Cooksley and Lindsay Garratt from law firm Winckworth Sherwood
Trump's budget ends the effective Perkins Loan program, eliminates the Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grant program, makes record
cuts to Pell Grants, dumps the program to forgive student loan debts
if a student works for at least 10 years in selected
public sector jobs and ends a program that covers interest payments for low income students while they are enrolled in school.