I can't see a drop of 2.5 % points in VAT doing what the government hopes; i.e., persuading Joe Public to spend more. It's too little spread too widely. The only certain thing this achieves is a massive increase in government borrowing that'll need repaying. People earning more than 40K, smokers, drinkers and drivers will be hit with higher taxes first.
Had the government announced a 12 month halt on stamp duty it'd have cost less and restarted the housing market - where the problems started.
As for the falling value of the £ - the government's 'initiative' is likely to be a gift from UK tax payers to foreign manufacturers. The lower value of the £ won't help UK manufacturers - we don't have a manufacturing industry anymore. If spending does increase (as the government hopes) it'll be for foreign made goods. But - as Trog points out - these goods will increase in price by around 20-25% to compensate for the devalued £.
For this great initiative the government will increase the national debt and justify higher income tax & national insurance none of which will be invested in the economy - just to repay debt.
I think I'm going to stop reading the newspapers - too depressing
.
Had the government announced a 12 month halt on stamp duty it'd have cost less and restarted the housing market - where the problems started.
As for the falling value of the £ - the government's 'initiative' is likely to be a gift from UK tax payers to foreign manufacturers. The lower value of the £ won't help UK manufacturers - we don't have a manufacturing industry anymore. If spending does increase (as the government hopes) it'll be for foreign made goods. But - as Trog points out - these goods will increase in price by around 20-25% to compensate for the devalued £.
For this great initiative the government will increase the national debt and justify higher income tax & national insurance none of which will be invested in the economy - just to repay debt.
I think I'm going to stop reading the newspapers - too depressing