viernes, 28 de enero de 2011

Cameron Says UK Is Determined to Kill Off Debt `Specter' - Bloomberg

David Cameron, U.K. prime minister. Photographer: Jock Fistick/Bloomberg

Jan. 27 (Bloomberg) -- Billionaire investor George Soros talks about the European sovereign debt crisis, the outlook for commodities and the U.S. deficit. He speaks with Erik Schatzker on Bloomberg Television's "On The Move" from the World Economic Forum meeting in Davos, Switzerland. (Source: Bloomberg)

Prime Minister David Cameron will reassert his commitment to eliminating Britain's budget deficit amid criticism that his plans are choking economic recovery.

British banks, households and the government all need to reduce their indebtedness to restore a balanced economy, Cameron will tell the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland today.

"Our first priority is to kill off the specter of massive sovereign debts," Cameron will say, according to remarks released by his office in London. "We can't just flick on the switch of government spending or pump the bubble back up."

Cameron is fighting back against warnings that his plan to almost eliminate the deficit within four years is too severe. Critics including billionaire investor George Soros say the squeeze is sapping economic confidence just as accelerating inflation puts pressure on the Bank of England to end its emergency stimulus.

Britain's economy unexpectedly shrank 0.5 percent in the final three months of 2010 as the coldest December in a century hampered services and retailing, data this week showed. That suggests the recovery faded even before Cameron's government implements the fiscal squeeze, the largest since World War II.

Consumer confidence plunged the most in almost two decades in January, hit by an increase in sales tax, according to a survey published today by GfK NOP Ltd. The Confederation of British Industry said yesterday its retail-sales index fell for the first time in three months and stores see further weakness.

Soros Warning

Soros, who reportedly made $1 billion selling the pound in 1992, said this week that the government will have to rethink its budget deficit-cutting plan or risk pushing the economy back into recession. Cameron's plan cannot "possibly be implemented without pushing the economy into a recession," Soros said.

Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne, who also speaks at the Davos gathering today, will hit back at criticism from the opposition Labour Party by warning that its policies left Britain more indebted than most other major nations.

"Over the last decade our economy became perhaps the most extreme example of any major economy of the dangerous imbalances that now need to be unwound," Osborne will say, according to extracts of his speech released by the Treasury.

Osborne will vow to press ahead and fight the "vested interests" resisting the cuts. He will promise to reduce regulations and simplify the tax system in order to encourage economic growth.

'Illusion of Growth'

Britain experienced "the biggest housing boom, the most leveraged banks, the most indebted households, the biggest budget deficit," Osborne will say. "An illusion of growth built on easy money that has now turned to dust. Adjustment will not be without struggle."

Cameron will say that without determined action to cut the deficit, higher real interest will prevent a recovery from materializing.

The prime minister made the deficit, which grew to 11.1 percent of gross domestic product in the last fiscal year, his top priority after Standard & Poor's threatened to lower the U.K.'s AAA credit rating in May 2009. S&P affirmed the rating after the government presented the fiscal plan in October.

"Already we're making progress," Cameron will say. "Not long ago we were heading towards the danger zone where markets start to question your credibility. Yet in the past eight months we've seen our credit rating -- which was on the brink of being downgraded -- affirmed at the triple A level."

To contact the reporters on this story: Gonzalo Vina in London at gvina@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: James Hertling at jhertling@bloomberg.net

No hay comentarios:

Publicar un comentario