Jumat, 17 Maret 2023

Passport Office workers to strike for five weeks with 'significant' delays expected ahead of summer - The Telegraph

Passport Office workers are to strike for five weeks in an escalation of a dispute over jobs, pay and conditions.

More than 1,000 members of the Public and Commercial Services (PCS) union working in Passport Offices in England, Scotland and Wales will take part in the action from April 3 to May 5.

Those working in Durham, Glasgow, Liverpool, London, Newport, Peterborough and Southport will walk out from April 3 to May 5 while those in Belfast will strike from April 7 to May 5.

The union said the action was a "significant escalation" of its long-running dispute, warning it was likely to have a "significant impact" on the delivery of passports as the summer approaches.

PCS general secretary Mark Serwotka said: "This escalation of our action has come about because, in sharp contrast with other parts of the public sector, ministers have failed to hold any meaningful talks with us, despite two massive strikes and sustained, targeted action lasting six months.

"Their approach is further evidence they're treating their own workforce worse than anyone else. They've had six months to resolve this dispute but for six months have refused to improve their 2% imposed pay rise, and failed to address our members' other issues of concern.

"They seem to think if they ignore our members, they'll go away. But how can our members ignore the cost-of-living crisis when 40,000 civil servants are using foodbanks and 45,000 of them are claiming the benefits they administer themselves?

"It's a national scandal and a stain on this government's reputation that so many of its own workforce are living in poverty."

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2023-03-17 07:59:00Z
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Kamis, 16 Maret 2023

NHS workers offered lump sum and 5% pay rise by UK government - Financial Times

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2023-03-16 14:16:16Z
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Labour vows to reverse Jeremy Hunt's pension tax break for well-off - Financial Times

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2023-03-16 10:06:08Z
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Budget leaves household incomes stagnant and people paying more taxes despite public service cuts, Resolution Foundation says - Sky News

Jeremy Hunt's budget leaves household incomes stagnant and people paying higher taxes despite cuts to public services, the Resolution Foundation has said.

The thinktank, which aims to improve the standard of living for low and middle-income families, said the chancellor had announced an "impressively broad suite of policies" to encourage more people into work.

However, it said: "Britain's economy remains stuck in a deep funk - with people supported into work but getting poorer, and paying more tax but seeing public services cut."

Click here for our budget calculator to see if you are better or worse off

Here are the key findings of the Foundation's budget analysis.

Beating the odds on a recession

The UK is forecast to have gone through "the biggest energy and inflation shock since the 1970s, while avoiding a recession, with unemployment peaking at just 4.4%," the Foundation said.

More on Budget 2023

It compared it to the mid-1970s energy shock which saw a recession with a 3.9 peak-to-trough fall in GDP.

Read more:
Hunt defends speed of budget childcare 'transformation'

A decline in living standards

However, the Foundation pointed to a "disastrous decline in living standards", with typical real household disposable incomes on track to remain lower by the end of the forecast in 2027-28 than they were before the pandemic.

"If even the slow growth of the past decade had continued, incomes would still be £1,800 higher than currently projected for 2027-28," it said.

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Key moments from Hunt's first budget

Taxes on track to hit 70-year high

The Foundation said taxes as a share of GDP are on track to hit 37.7% by the end of the forecast, a 70-year-high and a 4.7% increase since 2019-20, the equivalent to nearly an extra £4,200 for every UK household.

It said despite this the chancellor only has a quarter of the average fiscal headroom of his three predecessors and would not meet the fiscal targets set by Rishi Sunak, Philip Hammond or George Osborne when they were chancellor.

Help for parents

The analysis notes the budget includes the biggest increase in childcare support on record, which it said would encourage more parents to work and make it worthwhile for many to work longer.

The Foundation said under the current childcare system, a single parent of a one-year-old earning the National Living Wage would see their income fall after childcare costs by £370 if they moved from 25 to 35 hours of work a week.

However, under the new system, the same single parent would receive an income boost of £700.

The richest fifth of households are set to gain £180 on average from the extra childcare entitlement, the Foundation said, compared to £130 for the middle fifth of households and £20 for the bottom fifth.

More on Budget 2023:
The key points of the budget at a glance

'An unneeded tax break for wealthy pension savers'

The report was critical of the chancellor raising the annual allowance and scrapping the lifetime allowance for tax-free saving, which it said cost around £1.2bn and was expected to increase employment by 15,000 - a cost of around £80,000 per extra worker.

However, the Foundation said "even those employment gains may be overstated, given that giving very large wealth boosts will actually encourage some people to retire earlier than they otherwise would have done".

It said someone with a £2m pension pot will have received a tax cut of almost £250,000.

Austerity

The Foundation said the chancellor had chosen to "ignore pressures on public services", even though unprotected departments face 10% cuts to real day-to-day spending per capita by the end of the budget, rising to 14% if the newly announced aspiration to raise defence spending to 2.5% of GDP is met over the next parliament.

An investment 'roller-coaster'

The Foundation said the £28bn three-year increase in investment allowances represents the fifth major corporate tax change in two years, which it said illustrated "the lack of certainty that has frustrated businesses".

It said: "The policy will deliver a temporary 3% boost to investment, when what Britain actually needs is a permanent 30% boost to catch up with our competitors (France, Germany and the US)."

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'UK's underlying challenges remain largely unchanged'

Torsten Bell, chief executive of the Resolution Foundation, said: "Jeremy Hunt's first budget was a much bigger affair than many expected, combining improvements to the dire economic and fiscal outlook with a significant policy package aimed at boosting longer-term growth in general, and the size of the workforce in particular.

"A step change in childcare support stands out.

"But stepping back, the UK's underlying challenges remain largely unchanged.

"We are investing too little and growing too slowly. Our citizens' living standards are stagnant. We ask them to pay higher taxes, while cutting public services.

"No one budget could turn that around, but it's time Britain did."

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2023-03-16 06:00:22Z
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Jeremy Hunt’s ‘back to work’ Budget sees pension limits scrapped and free childcare extended - The Independent

Jeremy Hunt unveiled rapidly falling inflation, free childcare for toddlers, and a tax cut on pensions as he used his first Budget to declare his economic plan “is working”.

Saying the UK economy was “proving the doubters wrong”, the chancellor also announced that Britain will avoid a recession.

He used a £25bn-a-year improvement in the country’s finances to set out a “growth” Budget he said would deliver “better jobs and better opportunities” for the future.

And he told MPs the government was on course to reduce debt, leaving “more money for our public services and a lower burden for future generations”.

Mr Hunt used his first full Budget to:

• Announce that inflation is expected to fall to 2.9 per cent by the end of the year

• Scrap the £1m cap on tax-free pension savings

• Give 30 hours of free childcare to working parents of children between nine months and three years old from 2025

• Extend the energy price guarantee, which caps typical bills at £2,500, for another three months

• Resist demands from Tory MPs to ditch April’s planned rise in corporation tax

Mr Hunt later pledged to “fill the 1 million vacancies that companies up and down the country have, so they can grow faster”.

The prime minister, Rishi Sunak, said the “back to work” Budget would help “more people to find the jobs they want”.

But Sir Keir Starmer said Britain was the “sick man of Europe once again” after years of Tory “managed decline”, as he criticised what he said were “sticking plaster” announcements.

The chancellor also faced accusations that his pensions reforms were a tax cut to the wealthy, just as the overall tax burden is predicted to rise to levels not seen since the 1940s.

And the independent Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) warned that households are still expected to face the biggest fall in living standards on record.

There was no money for striking public sector workers, but the highly respected Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) think tank pointed out that the chancellor had still found £6bn to freeze fuel duties and maintain the 5p-a-litre cut announced last year.

Paul Johnson from the IFS said: “£6bn might have been enough to make an inflation-matching pay offer [for public sector workers] possible this coming year. That’s a political choice. Money for motorists, but not for nurses, doctors and teachers.”

He also said that the previously announced freezing of income tax thresholds, which set the level at which workers start to pay different amounts of tax on their earnings, was “an important part of ... why household incomes are still expected to fall more ... than at any point in living memory”.

On the broader economic picture, he added: “We’re by no means out of the woods yet.”

Mr Hunt also faced criticism over his surprise decision to spend £1.1bn a year on a pensions tax break for the well-off at the same time as the tax burden is expected to reach levels not seen since the end of the Second World War.

The move is designed to prevent doctors from leaving the NHS early, but official figures show it will stop only an estimated 15,000 high earners from leaving the workforce, and the Treasury could not say how many of those would be medics.

Treasury sources insisted it was important to find the “quickest and most effective” solution to the problem, as the health service battles a huge post-Covid backlog. But Labour said the move was a tax cut for “the richest 1 per cent”.

The OBR forecasts that the UK’s tax burden will “reach a post-war high of 37.7 per cent of GDP ... in 2027-28”.

Overall, Mr Hunt’s “back to work” plans, including reforms to pensions and childcare, are forecast to increase the number of people working by around 110,000.

The OBR predicted that the UK would avoid a technical recession – two consecutive quarters of decline – and shrink by 0.2 per cent this year. The economy is then due to grow by 1.8 per cent in 2024. But the OBR has downgraded its growth forecasts for later years slightly, to 2.5 per cent in 2025, down from 2.6 per cent, and to 2.1 per cent in 2026, down from 2.7 per cent.

The OBR forecasts, published alongside the Budget, also predict that house prices will fall by 10 per cent, and that net migration will “settle” at 245,000 a year, it estimates, up from 129,000 in its report last March.

In response to the migration forecast, No 10 said the UK has a “points-based” immigration system, but added: “We want to get net migration down.”

Tory MPs on the right urged Mr Hunt to think again over the corporation tax rise, demanding he cuts the rate in the autumn rather than wait until too close to the election, which is expected to take place in late 2024.

Former Tory minister David Jones told The Independent: “I’d like to see corporation tax reduced as soon as possible. The capital allowances do mitigate the increase, but I’d prefer to see a lower rate. The Conservatives must be the party of low tax.”

Former home secretary Priti Patel said she would ask the chancellor to “keep the wider approach to corporation tax under review”.

But his Budget was welcomed by others on the Tory back benches. Daniel Kawczynski, the MP for Shrewsbury and Atcham, said: “He’s just won us the next election by a narrow majority.”

Dame Meg Hillier, the chair of the Commons public accounts committee, said the pensions changes would “do nothing ... to reverse the exodus of people leaving [the workforce]. It might stop some people in their tracks and make them think, but many will have already made their pension plans.”

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2023-03-16 05:14:24Z
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Labour to reverse 'tax cut for the rich' pension reform if it wins the next election - Sky News

Labour has pledged to reverse the plans to abolish the lifetime pensions allowance if it wins power, calling it “a Tory tax cut for the rich”.

The party released analysis saying the policy proposed in Jeremy Hunt's budget will save the wealthiest 1% of pensioners £45,000 when they retire.

Shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves said this was "the wrong priority, at the wrong time, for the wrong people".

"The budget was a chance for the government to unlock Britain's promise and potential. But the only surprise was a £1bn pensions bung for the one per cent, a move that will widen the cost of living chasm," she said.

"At a time when families across the country face rising bills, higher costs and frozen wages, this gilded giveaway is the wrong priority.

"That's why a Labour government will reverse this move. We urge the chancellor and the Conservative government to think again too."

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Jeremy Hunt says the pensions lifetime allowance will be abolished

Chancellor Jeremy Hunt used his budget on Wednesday to announce the abolition of the lifetime pensions allowance.

It means people will be allowed to put aside as much as they can in their private scheme without being taxed - removing the £1.07m limit.

Mr Hunt will also increase the pensions annual tax-free allowance, from £40,000 to £60,000, under measures designed to increase the workforce by removing disincentives to being employed for longer.

The policies will cost the Treasury more than £1.1bn a year by 2027-28, with the aim of stopping an estimated 15,000 high earners - including senior NHS doctors - leaving the workforce.

Labour said they would encourage doctors to stay in work by creating a targeted scheme as the government has done for judges, "rather than create a free-for-all for the wealthy few".

And experts said that millions of savers will feel no impact from the changes, with Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) Director Paul Johnson saying they would "encourage a relatively small number of better-off workers to stay in the workforce a bit longer".

Meanwhile, the Resolution Foundation warned the policies may actually cause some workers to retire early or use "their now uncapped pensions saving to avoid inheritance tax".

Chief executive Torsten Bell said the measures are "hugely regressive and wasteful", adding: "It's a big victory for NHS consultants but poor value for money for Britain."

Sir Keir Starmer, the Labour leader, also hit out at the plan, saying: "The only permanent tax cut in the budget is for the richest 1%. How can that happen?"

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Mhari Aurora explains all you need to know about the budget

Budget at a glance

The pensions tax break was one of the headline announcements from Mr Hunt's budget, alongside a pledge to introduce free childcare for children under three.

Some key policies were revealed ahead of the chancellor's speech, including keeping the cap on energy prices at £2,500 for a further three months, despite a planned rise to £3,000 in April, and 12 new investment zones.

A number of other plans were unveiled by Mr Hunt, including:

• Bringing charges for prepayment meters in line with direct debit charges, impacting over four million households and saving them an average of £45 per year

• Making duty on draught products in pubs up to 11p lower than supermarkets

• Maintaining the freeze in fuel duty

Read more on the budget:
Tax calculator - see if you're better off
Ed Conway: There's a feel-bad factor coming, and this budget won't help

Unions reacted angrily to a lack of measures on public sector pay, saying Mr Hunt "stuck up two fingers to workers with the budget".

The announcement took place against the backdrop of an estimated half a million workers, including junior doctors, teachers and civil servants, walking out in disputes over pay, jobs and conditions.

Despite the promises of help with the cost of living, families still face a painful financial squeeze.

Living standards, based on real household disposable income per person, are expected to fall by a cumulative 5.7% over the two financial years 2022-23 and 2023-24 - less than forecast in November but still the largest drop since records began in 1956-57.

Mr Starmer said: "After 13 years of his [the chancellor's] government, our economy needed major surgery, but like millions across our country, this budget leaves us stuck in the waiting room with only a sticking plaster to hand.

"A country set on a path of managed decline, falling behind our competitors, the sick man of Europe once again."

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2023-03-16 06:00:00Z
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Rabu, 15 Maret 2023

Strikes: 'Shameful' government blamed as hundreds of thousands join biggest walkout in current wave of action - Sky News

Hundreds of thousands of workers are on strike today in what is believed to be the biggest walkout since the current wave of industrial action began.

Teachers, university lecturers, civil servants, junior doctors, London Underground drivers and BBC journalists are among those taking to picket lines around the country to coincide with budget day.

Members of several trade unions are involved in the action amid widespread anger over issues including pay, jobs, pensions and conditions.

One district organiser for the London Underground train driver union Aslef said the root cause of all the strikes was "the failure by the government to fund the vital public services that people need".

Strikes calendar image 08/03/23

Finn Brennan, discussing the action affecting the Transport for London (TfL) network, said: "It is not a strike about pay, it is not a strike looking for more time off.

"We simply want TfL to commit to negotiate with us about changes instead of trying to impose changes."

He said TfL wanted to fill a hole in its budget by cutting staff numbers, working conditions and staff pensions.

Mr Brennan said Aslef members were prepared to negotiate change but that more strike action was "very likely"

RMT general secretary Mick Lynch said today's walkout showed "how determined we are to reach a negotiated settlement to this long-running dispute".

"Attacks on pensions, conditions and job losses will not be tolerated and the travelling public needs to understand that understaffed and unstaffed stations are unsafe," he said.

"We will continue our industrial campaign for as long as it takes."

Screengrab taken with permission from a video posted on twitter by @R_LONDON_H of commuters at Tottenham Court Road underground station at 0800, after a strike by London Underground drivers closed the entire network on Wednesday. Picture date: Wednesday March 15, 2023.
Image: Commuters at Tottenham Court Road underground station in central London at 8am

Read more on the budget:
Budget news - live: Hunt extends energy bill support until June as some measures revealed early
Jeremy Hunt's first budget - here are the things to look out for

No trains are running on any London Underground lines due to the strike by Aslef and the Rail, Maritime and Transport union (RMT).

Pictures and video on social media showed huge crowds of people queueing at Tottenham Court Road station in central London.

Transport monitors say it has increased the number of traffic jams in the capital and meant journey times were longer during the commute.

Despite talks being held between unions and the government, the public sector strikes remain deadlocked.

Read more:
Who is taking industrial action in 2023 and when?
UK lost 220,000 working days to strike action in January

Some of the strikes, such as those by teachers, will only be held in England - where hundreds of thousands of pupils are having to stay home - as progress has been made in Wales and Scotland.

Mary Bousted and Kevin Courtney, joint general secretaries of the National Education Union said: "We do not want to go on strike - we want to be in the classroom, teaching and supporting children and young people.

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Tens of thousands of junior doctors have started a 72-hour strike across England in a dispute with the government over pay.

"It continues to be a regret that our members have to take strike action, but we know that parents and the public understand the gravity of the situation around school funding and teacher recruitment and retention."

Mr Courtney said Education Secretary Gillian Keegan was to blame for the strikes going ahead: "We have suspended our strike action in Wales today and tomorrow because we had a new offer and we're consulting members on it.

"It is Gillian Keegan who is out of step - she just won't sit down and talk with us and make offers to resolve the dispute."

Nadia Whittome, Labour MP for Nottingham East, has donated £3,000 to a strike fund for teachers and support staff in the area.

"Teachers and support staff in Nottingham work tirelessly to give young people the best start in life. Thanks to 13 years of Conservative governments, they are underpaid, overworked and stretched thinner than ever," she said.

"While the decision to strike will not have been an easy one, this dispute is not only about ensuring that teaching staff can provide for their families in a cost of living crisis, but for the future of our education system which cannot continue to treat educators this way."

Ms Keegan said in an open letter to parents that she was "extremely disappointed that many young people will once again miss invaluable time learning" and insisted the action was "completely unnecessary".

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Public and Commercial Services union general secretary Mark Serwotka, representing civil servants and other public sector workers, warned strikes could last until the end of the year.

"On budget day we're asking Chancellor Jeremy Hunt to give our hard-working members a fair pay rise," he said.

"We've been given a 2% pay rise when food inflation was 16% last week. 40,000 civil servants use food banks and 45,000 claim in-work benefits because they're so poor.

"The government can stop these strikes today by putting money on the table for our members."

Aslef union members at a picket line outside Rickmansworth Underground station in Rickmansworth, Hertfordshire, after a strike by London Underground drivers closed the entire network. Picture date: Wednesday March 15, 2023.
Image: Aslef union members at a picket line outside Rickmansworth Underground, in Hertfordshire

Workers incomes 'have fallen 26% in 13 years'

Members of the National Union of Journalists working at BBC Local across England are holding a 24-hour strike in a row over programme cuts.

Meanwhile, junior doctors in the British Medical Association continue a three-day stoppage they launched on Monday over pay.

Mike Clancy, general secretary of the Prospect union, said: "Our members in the public sector have seen their incomes decline by up to 26% over the past 13 years and their work taken for granted - they have had enough."

He said the government had not yet presented a meaningful offer.

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2023-03-15 12:11:15Z
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