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As the debate around the 2010 Business Plan (ABP) plumbs new depths of
incompetence from the Council of Ministers, one has to ask whether the
Jersey electorate can retain any measure of faith or confidence in its
government. One thing is apparent – with two ministers already changing
their minds on what to support – it is not the Council of Ministers’
Plan. Nor does it appear to be the Chief Minister’s Plan; it bears all
the marks of being the work of the Treasury Minister, Senator Ozouf.
First we had an air of mystery and secrecy. In presenting the ABP to
States members on Monday 20th July, the Chief Minister and Treasury
Minister managed to bring the usual stock of well-spun platitudes, but
failed to produce a copy of the Business Plan itself. Of course the
media had seen their copies on the previous Friday, but mysterious
last-minute changes meant that States members could not see it either in
hard copy or electronic form.
Within an hour of the close of this meeting, the first group of States
workers at Grands Vaux Family Centre were being told that their centre
was to close, and their jobs were under threat. The following day, it
was the turn of Patient Transport workers to get the same chilling news
that their service was to be cut. States members did not finally see the
Annex to the ABP, containing the details of how some cuts were to be
delivered until Friday 24th, well after the final States meeting, thus
preventing any detailed questions to ministers.
Even now, no-one knows exactly what cuts are to be delivered. The Health
minister has abandoned many of the proposals she had previously
sanctioned. The Education minister opposes many of the changes forced on
him. States members and scrutiny officers are studying the figures and
seeking clarity from ministers. The answers are few and far between. Who
has the definitive list of where the axe will fall?
The Treasury Minister says that the 0.8% across the board savings he
imposed must be achieved and if some cuts are aborted others must be
found. On Sunday, he stated that some ministers have yet to finalise
their priorities. When will the workers, the public and States members
know? The Chief Minister has offered a meeting for the 3rd September to
finally explain it all – just too late to finalise amendments to the
plan. This is sheer incompetence.
Of course the spin machine rolls on. If we are to believe Senator
Ozouf’s thatcherite dogma, cuts are “efficiency savings” and every
business can bring in 0.8% savings each and every year. This of course
has no basis in reality. He describes the funding of front line services
(such as Williamson proposes) as “new money”. This is a lie; the money
comes from cuts made elsewhere, and he knows it. The driving force is
“value for money”, he says. Here speaks a man who knows the price of
everything, but the value of nothing.
The nostrum he peddles is one beloved of right-wing politicians and
economists everywhere: small government with low public service spending
accompanied by low flat-rate taxes. He is aware that Jersey is bottom of
any league table comparing spending on social protection. The quality of
our public services is remarkable in the light of the low spend, but it
is not out of the ordinary. Yet he continues to portray it as either
grossly inefficient, or as a luxury “Rolls-Royce” oversupply. Neither is
remotely true. Having set himself against my proposals for progressive
tax measures, proper reform of Social Security supplementation, and
evaluation of Land Value Tax, his only option is to substantially reduce
public services and the cut standard of living of ordinary workers with
a wage freeze.
The real driving force behind these policies is Senator Ozouf’s
political ambition. He knows full well that increased spending by
government is an appropriate and correct response to a recession. After
all he has a Fiscal Stimulus war chest of over £100m to do so, with £44m
already allocated to spend this year (again only he knows the details).
Yet that pragmatic approach cannot be applied to public sector services
and wages to the tune of £17m. “Why not?” one may legitimately ask.
Could the answer be that the Fiscal Stimulus money is almost entirely
within the control of the Treasury Minister himself, whereas the other
funding is not?
Perhaps a little light is shed on his motives by his recent initiatives.
A drive towards a centralisation of power and control is evident. At a
time when the financial advisers employed by the States to invest a
variety of funds have managed to produce a loss of around £250 m from
stock market holdings, the Minister proposes to increase the level of
risk by increasing investment of the Strategic Reserve and other funds
in shares to 50%. Control of these funds would rest with the minister
(subject to advice).
The minister’s ludicrous attempt to use standing orders to prevent
scrutiny from examining the Banking Depositor Compensation Scheme (DCS)
is also revealing. It showed his already well-known contempt for the
scrutiny process. While standing for election in November Senator Ozouf
informed voters that a DCS was not needed. Six months later not only was
DCS vital, but Scrutiny was not to delay his plans. His subsequent
involvement in organising a vote of no confidence in the Scrutiny
Chairman concerned was shamefully anti-democratic.
A further glimpse into the ambitions of Senator Ozouf is revealed by his
move to centralise control of departmental budgets. By making
departmental finance officers report to him, the minister will at one
fell swoop reduce the number of decision–makers from ten down to one.
Incidentally, while all other departments suffer budget cuts, Treasury
funds will increase by £600,000 to enable this control. If this proposal
succeeds, we will have witnessed a bloodless coup and one–person
government will have arrived.
What is going on? A fundamental and anti-democratic shift in the balance
of power is under way, led by Senator Ozouf. It must be opposed.
Geoff Southern 07797 772 632
La Rochelle
St Helier
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