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CBI urges water sell-off and end to local tax plan

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Published Date: 26 October 2008
CBI SCOTLAND will this week renew its calls for the privatisation of Scottish Water and abolition of the Scottish Government's plans for a local income tax.
The recommendations, to be delivered to ministers ahead of the next spending round, are aimed at reviving the flagging economy.

Selling Scotland's water industry could raise up to £3bn, according to some estimates. For some time the CBI has urge
d the Government to consider an outright sale of Scottish Water or turning it into a mutual company. It says privatisation would save £180m a year in support costs that could be invested in other GDP-enhancing measures.

With public finances now under pressure, CBI Scotland is expected to take advantage of an opportunity to press ministers for radical measures. As an over-arching objective, it has repeated its demand that the Government assesses all new policies and spending decisions in terms of whether they help economic recovery.

More specifically, it will present eight recommendations in its response to the Government's consultation on the draft budget and spending programme for 2009/10.

Three of these proposals are new: bringing forward infrastructure plans, such as the Forth Road bridge; targeted cuts in business rates; and incentivising councils to support economic development.

It repeats calls for the public sector to extend the range of services it buys from private firms, and for more encouragement for young people to study subjects needed by industry.

CBI Scotland will also reaffirm its opposition to use of the tax-varying powers

CBI Scotland's director, Iain McMillan, said: "Business has a crucial interest in the budget of the Scottish Government, both as significant funders of Government through taxes, but also as beneficiaries of spending decisions, for example on skills and transport.

"We recognise that all tiers of Government are operating within a tighter financial climate, as is business, and as such are having to cut their cloth accordingly. However, their significant remit and budget means the devolved Government has a valuable role in helping firms and the economy through the current economic slowdown."

Action plan

• Review new policies and spending decisions against a single benchmark: will such policies aid economy recovery?

• Accelerate infrastructure projects

• Alleviate cost pressures through targeted reductions in business rates

• Enhance the range of services the public sector buys from the private sector

• Incentivise councils to support economic development

• Privatise Scottish Water

• Incentivise young people to study subjects industry needs

• Scrap plans for a Local Income Tax



The full article contains 419 words and appears in Scotland On Sunday newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 25 October 2008 2:41 PM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
  • Related Topics: Scottish Water
 
1

The Strategist,

26/10/2008 00:40:04
I concluded some time ago that this guy McMillan is not on Scotland's side. Hopefully Alex Salmond will tell him to get stuffed.
2

Mise,

Borders 26/10/2008 09:19:01
No, No, No, No, No, No !

We don't want Alex Salmond acting like Mrs Thatcher.

The public don't want to see their water bills soar - remembered how they did that in England ?

When I worked (and lived) in London, my water bill quadrupled in 7 years.

We just can't afford higher water bills on top of everything else.

CBI Scotland and other wealthy people should look elsewhere for gold-plated investments, instead of enriching themselves at our expense.

And if it's such a good thing, why haven't CBI Scotland privatised themselves ?
3

eric,

26/10/2008 11:54:00
my mate whos on dole in England pays his water bill every 2 wks £16 BY PLASTIC CARD IF HE MISSED ONE PAYMENT THEY HIT YOU WITH FULL YEARS BILL,ON TOP OF HIS OTHER BILLS,he goes 2 days without food.people are really struggling down south.
4

Richard M,

Scottish Raj 26/10/2008 18:13:24
No way Jose! CBI Scotland is playing a tired old Thatcherite record. The experience of every other privatisation of water and utilities is that a few senior executives load the company with debt then make a killing selling on their shares to a foreign company which will then has a licence to print money forevermore. In parts of England, it is common for a family in an average house to spend £75 a month or more just on water and sewerage bills.
5

Mise,

Scottish Borders 26/10/2008 18:49:00
Two of their other aims are:
• Enhance the range of services the public sector buys from the private sector

I think this is the wrong way around. I'd like to see enhancement of the range of services that the public sector buys from the voluntary sector, particularly the social enterprise sector.

Social enterprises are community businesses, which do not distribute profits/surpluses to individuals but use the profits/surpluses to meet their social aims.
The community can be geographical or of common interest.

For more information look at networks such as
www.sbsec.org.uk
www.senscot,net
www.forthsector.org.uk

and successful social enterprises like Bookdonors, www.bookdonors.co.uk

• Incentivise councils to support economic development

This is a priority, but resources should be directed towards new and faster growing and sustainable businesses, preferably ones which have their community's needs in mind, such as social enterprises.
6

Charlie Ferrier,

Hamilton 26/10/2008 20:32:08
Dont do it Scotland.

The CBI people are businessmen first and humanitarians second. The water supply is best kept in the hands of the public sector and controled via the election process.

Its a hell of a twist and quite cynical of these so called men with integrity to try and turn the global crisis into an argument for privatising Scottish water.

These mens greed is what has led to the crisis we find ourselves in in the first place. Remember all they want is profit - once the monopoly is privatised who is going to stop them from raising prices every six months?

The reply to these men should be that rather than privatise water we should be looking at nationalising more of the Scottish assetts held by them - as their greed has clearly overstepped the needs of fairness in Scottish society

 

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