Article VH0S Welcome to Austeria – a nation robbing its poor to pay for the next big crash | Aditya Chakrabortty

Welcome to Austeria – a nation robbing its poor to pay for the next big crash | Aditya Chakrabortty

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Aditya Chakrabortty
from on (#VH0S)
It's clear George Osborne intends to make austerity permanent. Those at the top will benefit, but hard times beckon for everyone else

A familiar dance begins on Wednesday, as soon as George Osborne reveals his blueprint for Britain. The analysts immediately begin poring over his plans for the next five years. They tell us how deep are the cuts in neighbourhood policing, how tight the squeeze for your local school - and the knock-on effect for the Tory leadership hopes of George and Theresa and Boris.

But many will miss the backdrop forming right behind them. Britain is now halfway through a transformative decade: staggering out of a historic crash, reeling through the sharpest spending cuts since the 1920s, and being driven by David Cameron towards a smaller state than Margaret Thatcher ever managed. None of this is accidental. While much commentary still treats the Tories as merely muddling through a mess they inherited, Osborne proudly promises a "permanent change" and "a new settlement" for the UK.

Related: UK budget deficit could be 40bn in 2020, academics warn

Austeria is a place where the past is honoured while the future is ignored

Related: UK government waters down financial regulation regime

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