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Tuesday 27 August 2024 5:18 pm  |  Updated:  Wednesday 28 August 2024 12:36 pm

Starmer pledges ‘wealth creation’ – but can his policies deliver it?

By: Jessica Frank-Keyes

Political Reporter

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Sir Keir Starmer has warned Brits to expect a “painful” Budget. Photo: PA
Sir Keir Starmer has warned Brits to expect a “painful” Budget. Photo: PA
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“I said before the election, and I say it again really clearly today: growth – and, frankly by that I do mean wealth creation – is the number one priority of this Labour government,” Sir Keir Starmer said.

Stated just moments into his first speech in the (in)famous No10 Rose Garden – watched by key aides, and now head of political strategy, Morgan McSweeney – the Prime Minister laid out what’s long been his top policy promise.

Getting the economy growing, topping the G7, creating jobs, supporting businesses and generating the rising living standards that could secure him a decade in power is, of course, a reasonable set of objectives for any Prime Minister.

To say nothing of McSweeney’s view that getting broken Britain functioning again also represents the solution to so-called “snake oil populism”, as Starmer put it.

But despite that insistence, an absence of immediate clarity – over taxes, over the upcoming Budget, and over the big picture approach to big business – opens the door to an obvious criticism. Just how does the PM plan to create wealth, and will his plan work?

Conspicuous hints – if not outright warnings – of future “pain”, “unpopular decisions” and “difficult trade offs” abounded. That £22bn black hole, he seemed to say, isn’t going to fill itself.

Rumours of an increase in capital gains tax, inheritance levies and even a specific duty on that nebulous word – wealth – weren’t cooled by the contents of his Downing Street address, which surely can only have been intentional.

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Beware a desperate Prime Minister in search of a legacy

Keir Starmer speaking at London Tech Week conference, discussing innovation and technology advancements in the UK.

And if anyone had somehow missed the flashing red warning lights, the alarm really should have begun ringing with the following lines.

“We have no other choice given the situation we’re in,” a dark-suited Starmer intoned amid the brambles. “So those with the broadest shoulders should bear the heavier burden.”

Laura Suter, AJ Bell’s personal finance director, dubbed it the “most compelling indication yet of which taxes could be on the table in the October Budget” and the “heavy pruning needed”.

Starmer cited “cracking down on non-doms” as his example, but refused to elaborate when quizzed by broadcasters on if he also meant “homeowners, shareholders and big business”.

His argument is for a bottom-up form of wealth generation, a country, he says, that “all of us have a stake in”. Proponents of free-market principles counter this vision with the assertion that you “cannot become wealthy by taxing wealth creators”.

Ultimately, the route Starmer’s government hopes will deliver them to that economic peak of ‘highest sustained growth in the G7’ is becoming clearer.

But also steadily growing louder is the echo of the unanswered question: “if it doesn’t work, what then?”

Read more

Nigel Farage calls for General Election after Starmer replacement

Nigel Farage’s party won a barnstorming victory in previously-Tory Kent in May’s local elections, alongside nine other county councils, in part over promises to slash spending. (Photo by Lia Toby/Getty Images)

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