Tuesday, March 31, 2020

A TIME FOR TRUTH

Plaid Cymru Leader Adam Price has called on the Welsh Government to be “honest” about why the agreement between themselves and an unnamed private supplier to provide an extra 5,000 Covid-19 tests a day had collapsed.

The Welsh Government said it was "disappointing" that the company had not been able to honour a “written agreement”.

The Plaid Cymru Leader said it “beggared belief” that the Welsh Government was refusing to say why the deal collapsed or who the company was.

Mr Price said it was in the “public interest” for the Welsh Government to be honest with the public and to “provide urgent answers” on what happened and why.

Some sources have suggested the UK Government was part of the reason the deal collapsed.

Mr Price said that Wales would now look at only 1,100 Covid-19 tests being done daily as opposed to the 6,000 tests that would have been conducted per day had the deal gone through.

The Plaid Cymru Leader said Wales would be “even further behind” on testing with “precious time” lost and “countless lives” at “greater risk”.

He said the Welsh Government shouldn’t be “disappointed – they should be furious”.

Plaid Cymru Leader Adam Price said,

“Having blamed a company for failing to deliver on a vital agreement to provide an extra five thousand Covid-19 tests, it beggars belief that the Welsh Government is refusing to say why the deal collapsed and who the company was – especially if the actions of the UK Government scuppered the deal as some sources have suggested.

“It is in the public interest for the Welsh Government to be honest with the public and to provide urgent answers about what happened -- and why.

“We were assured by Vaughan Gething that by tomorrow [April 1st] six thousand tests would be done per day. Now, because the deal fell through, we’re looking at only 1,100 tests being done a day. Wales will be even further behind on vital testing than we already were. Precious time has been lost and countless lives may now be at greater risk.

“Testing is one of the best weapons we have to defeat this pandemic by tracking and tracking the spread of the virus, and ensuring frontline health and care workers are protected and can go back to work.

“The Welsh Government shouldn’t be “disappointed”, they should be furious.

ENDS

Wednesday, March 25, 2020

EMERGENCY BASIC INCOME

Welsh and UK Government “must do right thing” as discontent grows amongst self-employed

Plaid Cymru Leader Adam Price has called upon the Welsh Government to introduce a temporary universal basic income for the next month amid increasing calls for adequate support for the self-employed during the Coronavirus crisis.

The proposed emergency payment would give the self-employed security for a limited period ahead of any further announcement of support from the UK Government.

The Plaid Cymru Leader said the health and economic crisis would leave millions of self-employed, freelance, sole traders and those on zero hours contracts facing “a catastrophic loss of income”.

He said that “certainty” was now urgently needed in the face of the new restrictions on daily life and that the “quickest, simplest, and surest way” of providing that certainty would be an emergency Universal Basic Income for a limited period – introduced on top of other payments including statutory six pay or universal credit.

Plaid Cymru Leader Adam Price said,

“The Coronavirus isn’t just a health crisis – it’s an economic crisis.

“Millions of people – particularly the self-employed, freelancers, sole traders, and those working in the gig economy or on zero hours contracts are facing a catastrophic loss of income due to the crisis which will now be exacerbated by the lockdown.

“What’s lacking is what people urgently need - certainty. Certainty that they can pay their bills, certainty that they will be able to put food on the table and certainty that they will get through this.

“That’s why we’re calling on the Welsh Government to provide an emergency Universal Basic Income for a month as the quickest, simplest, and surest way of providing much needed certainty for the self-employed, freelancers and those on zero hours contracts until the UK Government finally step up to the plate.

Shadow Economy Minister Helen Mary Jones added,

“In times such as this, what we need now more than ever is an ambitious and innovative plan that gets to the heart of the issue rather than introducing a patchwork plan.

“Here is an opportunity for the Welsh and UK Government to prove that they can adequately respond to the biggest crisis facing us in recent memory.

ENDS

Editor’s Notes:

A Universal Basic Income at median income would cost £247m for a whole month for the Welsh Government (with backdated payments to the 1st of March 2020)

• 100% matching of Welsh monthly median income for all 210k self-employed (£295 x 4) £1180 and giving it to all self-employed.

• Total cost = 210k self-employed x £1180. Cost: £247m a month.

HELPING THE SELF EMPLOYED

For the small business, this desperate situation is going to really, really hurt. If the business owner is a director of a small company and he has been an employee of said company, on the payroll, then there seems to be a little bit of help available. If they have ‘recognised’ business premises, then more help is available. 

However, the self-employed, working from home, have nothing. They have been directed to gain Job Seekers Allowance or Universal Credit. 

This is unacceptable - an absolute joke. Whilst all this is going on, no doubt the self-employed will still be trying to secure some income. 

We need to get this right for our self employed business people as they along with our small to medium sized enterprises are the economic lifeblood of much of our economy, trading with us, with each other and generating wealth that circulates within our economy locally and regionally.

Plaid Cymru has called on the UK government to immediately produce a package of support for self-employed workers, including:

The self-employed, freelancers, sole-traders, and workers in the gig economy must be given the same level of support as employed workers will be receiving.

This means that up to £2,500 a month must also be available for the self-employed who will stand to lose customers or won’t be able to work.

Saturday, March 7, 2020

LABOUR’S SCANDALOUS INACTION

Delyth Jewell Slams Welsh Government for ‘Scandalous Inaction’ Over Perinatal Unit

Unit was promised as part of Plaid Cymru budget deal but Labour set to renege on promise

Plaid Cymru’s Delyth Jewell AM has criticised the Labour Welsh Government for failing to open a specialist perinatal unit in Wales, despite promising to do so as part of a budget deal.

The specialist unit was due to be opened in Swansea in 2021, but last month the BBC reported that an interim unit on a psychiatric ward would be opened in Neath instead, going against the recommendation of mental health experts.

Speaking in a Plaid Cymru debate on mental health in the Senedd, Delyth Jewell said:

“I believe that the first person to call for a specialist unit to be developed was my predecessor Steffan Lewis and he was successful in playing a part in achieving a commitment from the Welsh Government to develop a permanent unit by 2021 as part of the 2018-19 budget deal between Labour and Plaid Cymru.

“Now we know that it doesn’t look like this is going to happen, with Labour set to break a budget deal promise by opening an interim unit within a psychological hospital instead.

“This is not what was agreed and is not what’s needed. Breaking a budget deal commitment is a very serious matter indeed, not only in terms of political trust, but more importantly in this instance, it means that new mothers will continue to be denied the treatment that they need.”

She went on to praise BBC Cymru Wales for a series of “excellent” journalistic stories about women who faced terrible tribulations as a result of having to go to England to access treatment, or receive treatment in inappropriate settings in Wales.

She read out the experiences of some of these women as reported by the BBC [contained in attached document].

South Wales East AM Delyth Jewell closed her passionate speech with the following words:

“According to the Welsh Health Specialist Services Committee, women now face a choice, ‘between receiving inpatient care more locally but being separated from their infant, or remaining with their infant in a specialist unit but needing to travel away from their support networks’.

“They add that in many cases women choose to access local acute psychiatric services that are ‘not fit for purpose and lack specialist knowledge’. This is a choice no one would have to face, especially new mothers in a crisis situation.

“So the message to the Welsh Government is this. These women need this specialist perinatal unit. The experts agree. You promised to provide it. So get on with it before any more new mothers have to suffer because of your scandalous inaction.”

In her response the Deputy Minister for Health simply pointed to the interim unit that’s set to be opened in a psychiatric ward, which falls very short of what the Welsh Government agreed to provide (see budget deal document below)

NOTES FOR EDITORS

Full copy of the speech attached [600 words]

Link to Official Budget Agreement 2018-19 and 2019-20 Agreement between Plaid Cymru and Labour that includes, “The Welsh NHS will develop specialist inpatient perinatal mental health support for new mothers and their babies in Wales”: https://gov.wales/sites/default/files/inline-documents/2019-05/budget-agreement-2018-to-2019-and-2019-to-2020.pdf

Thursday, March 5, 2020

SIMPLY LOOKING THE OTHER WAY

One reasonable definition of fair tax is that it’s the fair dues we all pay to participate in our society. Our taxes can be used to fund projects (significant and not so significant) that benefit us collectively and to provide a safety net for society. Tax is and probably always will be (and probably always has been) a subject that stirs people up on both sides of the electoral divide within these islands. 

The trick to realising that you have been sold a pup, is first to notice that you have been sold one. The Party formally known as New Labour, the Conservatives and the neo Liberal Democrats have been hooked on the idea that either by cutting, reducing taxation for the rich (and corporations) or even perhaps by turning a blind eye to tax evasion, avoidance, etc - that wealth will trickle down from the top to the rest of us. The problem is that wealth just simply does trickle down.

This questionable theory was pumped out by Ronald Reagan (and Mrs T) in the 1980’s is still remains  largely dominant; it’s not a new theory. US Presidential candidate William Jennings Bryan (in 1896); who noted ‘that if you will only legislate to make the well-to-do prosperous, their prosperity will leak through to those below’. ‘Trickle-down theory’ first appeared in the 1932 US Presidential campaign, when Democrats used it to hammer Republican Herbert Hoover’s plan to engineer economic recovery by making the rich richer.  

Fifty years later even Ronald Reagan’s supporters struggled to sell the idea to their own party, even George Bush (Senior) mocked Reagan’s theories of supply-side economics as ‘voodoo economics’ at least until he got the Vice Presidential slot. On this side of the pond there were even some monetarists who told Mrs T straight that the idea was nonsense and that it would not deliver results  - naturally she did not listen.

Across the pond, Reagan’s first budget brought in a moderate reduction in the basic tax rate, this was followed by the a drastic reduction of the top tax rate from 70 to 50 percent and later still to 28 percent. If the theory was correct then, the public coffers should have swelled with enough extra revenue to balance the budget within one to two years. Unfortunately, the theory was incorrect, within the eight years of Reagan’s Presidency the total Federal deficit soared from around $900 million to some $3 trillion dollars.

What followed has been described as an orgy of speculation in stocks, shares and real estate (this was the era of ‘Greed is good’), ordinary Americans stopped saving and started spending. Through the 1980’s there was a near continuous decline in long-term capital investment – on which economic growth and jobs were dependent.  To make matters worse the USA went into recession and the Federal Reserve had to raise interest rates to hold down the inflationary consequence of the tax cuts, by 1981/82 unemployment in the USA rose about 10% for the first time since the aftermath of the great depression in the 1930’s.

The gulf between the wealthy elite and the rest of the population became a chasm, the rich got richer and parallels have been drawn between the 1980’s and the Gilded Age of the 1870’s (income tax was abolished in the US and was only reintroduced during the First World War).  The 1980’s for the mega rich in the USA was an era of conspicuous consumption and extravagance – yet oddly enough very little of this prosperity tricked down to the American middle and working classes.

Interestingly enough average US family incomes did not return to the level they were at in the 1970’s until 1987 – wile this may have sounded good, the harsh economic reality was that Americans were now working harder and longer – in 1973 an average American worker had 26.2 hours of leisure time per week, by 1987 this was down to 16.6 hours per week.

One result was that jobs were also now less secure, Americans now worked on short-term of temporary contracts in increasingly un-unionised working environments - something that was also mirrored on this side of the pond. For blue-collar workers the 1980’s were a disaster, wages fell through the decade as employers threatened to move production overseas (in the 2000’s they did) because the workers had priced themselves out of employment.

The neo liberal / neo conservative right wing, in the US and here in the UK crowed about how government should not interfere with (or regulate very much) the ‘free market’.  This hands off attitude was also duly applied to the US savings and loan industry, laying the groundwork for the collapse that was to follow in 2007. The only exception being that if things went really pear shaped then it was expected that Government would collect the tab. One side effect of all this was fraud, 650 savings and loan companies collapsed, with the $1.4 trillion dollar tab being picked up by the US government.

On this side of the pond, building society after building society were floated on the stock market – and within a few years were readily absorbed by increasingly greedy banks.  In the US, exploitative working practices and sweatshops reappeared encouraged by the effective withdrawal of regulation and inspection. The 1980’s also saw the growth of increasingly powerful media empires and a concentration of power in fewer and fewer hands despite much reputed mantras from government about greater competition and choice for consumers.

We are all still living with the consequences of that period in the 1980’s when an ideologically driven obsession with the ‘free market’ and ‘privatisation’. Heaven help anyone who dare question these sacred truths – the very heavens may fall. The problem is that the market was rather than being ‘free’ it was pretty much increasingly unregulated as Governments in the USA and the UK largely looked the other way – tax collections fell and ironically tax evasion soared.

This state of affairs was tolerated by the long time dying Major Government and largely encouraged by the former New Labour governments of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown and barely mentioned by the former Con Dem government. Even the crash has not changed things - there was some talk about tacking tax evasion which was matched by continuing (significant) staff cuts to HMRC - justified by the harsh financial necessities of austerity.

It is interesting because tax evasion and tax avoidance, at least outside of the UK, is rarely out of the headlines with many heavily indebted governments being particularly keen to hunt down every tax dollar / euro / pound that is owed by tax evaders avoiding (unlike the rest of us) paying their fair dues to society. The Westminster elite privately at least regardless of whatever they say publically, appear to pay scant respect to the idea of fair taxation and fair representation, we now appear to be as close as possible to being governed by the sons of bankers and the sons of the City in the interests of the City (of London).

The real problem is that the current Bozo UK Government is, much like all previous Westminster governments (whether under Tony, Gordon, Dave or Teresa) since the end of Empire, remains in up to its neck when it comes to tax evasion. The UK Westminster government is heavily involved in aiding and abetting tax evasion worldwide. British Overseas territories, including the Cayman Islands, help to hide around trillions from pounds from the different nation’s tax authorities.

In the belly of the Westminster beast lies the City, which may explain why the former New Labour government, the former Con Dem coalition government and the current now unrestrained Conservative government (were and) remain very reluctant to do anything about the problem as some (but not all) of the city banks are hand in glove with drug dealers, dictators, oligarchs, rogue states and terrorists when it comes to money laundering. The inertia may be explained by the lure of comfy lucrative seats on the board for former Westminster politicians.