Archive for October, 2010

Spending Review: Hardly a Bitter Pill for Northern Ireland

PM meets other party leaders in Northern Ireland

Image by The Prime Minister's Office via Flickr

There’s a lot of nonsense and hyperbole being spun around the 4-year spending review announced by the Chancellor today – and the effect of these cuts on Northern Ireland.

The NI resource budget has been cut by 6.9 per cent over four years. As has been pointed out by Secretary of State Owen Paterson “that’s a saving of 1.7p in every £1 the Executive spends” – it’s hardly a doom and gloom laden budget prognosis.  Capital spending will fall by 37 per cent – although this is less than the 50 per cent reduction that the previous administration had mooted.

Paterson has made clear that the NI investment strategy relies on funding from a number of different sources, such as the Reform and Reinvestment Initiative and asset sales.  Therefore the St Andrews commitment to £18 billion investment will be achieved by 2017/18. He’s being a tad vague on ramp-up – but these are uncertain times.

Public spending per head in Northern Ireland is already 25 per cent higher than in England and nothing that was announced today will materially affect this differential. I, for one, would say that more extreme medicine was probably required. Moreover, Northern Ireland will be allowed to roll over any underspend this year into next year.  This is not available to English Departments. This surely provides an incentive to the Executive to make available top-up funds for capital projects – by encouraging departmental underspend.

Sammy Wilson is of the view that Northern Ireland “has been done no favours” with the announcements today. Perhaps not, but the extent of the “cuts” will be substantially less than many local economists had predicted. Moreover, in cash terms, Northern Ireland’s block grant is protected.

This could have been a lot worse – and IS much worse in GB. The Executive needs to build consensus and strike a budget sooner rather than later. And Unison, UNITE and the rest need to get real.

Stormont Yesterday

On a teal background, the letters "BBC&qu...

Image via Wikipedia

If you are not such an anorak as to be able to sit through Newsnight to watch Stormont Today on BBC 2, then it’s handily available on BBC iPlayer.

I was last night’s star turn wearing my Economics pundit hat.

Watch it here

Sheer Infuriating Hypocrisy

 

Peter Robinson at the Evolve Public Policy Forum

Image by DUP Photos via Flickr

 

It has taken me a full day to temper the invective I was planning to use in response to Peter Robinson’s contribution to the education debate. To those of you who wanted me to welcome the DUP leader’s new-found fondness for secular education – you’re about to be disappointed.

This man has been involved in one of the most divisive forces in Northern Ireland politics. The DUP has systematically propped-up the malevolent cultural apartheid that corrupts every corner of our civil society. But now he wants a single state education system. This man runs a political party and front bench team that wants creationist garbage taught in our schools and “intelligent design theory” featured in our museums. His party’s flat-earth perspectives and reactionary dogma is the utter antithesis of all that is right-minded and free-thinking. He fronts a rag-bag collection of bigots and political fossils that have helped put Northern Ireland on the international laughing stock map of small-minded mini nations.

His motivation for having a single state-funded education system, with funding removed for state schools, runs counter to logic and decency. Don’t get me wrong. I’m no advocate of Irish medium schools – I don’t believe that state funding should have been extended to such schools. They are patently absurd. However many schools that he describes as church schools attain some of the highest standards of academic excellence not just in Northern Ireland – but also in the United Kingdom.  To remove state funding from some of our finest schools would be a public scandal.

Few, if any, of our finest church schools are “faith schools” in a pejorative sense. None is permitted to discriminate on the grounds of religious faith when employing staff. All adhere to state recommended curricula. Most teach children good standards of citizenship and mutual respect.

As an Atheist I choose to send one of my my children to a Quaker school – a school that makes clear that it accepts children of parents of faith and those (like me and my wife) who have no faith. It also happens to be a school that attains incredibly high academic standards. It certainly does not force religious doctrine or liturgy on its pupils. In all respects it adheres to the academic guidelines defined by the Accord Coalition.

Indeed, while Northern Ireland’s decency and civil society have been undermined by politicians, clergy and the two-tribe mentality of the state, our teachers have been beacons of tolerance. Our much maligned education system has managed to produce wonderful, well rounded and decent children against all the odds. And our so-called “integrated system” has been at the vanguard, often, of the two-tribe mentality when some of our best schools have focused, instead, on producing some of the best academic standards in Western Europe.  State-funded grammar schools help produce the highest scores in GCSE and A Level results in the United Kingdom.

For readers that aren’t familiar with the aims of the coalition, here they are. And, for the benefit of Peter Robinson, I suggest that he encourages all state-funded schools to embrace these aims. Then we will, indeed, have one system of education.

Declaration of Aims of the Accord Coalition:

In a pluralist, multi-cultural society, the state should promote tolerance and recognition of different values and beliefs. Given the dangers of segregation and the importance of community cohesion we need schools that welcome all and are committed to non-discrimination. Schools should promote a culture of questioning, of knowledge, of respect and of exploration of values, where students develop their own identities and sense of place in the world. We believe all state-funded schools should:

1. Operate admissions policies that take no account of pupils’ – or their parents’ – religion or beliefs.

2. Operate recruitment and employment policies that do not discriminate on the grounds of religion or belief.

3. Follow an objective, fair and balanced syllabus for education about religious and non-religious beliefs – whether determined by their local authority or by any future national syllabus or curriculum for RE.

4. Be made accountable under a single inspection regime for RE, Personal, Social & Health Education (PSHE) and Citizenship.

5. Provide their pupils with inclusive, inspiring and stimulating assemblies in place of compulsory acts of worship.

And we commit to work with each other locally and nationally to turn public support for inclusive education into a campaign for reform that the government cannot ignore.

Paterson Strikes Right Chord on Corporation Tax

Owen Paterson – the Secretary of State – appeared on the BBC Hearts & Minds programme on BBC Northern Ireland last night and made all the right noises. He cautioned against sensationalist media speculation about draconian reductions in Northern Ireland’s block grant and he continued dropping heavy hints about reductions in Corporation Tax. But he was also realistic about the need for the local Executive to play its part in helping to reduce the UK budget deficit.

On a trip to Boston last week he was dropping heavy hints that he may want to undercut the Republic of Ireland’s corporation tax rate by implementing a 10% rate for Northern Ireland. He also elaborated on why he is getting rather fed-up with the division industry that insists on separate sectarian inspired institutions (like schools) that perpetuate the Norn Iron two-tribe consensus. Well said.

I’ve said some pretty hard-hitting things about Owen on this site – and will not forgive or forget the UCUNF debacle. But on fiscal matters Paterson is making good sense – and I hope it continues next week.

Price of the Silver Bullet? Wise-up Sammy.

DSC01776, Belfast Parliament, Belfast, Norther...

Stormont: Image by lyng883 via Flickr

Sammy Wilson, our perma-tanned Finance Minister, has just made the point on BBC Spotlight that if the the cost of a reduction in corporation tax is a £500m reduction in the the block grant he, and his Assembly colleagues, would say ‘no’ to such a reduction in corporation tax.

This neatly sums-up the sheer lack of any strategic vision on the part of the Finance Minister and his Assembly colleagues.

Regional tax differentials are an extraordinarily handy way to rebalance regional economic inequities. If the Treasury offers Northern Ireland the tantalising prospect of a reduction in corporation tax the Assembly should grasp the opportunity with both hands.

Northern Ireland’s costs of doing business are substantially lower than the Republic of Ireland’s. We have better infrastructure. We have more ready access to the UK economy and markets. And we have very useful clusters of businesses – especially in ICT. A reduction of corporation tax to the same level as the Repeublic of Ireland would be a strategic move in the right direction to putting the Northern Ireland economy at significant competitive advantage over other parts of the UK – including the South East of England.

To forego the opportunity to create huge economic competitive advantage for indigenous business growth and FDI on some aburd point of principle would be foolish in the extreme and Sammy Wilson is crazy and blinkered to suggest he would look this gift horse in the mouth.

The Assembly needs to wise-up on this issue. The prize of a reduction in corporation tax is a huge one. Don’t mess it up.

UUP Executive Rough and Tumble

Tom Elliott MLA

Image by niassembly via Flickr

A well-placed UUP mole has been in contact.  Apparently the UUP had its first Exec meeting (at the weekend) since Tom Elliott was elected leader. Elliott made it known to Exec members in advance of the meeting that Party discipline was all-important and that ill-disciplined members would be punished.

I’m advised that a certain UUP Councillor from Newtownabbey took exception to this and made the point that certain senior members of the party should also exercise discipline. Apparently, one of those aforementioned senior members of the party proceeded to “rugby tackle” the aforementioned councillor. Indeed, such was the physicality of the exchange I gather that the councillor claimed he had been assaulted – although later dropped the accusation when pursued by the media.

Must have been an interesting meeting.

Consumer Focus Axed…What About NI Quangos?

The BBC is reporting that Consumer Focus – the body set up by the last government to “represent consumers” – is to be scrapped.

This has got me thinking…what Northern Ireland based quangos should also be axed?

Here’s my list of the more obvious Northern Ireland bodies that could be axed – or whose functions could be incorporated into other governmental functions.

Northern Ireland Consumer Council

(If you think I’m being unfair, just get a load of this organisation’s head-count and ask yourself is there any way this organisation represents good value for money for consumers)

Ulster Scots Agency

Youth Justice Agency

Health Promotion Agency

Audience Development Agency

Northern Ireland Commissioner for Children and Young People

Equality Commission Northern Ireland

Northern Ireland Human Rights Commission

These are the ones off the top of my head…any other suggestions?

Skeptics Galore

I note from Slugger that a new Skeptics group is meeting in Belfast.

Wish them success.

Hope those who want local politics secularized will be attracted – from across the left/right spectrum.

Fleeing The Ship

I gather that the UUP has lost, in a matter of days, two of its “rising stars”. More falling squibs it would appear. Just a week after mumbling farmer Tom Elliott was elected leader, Colleenesque “community worker” Paula Bradshaw has quit – leaving no high profile female members. And former “rugby star” Trevor Ringland has left the scrum.

Begs the question why they ever got involved in the sorry disgrace of a party in the first place and what political home they may now seek.

Perhaps they might end up with a newly revived, non-sectarian Conservative Party. But that brand has hardly emerged from the general election unscathed. Sectarian gerrymandering in Fermanagh. Unionist unity talks. Etc.

I’ll watch with interest.


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Musings on things political and secular…

This is my site where I share my world views for anyone who might be remotely interested. Visit only if you think the content is interesting. Oh and comment is free. So go right ahead and agree or disagree. But, please, be kind and polite (especially to me).
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