Budget: Channel Tunnel sell-off to provide £2 billion cash injection for green projects
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A £2 billion cash injection for green projects will be
among measures in the Budget aimed at stimulating economic growth,
Treasury sources indicated today.
Chancellor Alistair Darling is expected to announce on Wednesday
that the fund will be paid for from the proceeds of selling off the
Channel Tunnel rail link.
Both he and Prime Minister Gordon Brown said at the weekend that
state efforts to stimulate private investment would be central to
the pre-election package.
But the Chancellor faced fresh pressure to make cuts today amid
fresh concerns over the strength of the recovery and figures
showing public spending at record levels.
Mr Darling promised a "sensible, workmanlike" Budget yesterday as
he renewed his message that there would be no pre-election
giveaways.
Better-than-expected tax and borrowing figures have given the
Chancellor more leeway than anticipated - up to £12 billion,
according to experts.
But he said voters expected him to be realistic about the UK's
precarious economic recovery and prioritise measures to stimulate
growth.
As he put the finishing touches to his Budget, a business group
predicted that the UK's economic recovery would not pick up pace
until the middle of next year.
The CBI said the end of stimulus measures such as the reduction in
VAT and the car scrappage scheme and subdued consumer spending
meant the economy would remain fragile in the medium term.
A leading forecaster, the Ernst & Young Item Club, said Mr
Darling needed to find another £10 billion through a
"credible, detailed and more aggressive plan", the Times
reported.
And, adding to the pressure for cuts, official figures were
reported to show Government spending now accounted for more than
half of the UK economy for the first time.
Statistics from the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and
Development (OECD), the Daily Telegraph said, put the figure at 52%
of GDP, one of the highest among developed nations.
Mr Darling is not expected to announce any details of planned
spending cuts as Labour believes immediate cuts - as advocated by
the Tories - would wreck the recovery.
But the Financial Times reported that he would identify which
Whitehall departments would bear the brunt of savings from 2011,
ahead of a spending review planned for the autumn.
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