MAGINNESS: SINN FEIN AND DUP FIDDLE WHILE ECONOMY BURNS
Sunday
22nd February 2009
SDLP
North Belfast MLA Alban Maginness said the Executive is sitting
on its hands under tight two-party control while the economy sinks
and unemployment mounts.
He
said: “Over the last couple of weeks we got figures showing
the sharpest rise in unemployment for nearly forty years and a
64% rise in mortgage arrears. In well-functioning political systems
this sort of news would send the Finance Minister back to the
drawing-board to re-examine the assumptions underlying the annual
budget.
“Unfortunately,
we don’t have an annual budget precisely because we don’t
have a well-functioning system. We have a three-year budget which
is now badly out of date and which was deeply flawed to begin
with. We have an Executive in the tight grip of two parties which
are so terrified of disagreeing on any plan of action to deal
with the downturn that they prefer to have no plan at all.
“We
are in constant danger of Sinn Fein and the DUP walking us into
an even deeper crisis. It is bad enough that they are agreed on
a do-nothing approach, what is much worse is that they are quite
prepared to block those who put forward rational responses to
the current economic situation.
“Mortgage
arrears will continue to rise and more and more people will face
the threat of repossession. The Minister of Social Development
has put forward a Mortgage Rescue Scheme which could help cope
with the problem of repossessions. Unfortunately, Sinn Fein and
the DUP have turned it down for funding in the last three monitoring
rounds.
“Unemployment
is rising most sharply in construction-related trades and services.
There is broad agreement among economists that there is no better
and faster way to boost the local economy than building social
and affordable housing. Even Finance Minister Nigel Dodds has
recognised its effectiveness. But he has not made it the spending
priority it needs to be, he has not rebalanced the housing budget
to take account of falling asset sales. Faster movement on the
£270 million backlog of schools maintenance, which is made
up of a large number of small contracts, could also do a lot to
boost small businesses at local level.
“Economists
tell us the recession will last until 2010. Unfortunately, so
will the flawed budget which Sinn Fein and the DUP foisted on
us in 2007. We are facing hard times and we should be able to
expect the Finance Minister to make some hard choices. His budget
is no longer fit for purpose. Every section of it needs re-examination
in the light of the downturn to find savings that can be put to
better use to boost the economy. Then we need to return to the
prudent practice of annual budgets which prevails throughout the
world.”