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Thursday, May 23 2013
Lugubrious Loner
PRESIDENT-ELECT Vladimir Putin faces a thorny dilemma: He is averse to change, but now faces a political landscape that demands it. Although the protest last Saturday in Moscow was relatively small, dissatisfaction runs deep and Putin can't return to business.
WOMEN'S EMANCIPATION
HILLARY Clinton has fought for women's rights around the world. But who would have dreamed that she would have to fight for them at home? "Why extremists always focus on women remains a mystery to me," she told an adoring crowd at the Women in the World Summit at Lincoln...
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2012 budget to help uplift poor families: Osborne

REUTERS LONDON CHANCELLOR George Osborne said he would use his 2012 budget to help those at the bottom of the earnings ladder, hinting he could go further in lifting more people out of paying income tax.

Osborne also said on Sunday the euro zone crisis and high oil prices posed a threat to the global economy.

“My priority is to help low and middle earners. That is where the bulk of the effort in the budget is going to be,” he said on BBC television. “We want to see real and substantial progress on lifting low income people out of tax.” Osborne, under pressure to revive a stagnant economy with rising unemployment and a squeeze on household incomes, was expected to present a neutral budget on Wednesday, sticking to a tough austerity plan which critics say has stalled Britain’s recovery from the global financial crisis.

Government officials have indicated economic forecasts for growth and government borrowing which underpin the budget will remain broadly in line with Osborne’s so-called autumn statement in November, when the growth outlook was revised sharply lower. Any effort to accelerate progress in raising the income tax threshold towards or above a 10,000 pound ($16,000) goal agreed between Conservatives and Liberal Democrats in the coalition government could allow Osborne to removed a 50 percent income tax rate on high earners.

Osborne, singling out a tax paid on house purchases, said he would launch a crackdown on tax avoidance - an area often cited by governments for savings but treated with scepticism by economists.

“People have had their warning - they have got to pay stamp duty on the homes they live in,” he said. “And we are going to deal with that in a very aggressive way.” With three years still to go before the next election - time for the economy to improve before voters have their say - Osborne’s team have calculated they do not need to panic yet or abandon their austerity plan. Headwinds remain - such as high oil prices and problems in the euro zone - threatening Britain’s economy and, possibly, Osborne’s strategy.

“Just because the European Central Bank is putting a lot of money into the euro zone does not mean some of the fundamental problems have been resolved and that remains a major risk to the UK and the rest of the world,” he said.


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