The business secretary, Vince Cable has told delegates at the Liberal Democrat conference in Birmingham three priorities – stability, stimulus, and solidarity – are needed if the UK’s economic fortunes are to be turned around.
He said the current economic crisis is the equivalent of war, adding: “It is wishful thinking to imagine that we have a healthy economy being infected by a dangerous foreign virus. Many of our problems are home-grown.”
In a largely downbeat speech by the business secretary, there were few positives to note, though he mentioned some of the “real achievements” made by the Department of Business, Innovation and Skills over the past year: “We have greatly expanded apprenticeships,” he said. “We protected our science budget and we have launched a chain of Technology Innovation Centres promoting the technologies of the future. We have established a Green Investment Bank to benefit major green projects.”
Cable added: “Nick Clegg has driven our Regional Growth Fund, investing in businesses and jobs up and down the country not just the South East.”
It was then the business secretary outlined the three ‘S’s: “Stability in the government’s finances – the deficit problem – and in our banks. Stimulus to support growth; sustainable growth based on business investment, exports, green technology and manufacturing. Solidarity to give people a sense of a shared society, reducing our appalling inequalities of income and wealth, and creating a responsible capitalism.”
Cable also called for banks to “perform their basic economic function” of productive investment, something he claimed they are currently not doing. “Banks operate like a man who either wears his trousers round his chest, stifling breathing, as now, or round his ankles, exposing his assets,” he said. “We want their trousers tied round their middle: steady lending growth; particularly to productive British business, especially small scale enterprise. No more feast and famine in bank lending.”
“A lot of responsibility rests on the Bank of England to relax monetary policy further linked to small business lending,” he added.