CP
As Andrew Griffith MP pointed out, if your pay packet fell by 4%, you’d be furious. You’d storm the HR office, email your MP, and fume into your tea.
Yet that’s exactly what has happened to every man, woman and child in Britain, quietly, invisibly, via the stealth tax of inflation.
The pound in your pocket, once a proud symbol of British grit, now buys less bread, less beer, and considerably less hope. And the culprit sits squarely in Number 11: Rachel Reeves, the self-styled guardian of “stability,” who has managed to turn the economy into a wobbly blancmange.
Inflation at 3.8% for the third month running. Three months. That’s not stability, that’s stagnation with a sinister grin. Reeves and her Labour cohorts promised to be “for working people.” Instead, they’ve conjured up an alchemical cocktail of higher taxes, higher costs, and higher prices. And, like a magician botching her trick, they expect applause as your money disappears before your very eyes.
Let’s be clear, inflation doesn’t simply “happen,” like rain on a bank holiday. It’s the result of choices, bad ones. This government has decided that business, the great engine of British prosperity, is a convenient cash cow to be milked until it keels over. Reeves slapped on a £25 billion jobs tax, doubled business rates for many, and smothered enterprise under the warm, damp blanket of regulation. She calls it “fairness.” The rest of us call it economic vandalism.
Supermarkets warned that taxes would push up prices. Reeves did it anyway. Pubs pleaded for relief; instead, they got a new round of levies that will add 10p to your pint before Christmas. And when the landlord shrugs apologetically as you hand over another fiver for a round, remember: it’s not inflation by accident, it’s inflation by policy.
Meanwhile, Labour’s Employment Rights Bill looms like a bureaucratic thundercloud. It promises “security” for workers but delivers red tape for employers. Each new rule, tax, and levy lands hardest on the very people Labour claims to champion. It’s a masterclass in economic irony, a government that wants to help the worker by strangling the business that employs them.
Now, let’s dust off the Laffer Curve, that unfashionable but unassailable truth of economics. The higher you raise taxes, the less revenue you get, because people work less, spend less, and invest elsewhere. Labour is now standing proudly on the wrong side of that curve, where ambition goes to die. They tax, they spend, and they wonder why the till is empty.
Reeves seems to think you can tax your way to prosperity, a notion as daft as fattening a cow by milking it faster. Britain needs dynamism, not dependency. Yet under Labour, innovation is treated like a suspect in a police line-up: questioned, searched, and punished for daring to succeed.
Inflation, let’s remember, is the cruelest tax of all. It hits the poorest first and hardest. It doesn’t discriminate, it devastates. When food, fuel, and rent rise faster than wages, it isn’t just an economic issue, it’s moral. Reeves can fiddle with statistics all she likes, but the simple truth is this: Labour’s policies are making Britain poorer.
For all their talk of “fairness,” Labour has engineered a system where working families pay more for less, where entrepreneurs are shackled, and where growth is something that happens somewhere else, usually across the Atlantic.
We don’t need more slogans about “stability” and “security.” We need freedom, freedom for businesses to hire, to grow, to take risks. We need to reward success, not penalise it. We need policies that unleash the private sector, not corral it into government-approved obedience.
Britain once led the world in industry, innovation, and confidence. We can again, but not while our leaders think prosperity can be legislated into existence. Inflation is not fate. It’s not weather. It’s a political choice, and Labour has chosen to make life more expensive, opportunity scarcer, and the future dimmer.
It’s time to end the experiment in tax and spend socialism before it ends us. Britain deserves better than this weary rerun of failed ideas. We deserve an economy that breathes again, light on tax, rich in enterprise, and free from the suffocating fog of Labour’s economic delusion. We need conservatism.
By Claire Bullivant
This article (Inflation Nation: How Labour’s War on Business Is Making You Poorer) was created and published by Conservative Post and is republished here under “Fair Use” with attribution to the author CP
Featured image: Conservative Post
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