Thatcher

  • Pensions

    Pensions
    June 1979 Pensions would be based not on the ‘movement in prices + earnings, whichever is greater’ but solely on prices – Pensioners set to get poorer relative to those in work
  • Budget raised indirect taxes

    Budget raised indirect taxes
    June 1979 Budget raised indirect taxes (most importantly Value Added Tax VAT) from 8% to 15% but he cut the top rate of income tax from 83% to 60% + the standard rate from 33% - 30% - shift from direct to indirect tax designed to boost incentives by allowing the successful high earners to keep of their income. Interest rates were raised by 14% + these later reached 17% in Nov, rewarding those with large savings, but hurting people with debts. Major relaxation of exchange controls
  • Incomes policy dropped

    Incomes policy dropped
    June 1979 Government Incomes policy was dropped
  • Increased public sector

    Increased public sector
    1979 Thatcher agreed to recommendations for increased public sector pay awards
  • Fall of manufactured goods

    Fall of manufactured goods
    1980-81 falling orders for manufactured goods saw the start of a recession + GNP fell by 3.2%.
  • Manufactoring decline

    Manufactoring decline
    Manufacturing production which was already declining, fell by 14% 1980-81, partly caused by this govt. policy unwillingness to intervene
  • Ballots not compulsory

    Ballots not compulsory
    1980 Employment Act made secondary picketing illegal but didn’t make ballots compulsory or ban sympathetic strikes. All new closed shops (i.e. union only Labour in an industry) had to be approved by a 4/5 of those affected + public funds were made available to encouraged unions to hold postal ballots.
  • Pays awards for police and army

    Pays awards for police and army
    1980 Budget large pay awards for police + army
  • Fall in manufactoring production

    Fall in manufactoring production
    1980 Partly due to Govt. unwillingness to prop up manufacturing production fell by 11%
  • Inflation up

    Inflation up
    Inflation of 22% in spring 1980 up from Labour figure in 1979
  • Increased productivity

    Increased productivity
    1981 Productivity increased amongst those still in work
  • Unemployment rose

    Unemployment rose
    Unemployment rose to 2.7million in 1981, the highest since the depression of the 1930s
  • Abolished low rate of tax

    Abolished low rate of tax
    1981 Budget 25p lower rate of tax introduced by Labour in 1978 was abolished
  • Unemployment rose

    Unemployment rose
    Unemployment rose to 2.7million in 1981, the highest since the depression of the 1930s
  • Riots

    Riots
    Consequences of economic recession wave of riots across inner-city London, Liverpool, Manchester, Leeds + Bristol in summer 1981
  • Fall in popularity

    Fall in popularity
    1982 - Thatcher’s continuation in office threatened. Opinion polls showed the Prime Minister’s personal popularity + that of her govt. had declined significantly
  • Tax Burden increase

    Tax Burden increase
    The overall tax burden increased from 34% of GDP in 1978-79 to 40% of GDP in 1982/3
  • Unemployment

    Unemployment
    3 MILLION
  • Increase in public expenditure

    Increase in public expenditure
    Public expenditure continued to rise, reaching 44.5% of the gross domestic product (GDP) in 1982, largely as a result of the huge increases in the number of those receiving unemployment benefit
  • Inflation fall

    Inflation fall
    Inflation down to 10% 1982 – partly due to high unemployment
  • Employment act

    Employment act
    Employment Act 1982 provided compensation from public funds to people dismissed from closed shops. It also made ‘union labour only’ requirements in contracts illegal. Trade unions became liable for damages if they were the cause of unlawful industrial actions. It gave employers legal redress against industrial action where the action was not wholly or mainly about employment matters (i.e. strikes which could be considered political)
  • Fall in inflation

    Fall in inflation
    At 5%
  • Conclusion

    Conclusion
    Margret Thatcher sticked to her principles throughout. Even though at some points the economy did badly, in the end it was a success, however due to the political and social consequences she was unlikely to be relected