Facing The Future - Lib Dem Policy Paper No.100
Facing The Future - Lib Dem Policy Paper No.100
Facing The Future - Lib Dem Policy Paper No.100
Contents
Contents Foreword Our Values Challenges and Opportunities
2.1 2.2 2.3 Economic and Fiscal Challenges and Opportunities Social Challenges and Opportunities Environmental Challenges and Opportunities 2.3.1 2.3.2 2.3.3 2.3.4 2.3.5 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 2.8 Climate Change Energy Resource Use Biodiversity Food Security
2 3 5 9
9 12 14 14 15 16 16 17 18 20 22 24 25
Political Challenges and Opportunities Foreign policy and Security Challenges and Opportunities Demographic Challenges and Opportunities Public Services Challenges and Opportunities Challenges and Opportunities in the Criminal Justice System
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Foreword
The only reason to keep the Liberal Party alive, wrote Jo Grimond, is to promote liberalism. I agree. Today our party is vibrantly alive - and kicking. Kicking against the vested interests that draw power away from people. Attacking the barriers to a fair, open society. Promoting liberal values in the international community. Laying the foundations for a sound, balanced economy. Building a more liberal Britain. In Government, we are demonstrating that we have the mettle to take the difficult decisions to put the countrys finances back on track and the imagination to reform our political system, our public services and our economy. The Liberal Democrats are the only party with both the steel required to fix the public finances and the zeal to build a fairer society. We are also showing that coalition, so long feared as an alien political creature, is a legitimate, effective form of government for Britain. But as we are sharing power in Westminster with another political party, it is even more important for us to be clear about our guiding principles. This document sets out our values; highlights the challenges that, from a Liberal Democrat perspective, we face as a nation; and summarises our priorities for policy development during this parliament. As liberals we depart from the other two main political traditions in three critical ways. First, we place our faith in people, rather than institutions. States, markets and communities can give people power. But they can also hoard power - in state bureaucracies, market monopolies and social norms. Labour is a party of state power. Conservatives believe in the power of the free market. These are honourable political traditions. But they are not ours. For us, the litmus test of any institution, law or reform is whether it gives more power to people to lead their own version of a good life. The exercising of power by people individually and together is the basis of social progress. As this paper puts it: Our vision is of a society in which power (political, economic, social) is as widely distributed as possible and people have the capacity to make the lives they choose for themselves. Second, liberals are the consistent optimists of politics. Optimism fuels our mission to redistribute power. It makes little sense to argue for people to have more power in their workplaces, in communities, over public services unless you trust them. And thirdly, we instinctively look forwards, not backwards. For the other two traditions, gripped sporadically by nostalgia, the ideal society often seems to lie in the past. For us, it lies in the future. The advance of individual freedom, knowledge, reason, democracy and material wealth translate into real progress for real people. We are in this sense the most progressive party. It is also why we are so passionate about the need to protect the environment for future generations. A quarter of a century ago, David Steel said: I am not interested in power without principles. But equally, I am only faintly attracted to principles without power. ...We will do nothing, change nothing, achieve nothing unless we can first gain power and then use it wisely. Autumn Conference September 2011 3
Facing the Future We are setting ourselves a high hurdle. To govern wisely on the basis of our distinct liberal principles, and to set out a compelling vision for a more liberal future. We have to make this parliament a liberal one. And ensure that our period in office is not simply a pause in the swinging of the two-party pendulum - but the first instalment in a new, better politics.
Our Values
1.1 Liberal Democrats starting point is the flourishing of the individual. The wellbeing and self determination of individual citizens are central to our values. That contrasts with conservative and nationalist thinking which place the interests of institutions - such as nation, race or family - before the individual and socialist thinking which, traditionally at least, sees people in terms of class allegiances. That is not to say that we do not recognise the centrality to most peoples lives of social relationships, for example through local communities, voluntary groups, families and work. Often, people are at their happiest because of their relationships and collaboration with others. But we see such connections as a means to promoting the flourishing of individuals and not as ends in themselves.1 1.2 Because of this focus on the individual, we are wary of concentrations of power which can threaten the freedom of the individual. This applies to coercive state power, but also to corporate economic power and to informal but still potentially oppressive social pressures to conform to a certain way of life or thinking. Our vision is of a society in which power (political, economic, social) is as widely distributed as possible and people have the capacity to make the lives they choose for themselves, whilst acknowledging our responsibility to others. Challenging concentrations of power and seeking to distribute power as widely as possible is at the heart of the Liberal Democrats approach. We therefore favour the maximum possible devolution of political power to local communities (especially through local democracy), the break-up of monopolies, whether public or private and regulation of market power, and the promotion of education and a diversity of voices in public debate. 1.3 Liberal Democrats are champions of civil liberties and human rights. We believe in due process, the rule of law, and the right to own private property as a bulwark of liberty. The state only has a right to intervene when the actions of citizens have a negative impact on others. We also believe that there are basic human rights, such as the right not to be imprisoned without charge, which are inalienable and are not conditional on the citizen fulfilling any particular responsibilities. Liberal Democrats value each individual equally. We are firmly opposed to any unfair discrimination based on prejudice and uphold absolute equality in political and legal rights. 1.4 At the same time, those who wish their own rights to be respected must expect to honour the rights of others. Liberal Democrats expect all citizens to obey the law of the land and that there will be consequences for those who do not. The rule of law is the foundation stone of a liberal democratic society. We also believe that there are some positive benefits available to citizens in a liberal democratic state which bring with them obligations to behave as good citizens in a broader sense for example those who do very well financially have a moral obligation to contribute proportionately more to fund the common needs of society, and those who are in receipt of benefits because of unemployment have an obligation to seek work actively. We value the idea of individuals contributing to build strong communities.
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Our ideological inheritance is covered in greater detail in our values paper, Its About Freedom (2002)
1.5 Liberal Democrats see the market as a mechanism for creating wealth and enhancing individual power and choices, rather than as an end in itself. Markets can encourage enterprise, and promote innovation. But left to their own devices, markets can allow unfair accumulations of wealth and concentrations of power through, for example, the creation of monopolies, and cartels, thereby reducing individual choices and freedoms. Unchecked markets may also allow our natural environment to be damaged or destroyed, thereby endangering our prosperity and quality of life and those of future generations. Governments should therefore promote competition where that is practical and regulate dominant market players where it is not, or where markets alone will not protect the public interest. They should also ensure the provision of the public goods that markets alone fail to deliver and take action to ensure environmental sustainability. As Barack Obama said in 2008, government cannot solve all our problems, but what it should do is that which we cannot do for ourselves. Liberal Democrats believe that government can be a means through which individuals cooperate to tackle their shared challenges and enhance their freedoms, using the power of democracy an enabling state. We are also clear that each government intervention must be justified by its contribution to the public good, and must be subject to careful scrutiny by representatives of the public. 1.6 The reason we value these approaches is because we believe they are the best way of enabling people to have the best quality of life that they can, which should lie at the heart of policy-making. Recent developments which allow us to measure peoples wellbeing effectively are important new tools in helping us to do this. If people having the best lives that they can is the most important goal and it is difficult to see anything else which is more important then we believe that the best way of achieving this is to equip individual citizens with the information they need to make informed choices about their lives, and the consequences for their long-term wellbeing. This is a distinctively Liberal Democrat approach, different from others who believe they know the choices that people should make about their own lives. Our approach to doing this, and specific policies towards achieving it are set out fully in policy paper 102, A New Purpose for Politics, (2011). 1.7 No system of values avoids difficult choices. There can be tensions between liberty and security, between private interests and the public good, between national standards and local flexibility, between individual choice and equity of provision in public services. However Liberal Democrats are strongly united in support of genuine equality of opportunity. Such equality of opportunity can promote freedom for those from the poorest backgrounds, while not running the risks inherent in any system focused on absolute equality of outcome. We believe there is an important enabling role for the state to make this a reality. Opportunities are not equally distributed in modern Britain. Where you are from, what your parents did, the school you went to, your social class, ethnicity and gender still have a significant impact on your chances in life, your educational attainments, your work prospects, and even how long you will live. In some respects, evidence suggests that the position has got worse rather than better in recent years. (eg. the proportion of children from the poorest backgrounds getting into the top universities has been falling). This can be tackled by both by strong public institutions to support broad-based opportunities (for example through a high quality, universally available public education system) and more targeted programmes to help those at particular disadvantage to improve their life chances. While rejecting absolute equality of outcomes
Facing the Future as an objective, we also recognise that high levels of overall economic inequality hold back social mobility, are linked to some social problems (such as ill health) and can undermine equality of political and legal rights. Inequality of wealth is particularly persistent and unlikely to be addressed without significant intervention. We also recognise the concerns which have been raised about fairness across generations. 1.8 Liberal Democrats believe that our focus on individual rights is fully compatible with support for flourishing communities. Human beings are not solitary creatures and thrive best in social environments. Local community action can be more effective than either national state programmes or market solutions in meeting many social needs. Communities, whether geographical or otherwise, are not a good in themselves but provide the necessary arenas for individuals to come together to meet their needs and attain their aspirations. It follows that community organisations should be open and accountable and, where they are spending public money, subject to democratic oversight. Different sorts of community, (for example local, national, belief) can be strongly bound up with individuals sense of identity and the impacts of government policies and market forces on communities must be taken into account. However Liberal Democrats will always be sceptical about arguments to put the greater good of a community as a whole above the rights of individuals or minority groups within that community. 1.9 Liberal Democrats are instinctively against narrow nationalism against building the solidarity of a state and its citizens through antagonism to others. This is distinct from patriotism a positive pride in our country and the values that we share. Cooperation across frontiers promotes peace and prosperity; nationalist rivalries provoke conflict, as the history of the twentieth century bitterly demonstrated. Liberal Democrats believe that the kind of rights and benefits we aspire to in the UK should also be available to people throughout the world. Liberal Democrats support the growth of international law, and the development of democratically accountable international institutions as mechanisms for spreading and safeguarding human rights and protecting humanity from global threats. 1.10 In a highly-integrated global economy, Liberal Democrats support the use of institutionalised international cooperation, within a strengthened framework of international law, to promote the values of environmental sustainability and democratic choice. We want to ensure that freer and fairer trade is extended. However these international structures themselves must be made accountable and not a source of bureaucratic dictation or the top-down suppression of local cultures. 1.11 Protecting our environment is arguably the most pressing challenge which we, as a country and as a planet, face today. Pollution, threats to biodiversity, the wasteful use of resources, food crises and human-made climate change are all direct threats to individual freedoms and opportunities. A degraded natural environment damages personal health and quality of life, weakens our economy and harms local communities. This is as true for future generations as it is for present ones. So Liberal Democrats place sustainable development at the heart of our thinking. We use the definition of sustainable development from the 1987 Brundtland Report, development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. We recognise that the costs of environmental damage too often fall on those least able to bear them. Our vision of sustainable development therefore embraces the three pillars of
Facing the Future the economy, society and the environment. For Liberal Democrats, sustainability is not an option or an add-on policy but a principle that lies at the heart of everything we do.
Facing the Future 2.1.6 To counter the recession, interest rates have been kept unprecedentedly low during the last two years. As a result, high levels of debts have not been as harmful as expected. Home repossessions, for example, have been lower than predicted. Nevertheless, high levels of debts do make households vulnerable, as well as adding risk to lenders loanbooks, and we should not be sanguine in future if indebtedness rises. We need to improve financial education to tackle the culture of debt that has developed. 2.1.7 The best way to reduce debt levels is for house prices to increase below the general level of inflation, so that people can take out smaller mortgages while remaining wellhoused, and pay off those mortgages more quickly. We welcome the Coalitions commitment to improve housing affordability by aiming for stable nominal house prices in future, which will also allow more young people to access the housing market. 2.1.8 A further major weakness was the poor position of the public finances prior to the recession. The public deficit reached 11 per cent of GDP, and contained a structural deficit of 120 billion. Put simply, Labour spent too much or taxed too little, putting us in a bad position to cope when the recession arrived. Sorting out that mess is now requiring tough choices in communities across the country, including in regions which did not benefit from sustained investment during the upturn. The lesson for economic policy is to ensure that a balanced economic development strategy that creates growth and builds export capacity is put in place during an economic upturn to cushion the inevitable downturn when it comes. 2.1.9 This leads to a further challenge for the UK economy dependence on a relatively limited number of sectors and on traditional international trading partners (EU and other G7 countries). Britain has many globally competitive firms in internationally-traded services (such as financial services, which includes a lot more than just banking), high technology manufacturing (such as pharmaceuticals) and creative industries. However these have their limitations. They are geographically concentrated in the richer parts of Britain. Banking has been very important but has taken a big set-back and is unlikely to recover to its previous levels in the foreseeable future. And all of these sectors tend to produce a limited number of well-paid jobs for the highly educated but few intermediate jobs. 2.1.10 While we need to develop new trade links with new markets, we also need to do far more to deepen and expand trade with traditional markets, most notably the EU. The UK needs to be at the forefront in driving forward positive, ambitious and bold single market measures and new free trade deals, building alliances with our European partners so that we can deliver new growth, jobs and greater competitiveness for the future. 2.1.11 The relatively small size of the manufacturing sector in the UK compared to EU countries like Germany and France has often been remarked on. Despite its small size, the UK manufacturing sector still includes quite a number of producers of low-technology goods vulnerable to competition from emerging economies. While not wishing to romanticise manufacturing or imagine we can go back to a golden age of Britain as the workshop of the world, we should be questioning whether there are changes to the UKs economic policy mix which could strengthen the UKs performance in the high to middle
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Facing the Future technology manufacturing sector, as part of the overall challenge of broadening the economy sectorally, regionally, and in terms of our international trade relationships. 2.1.12 Britains economic strengths should not be underestimated. In addition to the competitive sectors mentioned above, we have an effective and flexible labour market relative to most European countries, which is why unemployment has risen much less markedly than most economists expected. We have for example seen many people on short hours, resulting in fewer becoming unemployed. This is both fairer in that it spreads the pain and more efficient, in that people who are unemployed can see their skills atrophy, and can lose their connection to the labour market. Of course, we want to see short-time working end, just as we want to see unemployment fall. We also have to recognise that many emerging economic powers have even greater labour flexibility. 2.1.13 Over the long run our standard of living as a nation is determined above all by the skills of our workforce. The single most important long term economic policy is to educate everyone to their fullest potential. Unlike a century ago, when new technology replaced skilled labour, today new technology requires skilled workers to make the most of it. We therefore need people with skills as never before. This is particularly true in a globalised world in which many manufactured goods can and will be produced overwhelmingly in low wage countries. 2.1.14 In addition, Britain needs to have effective infrastructure. We need our roads, trains, planes and shipping to work effectively. We also need good telecommunications. The best time to invest in infrastructure is when financing costs are low, and construction prices keen. 2.1.15 There is increasing evidence that a strong competition policy is critical. Competition forces out firms that offer poor service or over-priced goods. Forcing firms to compete directly improves our standard of living in the short run, but also creates firms which can compete internationally, and who are well-placed to innovate and expand. Competition policy also needs to be sensitive to new entrants new firms such as BlackBerry or Streetcar can shake up a market to good effect. 2.1.16 Despite the difficulties of recent years, Britain remains one of the most prosperous countries in the world with many world class firms and industries. Our vision for a sustainable and balanced economy is one founded on strong growth contributing to social and environmental aims, underpinned by long-term investment with a well-skilled and versatile workforce. This will be the foundation on which a fairer, resilient and open Britain will best compete on the global stage. But it must not mean a return simply to how things were before the recession. The new economy which emerges must be truly new, placing sustainable development at its heart.
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Facing the Future years and simply redistributing money to the less well off through the tax and benefits system. The limits of this approach are now obvious. While of course accepting the need for a redistributive tax and benefits system, we emphasise measures to help people where possible to succeed for themselves in the economy. We therefore applaud the creation of a pupil premium, and remain committed to expanding it significantly. 2.2.7 A long-term feature of the labour market in all developed economies which presents a difficult challenge for social mobility and increasing opportunity is the replacement of many traditional clerical, skilled and semi-skilled manual occupations by automation and IT. This means that we have a labour market with an increasing proportion of graduate-level jobs and still many low-skilled jobs, but with the middle range significantly reduced. It is obviously more difficult for people who wish to climb up the ladder when some of the rungs may have been knocked away. At the same time we still have a problem of too many young people who lack even the basic skills needed for any paid employment.
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Facing the Future blocks approach, which aims at achieving agreements on such issues as finance, forestry and technology, which could later be embedded in a broader legal framework. 2.3.1.5 Given that some impacts of climate change are already occurring and further impacts are inevitable, we must start preparing now. One example is in water resources. The Environment Agency predicts that the amount of water available in England and Wales could drop by 10 to 15% over the next forty years. But the population is expected to increase by around 20 million by 2050. 2.3.1.6 The need to adapt to climate change also has implications for policies on land use planning; designing infrastructure; building regulations; and emergency planning. 2.3.2 Energy 2.3.2.1 The Climate Change Act 2008 requires the UK to reduce our greenhouse gas emissions by 80% by 2050 (from a 1990 baseline). Reaching that target will require action in the three areas responsible for 80% of emissions electricity, heat, and transport. 2.3.2.2 Demand for electricity is projected to double by 2050, partly because the most practicable means of decarbonising the transport and heat sectors is to deliver them via low-carbon-generated electricity. At the same time, there are also questions over the UKs energy security. Britain became a net importer of oil in 2004 and gas in 2006. All but one of our nuclear stations, and about half of our coal power plants, representing around a quarter of electricity generation capacity, will close by 2023 and must be replaced (although not necessarily, of course, on a like for like basis). The Governments aim is to deliver secure energy on the way to a low carbon future. This embraces a mix of renewable energy, new nuclear power and fossil fuel power stations fitted with carbon capture and storage (CCS) technology. The Government will subsidise the relatively new technologies of renewable energy and CCS, but not the much more mature technology of nuclear power; and is initiating a major programme of energy efficiency improvements in buildings and industry. 2.3.2.3 All of these goals need to be achieved without making energy unrealistically expensive for consumers or making the level of fuel poverty worse. In addition, although low-carbon industry sectors will see a significant expansion of activity, employment and exports, some other sectors, particularly energy-intensive industries such as aluminium and steel, will face difficulties in adapting to higher energy prices, and require some offsetting measures. 2.3.2.4 In its first year, the Coalition Government, under the leadership of Liberal Democrat ministers in the Departments of Energy & Climate Change and Business, Innovation & Skills, has made major strides in achieving carbon reduction targets. The Green Deal, a major initiative aimed at significantly improving the energy efficiency of homes and buildings, at no up-front costs to consumers, will be introduced from October 2012. Clear incentives for investment in renewable energy are being established through the reform of the electricity market, the feed-in tariffs scheme for microgeneration, and the Renewable Heat Incentive. And 1 billion has been allocated for the first commercial-scale CCS demonstration.
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Facing the Future 2.3.2.5 However, much more needs to be done to drive forward the clean energy revolution in the UK, in energy, transport and industry, and in particular in using innovative means to channel domestic savings (currently at a record level) and foreign direct investment into the low-carbon sectors such as green ISAs or other financial products, and the proposed Green Investment Bank. Liberal Democrat policy, which sees no role for nuclear power, and aims at a more ambitious emissions reduction target than the governments, needs to be reviewed in the light of progress in the UK and EU and globally. 2.3.3 Resource Use 2.3.3.1 Humans are living beyond the ability of the planet to support life. In 2003, the first report of the UNs Millennium Ecosystem Assessment showed that 60 % of the basic ecosystems that support life on Earth are being degraded or used unsustainably. The resources and absorptive capacity of about one and a third planets are now needed for sustainability; if everyone in the world lived like people do in the UK, three planets would be needed. 2.3.3.2 In Britain, we still landfill over half of our municipal waste, threatening the environment and wasting valuable natural resources. This is some way off the EU average of 40% and Germany and Holland landfill only 1% of their municipal waste. 2.3.3.3 UK households now recycle over 38% of their waste. But British households lag well behind those in other European countries: Austria (69%), Germany (65%), Belgium (60%) and Holland (59%). 2.3.3.4 The Coalition Government is committed to working towards a zero waste economy and is currently carrying out a review of waste strategy in England. 2.3.3.5 We are also profligate in our use of scarce resources such as rare earth metals, used in a range of vital technologies from computers to smart phones, wind turbines and hybrid petrol-electric cars, and other speciality metals like lithium. And many renewable resources, such as timber and fish, are being consumed at a rate exceeding their capacity to regenerate. There is increasing interest in, and experience of, systems of controlling supply chains so that, for example, timber, fish or palm oil which has been sourced sustainably can be clearly identified, or given preference in government and business procurement policies; these should be developed further. 2.3.4 Biodiversity 2.3.4.1 Biodiversity loss is a serious environmental challenge that has received insufficient attention. The UN study on the Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity (TEEB) says that on average one third of the Earths habitats have been damaged by humans and that the loss of biodiversity costs businesses up to $50billion every year. 2.3.4.2 At the World Summit on Sustainable Development, held in Johannesburg in 2002, governments agreed to reduce significantly the loss of biodiversity by 2010. They did not
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Facing the Future keep this promise. Nor did the EU meet its commitment to stop the decline in biodiversity in the Union by 2010. 2.3.4.3 The 2010 UN summit on biodiversity agreed to at least halve the loss of natural habitats and expand nature reserves by 2020. All signatories to the UN Convention on Biodiversity, are required to draw up national biodiversity plans. But the long term trends in the UK are still worrying. Last year, Natural England reported that more than two animal and plant species a year are becoming extinct in England and hundreds more are severely threatened by hunting, pollution, development, poor land management, invasive species and climate change. This represents about a quarter of all species in the best-studied groups, including every reptile, dolphin and whale species, two-thirds of amphibians and one-third of butterflies and bumblebees. 2.3.5 Food Security 2.3.5.1 Global food prices are rising. This is partly due to climate change and extreme weather; a recent study estimated that since 1980 global wheat production had fallen by 5.5%, and prices had risen by 18.9% because of climate change. Price rises are also a result of rising aspirations in developing nations and to derivatives trading systems. At the same time as hunger is rising in some countries, other countries including Britain are experiencing a steep rise in obesity and a debate is being had about the sustainability of some of our food production and systems. 2.3.5.2 With increasing pressure to produce more from less, renewed questions are being asked in Europe about the potential of biotechnology to supply food and tackle climate change. Meantime, in the US, legal challenges to the GM industry by the agri-environment sector point to the difficulties of different farming systems working compatibly in one country.
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Facing the Future predominantly elected House of Lords is a more immediate prospect. Moreover, decentralisation remains a pressing concern. Effective political institutions at lower levels represent an opportunity to meaningfully involve far more people in the political process and to have a more human-scale system of involvement. 2.4.7 Now that Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland have autonomous government, England remains as the most centralised state in the democratic world. Key political challenges for 2015 will therefore be delivering an effective devolution of power to democratically accountable local government in England, building on the current Localism Bill, and to find an answer to the English Question whether that implies an English tier of government, or regional or sub-regional bodies in England, perhaps based on cities or historic counties.
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Facing the Future interest to pursue practical cooperation with our European neighbours through the framework of the EU, and to use the powers available under the Lisbon Treaty to promote shared political and economic objectives. We support a common European response to the challenges posed by changes across the Arab world, in managing both the transition to more open regimes and the surge in migrants and refugees that insecurity across the Middle East threatens to create. 2.5.6 The British debate on our place in the world, and in particular our role in Europe, remains stuck in an outdated narrative of global status and distrust of Germany and France. Liberal Democrats over the next four years should be leading the national debate on how the UK develops an understanding of its foreign policy role and priorities more appropriate to the global transformation through which we are living.
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Facing the Future good for the economy as a whole, the evidence is less clear on the short run impacts on existing low-skilled workers. The change in the age profile of the population may also have affects on our culture and social attitudes older people tend to be for example much more concerned about issues like crime and anti-social behaviour than younger people. 2.6.4 These challenges raise a number of questions for government policy. The first of these is how to respond to the increased demands for spending generated by an ageing population. How far can health, care and pension provisions increase as a proportion of GDP, should this be in the public or private sector, should we be cutting expenditure elsewhere or allowing the overall tax take to rise, are there implications for universal versus targeted benefits? 2.6.5 The second is the issue of the UKs housing problem, which is not solely a result of demographic change but which is highlighted by it. How can we achieve an adequate supply of affordable housing in the places and types of homes people want to live in, while upholding the principle of sustainable development? This is a key to answering many problems involving social mobility, debt levels, boom and bust cycles and economic competitiveness. 2.6.6 The third is the highly sensitive issue of economic migration and community relations. How can we reconcile a liberal migration policy which allows the UK economy to benefit from the valuable skills migrants can bring, while maintaining public confidence in the immigration system and addressing concerns about integration and the problems caused to local areas by sudden surges in immigration? 2.6.7 It is important not to overlook the opportunities that demographic changes bring. Many people will enjoy good health much longer into old age and be able to contribute much more, both economically and through involvement in families and communities. It is also necessary to be wary about long range predictions for population numbers in the 1930s projections based on contemporary trends predicted a halving of the British population over the following half-century.
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2.7.3 A notable feature has been the pace of reform, with major reforms introduced simultaneously across a range of different services. 2.7.4 A major challenge for public services over the coming years will simply be to manage with fewer resources and to cope with the pace and scale of change. 2.7.5 While there is much about the Governments programme of public sector reform that Liberal Democrats can welcome (and indeed was drawn from the Liberal Democrat Manifesto, such as the Pupil Premium), there are also issues which will need to be addressed. In particular, how far local devolution is combined with local democratic accountability, how far local decision-making can be reconciled with national standards and entitlements, how far a holistic approach to people using different services can be maintained in an environment with a diversity of providers, and how far co-operation between services can be combined with competition between providers.
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2.8 Challenges and Opportunities in the Criminal Justice System and Civil Liberties
2.8.1 There is clear evidence that crime rates have been falling since the mid 1990s, with overall crime as recorded by the British Crime Survey down 50% since 1995, including a 3% fall in 2010. 2.8.2 Despite the improving crime figures, there remain real challenges. Whatever the trends, the commission of 26,000 crimes a day, including 1,000 injuries being inflicted, represents an enormous amount of human suffering. And some categories of crime such as sexual offences have not shared the general downward trend. Crime and the fear of crime are unsurprisingly one of the leading public concerns in the UK. 2.8.3 The efficiency and effectiveness of the criminal justice system itself also presents a continuing challenge. Only one in a hundred crimes results in a conviction in court, with detection rates varying enormously between police services. There are particular concerns about the way rape is tackled. The government estimates that as many as 95% of rapes are never reported to the police at all. Of the allegations of rape that were reported from 2007 to 2008, only 6.5% resulted in a conviction, compared with 34% of criminal cases in general. 2.8.4 The police service will face real challenges in continuing to provide a high level of protection while having to manage cuts of 20% in central government funding. There will also be a new structure for police authorities based around a directly elected individual. 2.8.5 The direction of penal policy over the last two decades has been ineffective, with the number of people in prison having nearly doubled to 83,000 despite clear evidence that community-based sentences are better at reducing re-offending and therefore at cutting crime in the long run. 92% of young men serving a short sentence re-offend within two years. Liberal Democrats very much welcome the new focus on non-custodial sentencing and the development of the principle of restorative justice from the Coalition Government which reflects the policies of our 2010 Manifesto. 2.8.6 In response to fear of crime and terrorism, the last Labour Government introduced a number of measures curtailing liberties including the national ID card system, greatly enhanced surveillance including CCTV, and detention without charge for up to 28 days. Thanks to Liberal Democrat influence, the Coalition Programme is very strong on protection of civil liberties whilst ensuring an effective response to terrorism, reflecting much of the Liberal Democrat Manifesto. The Government has begun to repeal many of the most illiberal measures of the Labour Government. However there are always pressures to trade away liberties in the name of security, as attempts to water down the protections in the Human Rights Act have demonstrated, and so liberals must always be vigilant. 2.8.7 Finally, one product of globalisation and increasing mobility is the growth in cross-border and organised crime. Human trafficking, smuggling, counterfeit goods trade, money laundering, cybercrime and other serious transnational crimes are on the rise and these demand international responses. These threats to our security cannot be dealt with exclusively at the domestic level. They require a coordinated and international response. In addition, we must work to ensure that the high standards in our criminal justice system are exported abroad for the benefit of British nationals abroad as well as to pursue the broader adherence to fundamental Autumn Conference September 2011 25
Facing the Future human rights across the world. Liberal Democrats welcome much of the ongoing work at the European level to meet these challenges for the future. We will work to ensure that our domestic efforts to safeguarding our hard won civil liberties and protect the public from crime, is also reflected in our approach to European Justice & Home Affairs measures.
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Facing the Future accompanying need for major new investments in energy efficiency, renewable energy, electric vehicles, and so on; among other benefits, this will also help develop energy security and insulate the economy from fossil fuel price shocks. We will need to consider how to maximise the opportunity for Britain to benefit from this transition, fully realising job creation and export opportunities, and seeing Britain develop as a world leader in technologies such as offshore wind, marine renewables and carbon capture and storage all sectors in which the world economy is expanding rapidly. Building on the work of the Quality of Life Working Group, we will propose ways of measuring and monitoring progress that are more meaningful than just GDP growth. 3.6 A key issue which underlies many of the problems around private debt levels, economic volatility, erosion of communities and equality of opportunity is the dysfunctional UK Housing market. The party should therefore undertake a comprehensive review of Housing policy, considering all aspects of the functioning of the housing market, social housing policies, land use planning issues and sustainable housing. 3.7 Tackling Inequality and Improving Social Mobility is one of our key objectives. We will continue the policy development work already begun by the Inequality Working Group looking at all aspects of increasing opportunity and removing the barriers which hold people back from achieving their full potential. This will build on important initiatives by the Coalition Government including the pupil premium. It will need to address both social mobility over generations and within individual lifetimes. Ensuring that all members of society are able to contribute fully is not only in their own interest but will also boost the economic performance of the country as a whole. 3.8 We also recommend a cross-portfolio working group to examine the range of problems faced by Working Families. This group of low-to-middle earners had seen their standard of living stagnate even during the relatively good economic years of the last decade, and given current movements in wages and prices are likely to see them worsen before they get better. The group will need to consider among other things the cost and availability of childcare, welfare policy, and transport needs. Housing costs are very important and there will need to be close co-operation with the work on Housing policy. 3.9 The international scene is going through a period of transformation, with the rise of new economic powers in Asia and Latin America, and challenges to the credibility of many of the institutions on which British foreign policy has rested for decades , like NATO and the EU. On the specific issue of Britains nuclear deterrent, a final decision on renewal of the Trident nuclear system will not take place until 2016, after the next election. Alongside initial gate preparations for Trident renewal, the Government will also be undertaking research into alternatives to Trident. A major decision for the party before the next Election Manifesto will therefore be on our policy on the British nuclear deterrent. 3.10 We therefore propose a comprehensive Defence policy paper to consider how Britains foreign and security policies should respond to the new international situation. It will need to cover Britains defence posture in an overall strategic context. This work should be timed to take place once the results of the Governments work on alternatives to Trident is available. 3.11 Many of policy challenges identified in this paper require effective action at the European level if they are to be met. In the same way that our commitment to sustainable development is a thread that runs through all of our policies, we need to consider how EU level action can add 28 Policy Paper 100
Facing the Future value to our domestic efforts across the piece, and develop priorities for action at the EU level, recognising that the UK can shape the EU agenda if it has the political will and ideas to do so. Nevertheless, while there will need to be attention paid to the European dimension in each policy working group, we should also produce a Europe policy review for the Autumn 2013 party conference as a precursor to the 2014 European Election Manifesto. This will draw out our vision of the policy priorities for the European Union. 3.12 A particularly sensitive policy area where we will need to refresh our policies is Immigration and Identity. We need an evidence-based approach to the issue of economic migration which allows the UK economy to benefit from the valuable skills migrants can bring, while maintaining public confidence in the immigration system. As Liberal Democrats, we celebrate the diversity of cultures we now have in Britain. However, our vision of multiculturalism does not mean segregation, with communities leading parallel lives. Multiculturalism has to be seen as a process by which people respect and communicate with each other, rather than build walls between each other. Many Black and Minority Ethnic groups in the UK experience disadvantage in a range of areas including employment, education and health. We also need to develop policies to address these, while recognising that different groups often have very different experiences. We propose a policy working group to tackle this complex mix of issues. 3.13 It is now nearly a decade since the partys last comprehensive review of Public Services (usually referred to as the Huhne Commission of 2002). The public services are central tools in achieving our goals of individual empowerment, social mobility and thriving communities. While political discussion is frequently driven by particular issues that flare up over specific service portfolios, and the party has been adopting policy on schools and health in response to the Coalition Governments reforms, it is vital to develop a considered and coherent overall approach based on our own distinctive vision for public service reform. We therefore propose to conduct a major review of policy on the public services as a whole, to be undertaken late in the Parliament in order to make maximum use of lessons from the implementation of the current reform programme. This work will need to consider the challenge of dramatic demographic change and the impact of an ageing population on health and care services. 3.14 A specific area which we wish to prioritise is Skills and Post-16 Education, including Higher Education. Skill levels are vital to overall economic performance and individual opportunity. Key scientific and technical skills will also be needed to make the transition to a low carbon economy. The UK has traditionally trailed some of our main competitors in the skills of the workforce. This has lead to an emphasis in policy on the sheer number of qualifications being gained in order to catch up, but we need to find ways of giving people the right skills they will need to succeed in a modern workforce for example through apprenticeships. In particular we need to help young people with low skills and those who have been languishing in unemployment during the recession. We also need to find policies to support people getting beyond their first job to move up the labour market far too many people are stuck in dead-end jobs or continually circulating between periods of unemployment and low-paid work. Clearly we need to review our party policy on Higher Education, with the key objective of improving access. It makes sense to consider all post school education holistically. 3.15 The principle of sustainable development should run through all of our policy commitments. Liberal Democrats had a very strong platform on climate change issues going into the last election and the Coalition Government has made good progress with bringing forward new targets and policies to meet the UKs carbon budgets. Given the ever developing Autumn Conference September 2011 29
Facing the Future understanding of the science of climate change and its impacts, and the need for bold and urgent action to achieve our ambitious targets to reduce emissions, we need to undertake a comprehensive review of policy on The Transition to a Zero Carbon Britain. This should focus on the international treaty and institutional framework, and international and energy (including electricity, heat and transport) policies and the roles of particular sectors, using a crossgovernment approach. It should address the need for new measures to adapt to the consequences of climate change. We will also need to undertake wider work on the issue of sustainable resource use to inform policy development generally. 3.16 We have highlighted in this paper some of the continuing barriers to full equality of opportunity for women. We therefore propose to develop new policies on Gender Equality. These would among other things address the persistence of the pay gap between women and men and the continuing under-representation of women in public life. 3.17 We will need to further update our policies on devolution of power to communities and citizens. This will take things forward from the Governments localism bill, the Scotland Bill and granting of legislative powers to the Welsh Assembly, and the possibility of a referendum on Scottish independence. We will have to grapple with the English question, considering both the case for an English Parliament and for devolution at a lower level within England such as counties and city regions. Going beyond formal constitutional changes however, we will also have to give serious thought on how to re-engage people with democratic politics and redefine what it means to be a citizen in the twenty-first century. This will mean creative thinking about models of participation at all levels. We will therefore conduct a policy review on political reform and participation. 3.18 We propose a major policy exercise to take forward new ideas on Crime and Justice. We will have to consider our policies on policing and the need to use resources more efficiently based on evidence on what works to reduce crime and reassure the public. In particular we will need to develop policies to meet the growing challenge of e-crime. We will also need to consider how to move forward policies on restorative justice, rehabilitation and reducing reoffending, in the light of significant moves in that direction under the Coalition Government. In addition, we will need to consider how to deal with the growth in serious, organised and cross-border crime, including the opportunities for coordinated international action at the European level. 3.19 The Coalition Government has embraced a traditional Liberal Democrat theme of Mutualisation, and Employee Ownership primarily within the public sector. Liberal Democrats have always identified employee participation in the workplace as an important feature of dispersing economic power, and promoting enterprise. We believe mutual forms of enterprise offer the possibility of greater job satisfaction to those who work in them and a more responsive service to customers. There is a clear opportunity to use the newfound popularity of mutualism to further develop this model so that it becomes much more widespread in the private as well the public sector, as part of our agenda for rebalancing the capitalist economy. Recognising that most businesses will however not become mutuals, this work should extend to consider how to improve employee participation in decision-making in businesses generally. 3.20 Given the demographic changes identified as a decisive feature of British society in the coming years, we propose to undertake a review of Challenges and Opportunities of an Ageing Population. This will need to consider traditional public policy questions such as how to meet the need for pensions and care services, but will also look at the social and personal 30 Policy Paper 100
Facing the Future challenges arising from increasing numbers of single older people, such as the risk of social isolation. It will also explore the positive opportunities for greater physical, social and economic activity in later life and what support is needed to help make these opportunities into a reality.
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Staff: Christian Moon Ruth Gripper Nick Lane Comments on the paper are welcome and should be addressed to: Policy Unit, Liberal Democrats, 4 Cowley Street, London SW1P 3NB ISBN: 978-1-907046-37-7 July 2011 Further copies of this paper may be obtained, price 5 from: Liberal Democrat Image, PO BOX 443, Farnborough, Hampshire, GU14 4DA Tel: 01252 510 005 Email: libdemimage@ldimage.demon.co.uk Printed by Contract Printing, Rear of CMS Building, Unit 11, Whittle Road, Corby, NN17 5DX
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