Economy

British govt. loses economic competence

A new poll has shown that British Prime Minister David Cameron and his Chancellor George Osborne’s popularity for economic competence have received a major blow in the wake of the Budget.

According to the poll the Prime Minister and the Chancellor enjoyed a net 24 point advantage over Labour counterparts Ed Miliband and Ed Balls before the financial package.

But research by ComRes for the Independent on Sunday and Sunday Mirror suggests that has now been slashed to just four.

Overall, the poll put Labour on 40 percent in terms of popularity, ahead of the Tories on 34 percent and Liberal Democrats on 11 percent.

The poll also suggested that some 25 percent trusted Cameron and Osborne to make the right decisions on the economy, while 54 percent did not. The net score of -29 was down from -20 before the Budget last month.

The ratings for Miliband and Balls, on the other hand, have improved from -44 to -33 this month.
Just over a quarter of those quizzed said the Budget measures were generally fair, compared to 54 percent who thought the opposite.

Older voters were said to be most critical, indicating that the “granny tax” row has harmed the Conservatives.

The researchers also asked whether the coalition had changed Britain for the better over the past two years, with a fifth saying the country had improved and 47 percent insisting it had got worse.

ComRes interviewed 2,048 adults online on April 18 and 19. Data were weighted to represent the wider population.

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