Free market is best, Britain's PM says, as leftist
opposition closes in
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[September 28, 2017]
By David Milliken
LONDON (Reuters) - British Prime Minister
Theresa May on Thursday defended free markets as the proper way to run
an economy, a day after surging opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn said his
left-wing ideas now represented the political mainstream.
May, whose Conservative Party is running neck and neck with Corbyn's
Labour Party in opinion polls, said properly regulated markets were
essential to boost living standards, and she stuck to her government's
plans to cut debt without raising taxes sharply.
"A free market economy ... is unquestionably the best, and indeed the
only sustainable means of increasing the living standards of everyone,"
May told a conference hosted by the Bank of England.
May has struggled to convince voters that the economic policies pursued
by British governments since the 1980s are still the best answer to the
country's problems. She lost the Conservatives' parliamentary majority
in an election in June.

Living standards have fallen since May's Conservatives came to power in
2010, due to years of meager wage growth and bouts of high inflation -
including a slowdown caused by last year's vote to leave the European
Union.
BoE Governor Mark Carney, speaking at the same event, told May that the
central bank's ultra-low interest rates and other stimulus programs
would be unable to offset the likely hit to the economy from Brexit.
"The biggest determinants of the UK’s medium-term prosperity will be the
country’s new relationship with the EU and the reforms it catalyses," he
said, repeating comments he has made previously on Brexit.
"Most of the necessary adjustments are real in nature and therefore not
in the gift of central bankers."
Credit ratings agency Moody's downgraded its assessment of Britain's
ability to service its debts last Friday due to concerns that Brexit
would hurt growth and that the government was finding it harder to keep
spending under control.
Separately on Thursday, May criticized U.S. planemaker Boeing <BA.N>,
warning that its behavior in a trade dispute which threatens thousands
of British jobs was undermining its commercial relationship with
Britain.
STICKING TO THE SCRIPT
In her speech, May appealed to what many Conservatives see as their
pro-business, fiscally prudent core values before her party's annual
conference next week.
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Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May walks out of 10 Dowining Street
to welcome Ireland's Taoiseach Leo Varadkar in London, September 25,
2017. REUTERS/Hannah McKay

"Unfunded borrowing and significantly higher levels of taxation would damage our
economy, threaten jobs, and hurt working people," she said.
Corbyn told his Labour Party's annual conference on Wednesday that they were "on
the threshold of power", roughly level with the Conservatives in opinion polls.
He is the party's most left-wing leader since the early 1980s - earlier this
week his finance spokesman proposed nationalizing privately-funded
infrastructure, capping credit card interest payments and squeezing more tax
from big business.
May and Carney were speaking at the start of a two-day conference to mark 20
years of BoE independence.
May was challenged in a question-and-answer session about comments she made last
year when she said record-low BoE rates had "bad side effects".
Carney said at the time he did not "take instruction" from politicians, and May
clarified on Thursday that she did not think the BoE had been wrong to cut
rates.
"The point that I was making was that action that is taken to deal with one
issue, that was necessary action and rightly taken by an independent Bank, does
have implications for others," she said.
Most economists now expect the BoE to raise interest rates for the first time in
a decade after its next meeting on Nov. 2.
Andrew Tyrie, who until June headed the parliament committee that monitored the
BoE, warned that the BoE's independence depended more on politicians' goodwill
than in other regions where central bank independence was legally entrenched.
(Reporting by David Milliken Editing by William Schomberg/Jeremy Gaunt)
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