The Scotsman

No ‘escape velocity’ from more austerity pain

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FoR the best part of a year, we have had growing evidence across the board that the recovery is broadening and deepening. And even with yesterday’s slightly surprising data that growth in the dominant services industry slackened in January, the underlying picture in the sector chimed with the upward trend.

Far more worrying was the warning by an independen­t think-tank yesterday that the worst is yet to come in the UK government’s austerity programme, now well into its fourth year.

the warning plays to the fear in much of society, particular­ly the public sector, that much bigger future spending cuts by the government mean a “recovery” risks having an ironic feel for millions of people: jobless and with falling living standards. extra cuts in social security spending, the spending firewall allowed by the government to education, health and internatio­nal developmen­t means that other department­s face cuts of more than 30 per cent to their budgets under osborne’s plans compared to where they were in 2010.

that scale of cost-cutting cannot be done just by eliminatin­g waste, removing duplicatio­n, shifting civil servants out of the south-east of england and more efficient working practices.

it is difficult to see how the government will not be cutting bone as well as flesh. the iFS says the challenge faced in getting a financial surplus by 2018 is aggravated by the £6bn of spending pledges already made by the government for after 2015 (the year of the general election) and an ageing population in Britain that will make more demands on the nhS.

Perhaps the best hope is that the economic recovery over the next couple of years or so proves much stronger than anybody thought, rendering some of the worst further public spending cuts and fiscal consolidat­ion unnecessar­y.

that may be a long shot but – austerity-wise – it is the best we have.

Wolfson short-circuited on smartphone mania

the hefty operating losses at Wolfson Microelect­ronics, and the scaling back by City analysts of expected revenue growth at the edinburgh-based group in 2014, shows how tough the smartphone market remains.

the consensus seems to be that we are not likely to see any appreciabl­e rebound in Wolfson’s fortunes until the second half of this year at best.

Wolfson admits it was wrongfoote­d last year by the stampede of consumers into the new 4G smartphone­s, which benefited one of its main audio-chip competitor­s, Qualcomm.

A second blow to Wolfson was a slump in orders from its second biggest customer, the embattled BlackBerry group. And, given BlackBerry’s problems, including its perception among the younger generation as “yesterday’s phone”, that pressure on the Scottish business is unlikely to go away.

in the short term, Wolfson is most likely to be a restructur­ing and margin protection story rather than one of buccaneeri­ng expansion.

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