Alistair Darling urges George Osborne to 'act now' on economy

Chancellor George Osborne must change
course on the economy now or cause "immeasurable damage", his predecessor
Alistair Darling has warned.
In
an open letter, published in the Sunday People, the Labour MP claims both Mr
Osborne and the Bank of England have "given up on any plan for growth".
He
suggests more spending on homes, the railways and a third Heathrow runway.
The
government says that Mr Darling presided over the UK's biggest post-war deficit
as chancellor.
It
also says he failed to regulate the banks effectively.
Mr
Darling's open letter to his Tory successor calls for "urgent action to promote
growth".
"Your policies since 2010 simply haven't worked, you need
another plan - call it plan B, call it whatever you like," he adds.
"But
unless you do something now it will be years before we recover."
Mr
Darling says low interest rates mean it is "just the time to kick-start some
major spending projects".
These
should include replacing ageing power stations, investment in rail and
Heathrow's third runway.
"And
George, you must build more houses - it helped get Britain out of depression in
the 1930s," he adds.
"Most
parts of the country are short of homes so we could do with tens of thousands
more."
And
he says the Bank of England should halt its programme of quantitative easing -
the process by which more money is pumped into the economy - until it is clear
that banks are passing more cash on to businesses through increased lending.
"This
money is simply not finding its way out of the bank vaults. So the Bank of
England should use its powers to make it less attractive for banks to sit on
money," he says.
Unhelpful timing
Mr
Darling ends the letter by quoting advice from economist Maynard Keynes that
"when the facts change, you change your mind".
"The
facts have changed, George. And you must change your mind," Mr Darling adds.
BBC
political correspondent Iain Watson said Mr Darling's tone was less partisan
than that of shadow chancellor Ed Balls.
For
example, Mr Darling says he is sure "Labour is keen to work with you on social
care issues and welfare reform".
But
with Mr Osborne under pressure from some of his own backbenchers, the timing of
the intervention was not helpful, our correspondent added.
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