Help GB PAC Create a Great British Savings Plan For British Savers & Investors (please add your ideas in the Comments)

GB PAC are launching The Great British Savings Plan, crowdsourcing government policies and tax breaks that will reward and encourage Brits to invest in our economy.

To do so, we need your ideas on what to include.

Please add them in the comments section below

Much of today’s political dialectic is, at its heart, a battle between those who want to manage unsustainable problems with short-term fiddles, and those who want to actually solve them, regardless of the short-term disruption. This discourse covers almost everything: Brexit, immigration, tax, welfare, pensions, crime, the NHS and most recently, the bailout of British Steel.

Our support for the rest of the world involves accepting a worsening quality of life and taking on unsustainable levels of debt.

After three decades, this model cannot go on. As Trump pushes back, Asian nations will be forced to sell down Western assets to support their domestic economies. Simultaneously, Europe is poised to borrow trillions to fund a new defence pact. Thus, we can no longer outsource our saving.

Nor would we want to, because the problems of our ‘buy now pay later’ model are all too visible. Due to our excessive debt, economic crises are becoming frequent whenever markets lose confidence in our ability to pay. Inevitably, one day a mini-crisis won’t just go away. Then we hit Greek style economic Armageddon, with all the human costs that entails.

Our lack of saving is also visible in our broken infrastructure, housing and disappearing stock market. The UK’s fixed capital investment has been below G7 peers since 1990. We rank bottom for corporate investment as well. Our tax and spend economy means we simply do not have the capital or the incentives to invest in infrastructure or economic growth.

This has enormous consequences for our sovereignty. As we saw in Rachel Reeves’ mini-crisis, the first thing the Chancellor did was hop to China, cap-in-hand. Because we cannot save for ourselves, those who lend to us – whether it be the EU, China or the globalists – get to call the shots. This goes completely against the purpose of Brexit, and what the public have consistently cried out for - i.e. an independent UK run by those acting in the country’s interests. If we do not want to be a vassal state (think Greece or, Sri Lanka etc), we need our own money.

A Savings Culture is not just vital for national sovereignty; it is essential for personal freedom and wellbeing. As a nation and as individuals, money gives us choices. An impoverished and indebted population lacks the agency to solve their own problems. In fact, debt is one of most common causes of mental health problems, including suicides.

In short, the case for a renewed domestic savings culture is overwhelming. Unfortunately, Reeves seems to be on the wrong track. Government borrowing is exploding upwards. And the chancellor is desperately trying to water down the prudent lending rules we put in place after the financial crisis.

While more debt may provide a short-term sugar-rush, this is not good quality, sustainable growth. Borrowing after all, is just taking from the future (our children and grandchildren) for an easy fix now. That will leave us poorer and more vulnerable to future economic shocks.

To make matters worse, this government have attacked savers by vindictively targeting investors and pensioners. With our taxes so skewed, it is no surprise wealthy entrepreneurs and responsible savers are fleeing in droves.

The persecution of wealth means money generated in the UK is now heading elsewhere. This is literally an existential problem. The Adam Smith model on which western prosperity has been built depends on the reinvestment of profits. Otherwise, as Smith made clear, capitalism does not work.

To be clear, it has not all been Reeves, our savings crisis has been thirty years in the making. Gordon Brown, Balls, Osborne, Sunak and Hunt all played their part. Investing in our great country has become too complex, too punitive, too expensive and the rules too uncertain. Now, look at the state we’re in.

It is imperative for national rejuvenation that we launch a Great British Savings Plan. With the aim of encouraging and rewarding long-term British saving and investing. Now is the moment to become a nation of savers.

To do that, we need your help. We want your ideas on what a Great British Savings Plan should include. It could be reducing costs and cutting bureaucracy for the City, tax cuts, simplification, merging pensions and ISAs, or anything else you can think of.

Whatever your big idea for the Great British Savings Plan, please add them in the comments section below.

All ideas welcome. The more original, the bolder, or the simpler, the better.

We will be sharing the results with all parties and already have interest from the Conservative Party leadership.

I think enough people will champion cutting business rates to allow profits to be reinvested and allow more small businesses to flourish. But one idea I would put forward is increasing education around investing for the general public. The stats are shocking for the UK. I think it’s most people 90%+ only have a cash ISA as well as most never look at there workplace pension plan. This is changing younger millennial and Gen Z, with the rise of Fintect products but most are stocks adverse and see it as risky. Whilst I don’t want to agree with the current Chancellor about changes to ISAs, it would be nice to see an ISA aimed at British stocks. However, it should extend the existing ISA limits and not bring down current amounts; i.e. 20k to 25k limit per year.

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As a child my grandmother opened a bank account for myself and my siblings. I can’t explain how excited we were when she would tell us we had post. We would open our bank statements to see that we had received 2p interest on our savings. This was probably my first introduction to savings etc.

At a cultural level:
We need to change the narrative. Too many people are unaware of how the government spends our tax’s. They dont think of it as their money, they think everything is free. I have seen examples of immigrants receiving benefits, sending the money home to build houses in their country of origin. Why should we pay to build houses in other countries when we can’t afford our own houses and we are not building enough new houses. People need to be aware and feel angry, maybe they will then take more interest and get out and vote.

Incentives to work hard: all too often I hear:

  • Im not going uni, I don’t want the student debt.
  • There was no point getting that promotion, or doing all that overtime, Im no better off after tax.
    Im never going to be able to afford a house, or even my own place, why bother. I’ll just spend all my money and worry about it later.
    I cant afford to go to work, they will dock my benefits.

1 - On an individual level: Some kind of young savers scheme would be excellent. With rewards for reaching targets. Maybe a bonus on your birthday. This needs to be easily obtainable for all, including those on low incomes ie when you register a birth you get given an account. I know there have been various schemes over the years but these are different times.

It could be called the “My Future Savings” scheme or ISA etc; Funds can be made available when the young person leaves school to go to university, starts their own business or buys a house. A bit like a pension, once the money is in you cant take it out until you meet certain criteria. Must be run in a way it doesn’t line the pockets of the super rich. Guaranteed interest rates if the people running the scheme make a profit, it goes back into the scheme, ie the people get more of a bonus.

Age 0 to 18 - your saving for your future.
Age 18 to retirement - your saving for your pension.

The Help to buy scheme has been good, I know several people using this. However you can only use the scheme if the house you buy is under £250k. A lot of areas in the country you wont get a shoe box for this.
People will engage if they think they are getting something for free.

2 - As a society we no longer save: We buy everything on credit, that’s the first step to unmanaged debt. Education is key: Children (and adults) need to be taught how to manage money, how to manage student debt, mortgage rates, how tax works etc etc. But then the Labour government needs the same.
https://x.com/griffitha/status/1915401370477244857?s=48&t=yN_2betu6IuLyKiEt5Dgiw
Before young people have even left school, they are encouraged to apply for loans etc to go to university. They have no guaranteed way of paying it off.

3 - Early intervention on pensions. Too many people leave it too late to fully understand their pension situation. Rules change over the years, everything is so complicated. Pensions should be simplified and reviewed periodically. Every adult should have a Financial Life Plan and understand the risks etc As a society we need to value and respect Pensioners, having worked all your life it would be nice to be able to pay the bills and possibly afford a day out once in a while. Pensioners have the time, if they had the money they would also have the means to buy a coffee or a Chinese, go to the cinema/theatre etc this all helps to kick start the economy. I there was affordable suitable housing they would.

Legislation: Government can not change the rules within 10 years of your retirement age. If they do old rules apply. We need to investigate where all the pension funds have gone. For everyone person that lives a little longer, there are people that died early and did not receive their full pension.

A large part of the population are living hand to mouth, savings are a pipe dream.

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My partner and I recently had a baby and we’ve been discussing options of how to save for his future. The only option that made sense to us was a junior ISA, as child trust are no longer a thing. However, my main gripe with them is that 18 years old seems to young to hand over a lump sum of money. With trusts this could be delayed until later in life i.e. 25. Better financial education is definitely necessary, but I would like there to be more options, like withdrawal limits to be placed on these accounts until a certain age. Yes at 18 you are technically an adult, but not many 18 year olds receive a large lump sum that has been collecting interest.

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I copied this from a seperate policy, see link below. Unfortunately for people that do save and invest (in their home), they are often penalised in later life. If they have savings above the UCL or they own property they may have to sell their home to help fund the care costs. This does not encourage people to save.

Professionally qualified care givers, a national care agency and funding proposals

There should be national care funding agency akin to the British Business Bank ( http://british-business-bank.co.uk/) to offer finance for the many health and care needs which are not covered by the NHS, notably dementia, incontinence and associated maladies. As things stand today, in order to fund decent care, self-funders often have to resort to equity release loans, often at high rates of interest. These financial products – recommended by the NHS no less – provide much needed financial solutions to elderly people in need of personal care, and there has been some regulation of the sector, but equally the space is still infested with sharks and charlatans.

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