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Barack Obama re-election campaign raises $86m in three months

US president’s 2012 bid sails past $60m target for last quarter, easily eclipsing the efforts of Republican contenders Barack Obama’s re-election campaign has exceeded its $60m fundraising target for the past three months, bringing in $86m from April to June and eclipsing his Republican contenders. Officials for Obama’s 2012 presidential campaign said it had received funds from more than 552,000 people, representing “more grassroots support at this point in the process than any campaign in political history”. In keeping with the president’s 2008 winning strategy of targeting small donations, 98% of contributions in the second quarter of this year were $250 (£157) or less, with an average donation of around $69, campaign manager Jim Messina said in a video to supporters. The figures confirm that Obama, who raised a record $745m during his 2008 bid, has started the 2012 race as the cash leader despite criticism from some Democrats that he has tilted to the right in US debt talks and worries about the economy. The Republican frontrunner Mitt Romney raised $18.25m from April to June, and most of his party’s hopefuls for the White House raised between $4m and $4.5m during the same period. Romney’s rival Michele Bachmann is due to announce her fundraising total for last quarter this week. Of the total raised for Obama during that period, more than $47m went to the Obama for America fund and more than $38m to the Democratic National Committee. US elections 2012 Barack Obama Democrats Michele Bachmann Mitt Romney Republicans United States US politics US elections 2008 guardian.co.uk

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Pupils forced to switch GCSE courses as schools chase Ebacc results

Schools have put in place plans to restrict pupils’ GCSE choices as a direct result of the introduction of the new benchmark, a seminar has heard Teenagers are being given limited GCSE options and forced to switch courses midway as schools try to boost their scores in the new English baccalaureate (Ebacc), it has been claimed. In some cases, youngsters are being asked to change a year or less before they are due to sit exams, it was suggested. And almost half of schools have put in place plans to restrict pupils’ GCSE choices as a direct result of the Ebacc’s introduction. The education secretary, Michael Gove, introduced the Ebacc at the end of last year, and the measure is now included in league tables – allowing schools to be rated on the proportion of their pupils achieving the benchmark. To achieve the Ebacc, pupils must score at least a C grade in English, maths, science, a foreign language and either history or geography. But a seminar on the Ebacc and the national curriculum has heard that other subjects such as art, drama, music and religious education are being squeezed out, with more pressure being put on pupils to take those that are included. David Peck, director of the Curriculum Foundation, said that while some schools have opted to stick with their curriculum, others are changing it to fit with the Ebacc. “Some will change GCSEs mid-year. That’s certainly happening in a number of schools,” he said. He added that choices for pupils year 10 (the first year of GCSE study) are changing “very late”, while the options available for those starting GCSE courses this year have also altered. Speaking after the seminar, Peck added: “Some of the current year 11s [second year of GCSE study] have had to switch GCSE courses in some schools, that’s true.” In many cases, pupils have been asked to change so that they can take a language. Asked how long these pupils then have to study the course, Peck said: “A year or less in many cases.” Other schools are laying on “twilight” courses after school. Shadow schools secretary Andy Burnham, who arranged the seminar, said afterwards: “The danger is it puts the interests of the school above the interests of the individual.” In a survey of more than 2,400 teachers, conducted by the NASUWT teaching union, 43% say their school had planned to restrict the degree of choice 14-year-olds have over their GCSE options as a direct result of the Ebacc being introduced. NASUWT spokesman Chris Weavers told the seminar that those questioned had at the same time seen reductions in time spent on subjects not included in the Ebacc. In design and technology 17% had seen a reduction, 15% in information and computer technology, 13% each in art, music and drama, 12% in citizenship, 11% in personal, social, health and economic education, and 10% in religious education. “Schools are either stopping subjects or reducing curriculum time,” Weavers said. “There’s very clear evidence that it’s distorting the offer.” Rabbi Dr Jonathan Romain, chair of the Accord Coalition, said: “We have got a policy of freedom of choice, but in reality it’s a diminution of choice.” Peter Hall Jones, chief executive of the Curriculum Foundation, said: “It’s a bad Bacc.” Brian Lightman, general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders, said the union had heard of pupils being asked to switch courses. “We are extremely concerned about it, ” he said. “It’s an inevitable consequence of creating a new performance indicator and judging schools against it. “What schools should be doing is considering what’s the most appropriate curriculum for their pupils. But, unfortunately, the nature of the high stakes accountability culture that we have at the moment is putting schools under enormous pressure to meet targets.” Lightman added: “There seems to be a worrying trend towards removing choice from young people at 14. I think that’s very dangerous in terms of motivating young people to choose subjects that play to their own strengths.” According to official figures, 15.6% of pupils in England, around one in six, achieved the Ebacc last summer. GCSEs English baccalaureate Schools guardian.co.uk

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Maria Damanaki unveils details of EU fishing reforms

EU fisheries chief hopes phasing out ‘discarding’ and agreeing plans with member states will preserve Europe’s fish stocks The biggest shake-up of European fisheries regulation in four decades was unveiled on Wednesday in Brussels, intended to preserve dwindling fish stocks. Maria Damanaki, the EU fisheries chief, told policymakers in Brussels that strong and urgent action was needed if stocks were not to face collapse. She said: “Action is needed now to get all our fish stocks back into a healthy state to preserve them for present and future generations. Only under this precondition can fishermen continue to fish and earn a decent living out of their activities.” The central plank of her radical proposals is an attempt to ensure all European fish stocks are “at sustainable levels” by 2015 – a difficult task, as most stocks in the region are already overfished. She aims to achieve this by phasing out the wasteful practice of discarding healthy fish at sea – a perverse consequence of the current fishing quota systems – and agreeing with member states’ long-term management plans for their stocks, but giving the states the freedom to decide how to implement those policies. She is also likely to face opposition, as the reforms to the common fisheries policy – the roots of which date back to the Treaty of Rome of 1957 at the founding of the European Union – will mean short-term pain for fishermen, even as they should preserve the long-term future of some. Fishing groups have attacked her proposals in their draft form, arguing that their fleets will be unfairly penalised and that not enough attention has been given to possible solutions such as adjusting fishing gear. But Damanaki has made it clear she will stick to her proposals. She said: “We have to manage each stock wisely, harvesting what we can but keeping the stock healthy and productive for the future. This will bring us higher catches, a sound environment and a secure seafood supply. If we get this reform right, fishermen and coastal communities will be better off in the long run. And all Europeans will have a wider choice of fresh fish, both wild and farm produced.” The proposals also include targets and time frames to stop overfishing; ways to allow fishermen to trade their quotas with one another, which will help some fishermen to leave the industry; support measures for small-scale fisheries; better collection of data; and new rules for fish farms. Damanaki’s proposals will also replace the current annual shouting match among countries over the size of the quota they should get. At present, ministers vie for the biggest quota with a decision taken each December. But under the new plans, these annual contests would be replaced with long-term management plans, giving greater certainty for the future and less of the wrangling that can result in fisheries losing out. Day-to-day decision making would also be devolved from Brussels to the regions. Europe’s fishing fleet is too large and too efficient, according to the European Commission. This has led to drastic overfishing. Chris Davies, the UK Liberal Democrat MEP, pointed to recent academic studies suggesting Europe’s fish stocks were less than 10% of their post-war levels. Damanaki has made clear in the past few months her intention to phase out the wasteful practice of discarding healthy fish , which fishermen are forced to do under the current rules, for instance if they exceed their quota or because they catch fish for which they do not hold a quota. But she has come under pressure from fishing groups and some member states who are concerned that ending discards and forcing fishermen to land all they catch could result in lower profits for fishing crews. They could end up having to sell lower value fish or species for which there is less demand, meaning their catches may be worth less than if they could discard at will. Damanaki has acknowledged the problem, telling a meeting of the European parliament’s cross-party Fish for the Future group that some reduction in employment in fisheries was inevitable, but that without change to protect fish stocks the loss of jobs would be even greater, because Europe’s seas are so depleted. She would like help from member states to compensate fishermen for some of their lost income, and has supported pilot schemes in which fishermen would turn their boats to other uses, such as tourism or collecting plastic litter for recycling . Member states would also be encouraged to let the owners of large vessels exchange fishing rights, because there are too many boats hunting too few fish. Damanaki also wants to reform the fishing agreements that some member states have with developing countries, allowing EU vessels to fish there. These agreements have attracted controversy because, in extreme cases, they can stifle the growth of indigenous fisheries in poorer countries. Davies said: “Commissioner Damanaki might have been expected to back down in the face of opposition from those who resist change, but she seems fearless and determined to push ahead with reforms that may be the saving of our seas, of the fishing industry, and of coastal communities. “Our waters are capable of supporting many times more fish than now exist. It is not too late for the situation to be reversed, but we have now reached a crisis point. Overfishing must cease or there will be no more fish on the plate.” Fishing Food Wildlife Conservation Animals Marine life European Union Europe Fish Fiona Harvey guardian.co.uk

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Poor to be banned from bringing spouse to the UK from overseas

Home Office proposes minimum income threshold for those wishing to bring a spouse, partner or dependents to the country British citizens who are poor or unemployed could be prevented from marrying the spouse of their choice if new family migration proposals become law. The government wants to introduce a new minimum income threshold for those looking to sponsor a spouse, partner or dependants to come to the UK. Under the proposals the unemployed or those living on less than around £5,000 a year would be banned from doing so, while the probation period before spouses and partners can apply for settlement in Britain will be raised from two to five years. A Home Office consultation paper published on Wednesday also proposes making it more difficult for families to bring dependant grandparents to live with them in the UK. Instead, it encourages people to send money to support them abroad. The shake-up of the family migration route to Britain, under which 48,900 visas were granted last year, is the fourth phase of the government’s plan to curb immigration abuse and reduce net migration to below 100,000 a year. However, the Oxford University-based Migration Observatory estimates the plans contained in the paper would reduce annual net migration by no more than 8,000 per year. Restrictions on the number of non-European skilled workers and overseas students have already been announced, and there will a reduction in the rights of temporary workers who wish to settle in the UK. The immigration minister, Damian Green, said the proposals would encourage “better family migration” and were designed to end abuses and send a message that “if you can’t support your foreign spouse or partner, you cannot expect the taxpayer to do it for you”. The majority of those who come to Britain under the family route are women from Pakistan, India and Bangladesh. The consultation proposes tougher English language standards and a more ‘rigorous’ approach to sham marriages including a new test to establish whether relationships are genuine by investigating whether the couple live together, speak the same language and knew each other before getting married. Ministers also want to change the wording of article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights – which protects the right to family life – to allow even genuine wives and husbands to be deported if they had been living in the UK illegally. As revealed in the Guardian earlier this year, the consultation contains plans to scrap the right of appeal for visitor’s visas, which would end 40% of all immigration appeals. The family migration plan is expected to be implemented this autumn. Immigration and asylum Damian Green Alan Travis guardian.co.uk

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Mumbai blasts – live updates

Home ministry confirms three terrorist attacks, two in south Mumbai, in the Opera House district and Zaveri bazaar and one in Dadar in central city 3.38pm: The blasts occurred about an hour ago. At least 60 people have been injured, according to the Maharashtra home secretary (Maharashtra is the state in which Mumbai lies). The Maharastra government is not describing the blasts as terrorist attacks at the moment but the home ministry in Delhi has unequivocally said that the explosions were acts of terrorism. Mumbai was of course the scene of 2008 terrorist attacks by gunmen, which killed 166 people. 3.28pm: Three explosions have rocked Mumbai during rush hour, in a series of coordinated terrorist attacks on the city, India’s home ministry said. There were no confirmed numbers of fatalities or injuries but NDTV quoted reports saying 10 people have been killed . Two of the explosions took place in the Opera House district in South Mumbai at Opera House and in Zaveri bazaar. A third occurred in Dadar in the centre of the city. Six people have died in the Dadar blast and four in the explosion at Zaveri Bazaar, according to NDTV. NDTV has rolling television coverage here. India Global terrorism Mumbai terror attacks Haroon Siddique guardian.co.uk

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All Six Fake Democrats Lose in Wisconsin Primary Recall Elections

Click here to view this media Some good news tonight from Wisconsin. All six of the fake Democrats the GOP put up to run against actual Democrats in the recall primary elections lost tonight. I wonder if this will cause any backlash for them wasting the taxpayers’ money for pulling this stunt. Ed Schultz talked to the Nation’s John Nichols about the results and here’s more from USA Today — Fake Democrats lose in Wisconsin primary recalls . And as Ed and John discussed, the GOP running fake Democrats weren’t the only dirty tricks that went on with these elections. Deceitful Robocalls Added to List of Dirty Election Tricks in Wisconsin : Adding to the list of dirty tricks, reports are surfacing that a “Right to Life” group is robocalling Wisconsin Democrats and telling them not to go to the polls today, and instead to wait for an absentee ballot to arrive in the mail. This is false, as July 12 is the last day to cast a vote in the Democratic primary, and there is not enough time to cast a vote by mail. Apparently, the robocalls are coming from a 703 area code (Virginia). We do not know yet exactly who is ultimately responsible for these calls, and even if an individual is caught and takes the fall, we may never find out who’s really pulling the strings. Whoever they are, they are obviously people in synch with the right wing agenda of Governor Walker and the Koch Brothers. Disenfranchising voters by tricking them into not voting is a tried and true method of voter suppression. So is finding excuses at the polling place to keep certain people from voting, as GOP-pushed voter ID laws do. What all the tactics we see in Wisconsin have in common is that the right wing is pulling out the stops to prevent the people from exercising their constitutional right to remove them from office. Karoli : Fortunately, Wisconsin’s recall elections will go forward with actual Democrats running against their recall targets. Despite the best efforts of Koch Industries and their American Majority puppets , the real Dems won by large margins. Daily Kos : 8:01 PM PT (Steve Singiser): To put our own shiny bow on Wisconsin, here are the margins of victory for each of the real Dems: Nancy Nusbaum (SD-02) wins 65-35; Sandy Pasch (SD-08) wins 67-33; Shelly Moore (SD-10) wins 54-46; Fred Clark (SD-14) wins 67-33; Jessica King (SD-18) wins 69-31; Jennifer Shilling (SD-32) wins 71-29. Of course, it means the Republicans get another 30 days before they lose, but at least the fakers were sent home summarily. Next up: Republican attempts to recall Democrats on July 19th. Because the two parties really are not alike at all, there will be real Republicans facing real Republicans in a couple of the primaries, as opposed to fake ones screwing up the landscape. However, that doesn’t mean the races won’t be interesting .

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Betty Ford’s funeral is attended by US first ladies

Speakers praise Betty Ford for her warmth and honesty at her funeral in California US first ladies past and present have joined other former White House residents to remember Betty Ford at her funeral. Speakers hailed Ford for reshaping the role of first lady with her plain-spoken candour and as an inspiration for the addiction rehabilitation centres that bear her name. “Millions of women are in her debt today and she was never afraid to speak the truth even about the most sensitive subjects, including her own struggle with alcohol and painkillers,” said Rosalynn Carter, who succeeded her in the White House. “She got some criticism, but I thought she was wonderful and her honesty gave to others every single day.” Michelle Obama, Nancy Reagan, Hillary Clinton and former president George Bush were among those at the service in Palm Desert, California. Ford, who died aged 93 on Friday , helped bring previously taboo subjects such as breast cancer into public discussion and openly discussed her own battle with the disease. She was equally candid about her struggles with drug and alcohol abuse, and spearheaded the Betty Ford Centre to treat those addictions. Cokie Roberts, a TV interviewer, noted that Gerald Ford confided to her privately that his wife badgered him relentlessly into stronger public support of equal rights for women. Bush, accompanied by Nancy Reagan, arrived a few minutes before Michelle Obama. The former president chatted quietly with Reagan as they waited for the services to begin, greeting Clinton as she took a seat next to him. After the funeral, members of the public were invited to file past the casket and sign a guest book. Ford’s body will be flown on Wednesday to Grand Rapids, Michigan, where Lynne Cheney, wife of the former US vice-president Dick Cheney, and historian Richard Norton Smith will speak at a church service. The former first lady Barbara Bush is expected to attend that event. Ford will be buried alongside her husband at Gerald Ford’s presidential museum in Grand Rapids on Thursday, which would have been his 98th birthday. Ford, the accidental first lady, was thrust into the White House when Richard Nixon resigned as US president over the Watergate scandal and Gerald Ford, then vice-president, assumed the US’s highest office. Rosalynn Carter recalled that she met Ford when the first lady visited Georgia, where Carter’s husband was governor. “We invited Betty to stay at the governor’s mansion. She was the most distinguished guest we had ever had but when she arrived she was so warm and friendly that she immediately put me at ease and we had a good time together. “Of course I didn’t tell her then that my husband was thinking of running for president,” Carter added. A lifelong friendship remained intact after Gerald Ford lost his re-election bid to Jimmy Carter. Outside the church passersby, some walking dogs or out for a jog, stopped to reflect on the former first lady’s life. “I don’t know where a lot of people would be if it weren’t for her,” said Randy Gaynor, 47, a recovering alcoholic. “There’s been a lot of first ladies and they did a lot of things, but this will be long remembered after she’s gone.” United States US politics guardian.co.uk

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7/7 London bombings ‘were Osama bin Laden’s last successful operation’

Evidence from al-Qaida leader’s compound suggests he was in contact with militants as London plots unfolded, say US officials The 7 July suicide bomb attacks on the London transport network in 2005 were the last successful operation Osama bin Laden played a role in, US government experts have concluded. They said there was strong evidence, including material collected from the Abbottabad compound in Pakistan where Bin Laden was killed, indicating that as the London-based plots unfolded he was in close contact with al-Qaida militants. Some of the confidence the US officials expressed about Bin Laden’s involvement in the attacks is based on analytical judgment rather than ironclad proof. Two of the officials said there was no “smoking gun” evidence proving that he orchestrated the plots. One official said Bin Laden was “immersed in operational details” of the group’s activities. “We believe he was aware of these plots ahead of time,” another of the officials said. Circumstantial evidence, including information gathered from the Abbottabad compound, also suggests the al-Qaida leader had advance knowledge of an unsuccessful London-based 2006 plot to simultaneously bomb US-bound flights, several US national security officials said. “Bin Laden was absolutely a detail guy. We have every reason to believe that he was aware of al-Qaida’s major plots during the planning phase, including the airline plot in 2006 and the London 7/7 attacks,” one of the officials told Reuters. Fifty-two civilians, and four suicide bombers, died in the 7/7 attacks on three London Underground trains and a bus. Hundreds were injured. It was “the last successful operation Osama bin Laden oversaw,” one US official said. Investigations by British authorities, with support from the US and other allies, established some time ago that elements of al-Qaida’s core leadership had played a role in the 2005 attacks. Investigators found evidence that Mohammad Sidique Khan, leader of the cell that carried out the bombings, and another cell member had travelled to Pakistan for paramilitary training before the attacks. One of the plots that US officials believe Bin Laden was at least aware of was a 2006 plot to bomb multiple US-bound flights from Britain using homemade liquid explosives. The plot was disrupted when police launched a major roundup of suspects. Flights to and from Britain were severely disrupted and tight new restrictions were placed on passenger carry-on items such as liquids and gels. The latest assessments from US and other western officials support assertions by the Obama administration that, despite years of apparent isolation in Abbottabad, Bin Laden still managed to keep in touch with activities – sometimes in considerable detail – of his followers around the world. By the same token, the cache of evidence found in Bin Laden’s compound does not offer new indications about any specific current plots he was involved in directed at US or other western targets. 7 July London attacks Osama bin Laden Pakistan United States UK security and terrorism Global terrorism guardian.co.uk

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Hamid Karzai appeals to Taliban as his brother is buried

Afghan leader urges Taliban to ‘stop destroying the country’ as police investigate the shooting of Ahmed Wali Karzai Ministers, parliamentarians and thousands of other people joined the Afghan president Hamid Karzai to bury his half-brother Ahmed Wali Karzai, a political strongman who was praised for his efforts to bring peace to the southern province of Kandahar. Ahmed Wali Karzai, dubbed the president of Kandahar, was killed on Tuesday at his home by his long-trusted security chief. Security was tight as the funeral procession set off from the Mandigak Palace, the governor of Kandahar’s residence, to a burial plot in the Karz district at 7am local time on Wednesday. Immediately after the ceremony Karzai placed a turban on the head of Shah Wali Khan, another of his half-brothers, but made no official announcement on who would become the new provincial council head. The Taliban have claimed responsibility for killing Ahmed Wali Karzai. Speaking at a press conference on Tuesday Karzai said: “This is the life of the people of Afghanistan. Afghan families, every one of us, have suffered from it and we hope, God willing, for our suffering to be over. “Once again I call on the Taliban, my dears, my brothers and friends, come and join me in building the country. Stop destroying the country.” Karzai was joined at the funeral by Kandahar’s governor, Tooryalai Wesa, and the mayor of Kabul, Muhammad Yunus Nawandish. Islamic custom stipulates that a body must be buried within 24 hours. A memorial is scheduled for Thursday so more family members can travel to Kandahar. The brothers’ father, Abdul Ahad Karzai, was assassinated in 1999. Ahmed Wali Karzai’s body was released to the family on Tuesday afternoon from the Mirwais hospital. Rumours circulated that the remains of Sardar Mohammad, Ahmed Wali Karzai’s assassin, were strung up at a city centre roundabout. Police chief General Abdul Razaq said an investigation had been launched into the assassination. Local media, citing officials, reported that a number of arrests had been made on Tuesday night in connection with the killing. Afghanistan Hamid Karzai Taliban guardian.co.uk

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Age of austerity to continue for decades, warns OBR

Office for Budget Responsibility report suggests UK will continue to pay the price for an ageing population and declining tax levels Britain must brace itself for decades of austerity even after George Osborne’s spending squeeze, to pay the price for an ageing population, the independent Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) warned on Wednesday. The OBR, set up by the chancellor to produce independent projections of the public finances, says the rising cost of healthcare and pensions, and declining tax revenues from the North Sea, will mean future governments have to take action to prevent debt levels rising inexorably. Without fresh tax rises or spending cuts, the OBR says, the government’s debt will hit a trough of 60% in the mid 2020s, compared with less than 70% now, before rising rapidly to hit 107% of GDP by 2060-61. Although the deterioration in the public finances is more than a decade away, the OBR urges politicians to make long-term decisions now, to prevent the economy drifting into a debt crisis as the population ages. “Policymakers and would-be policymakers should certainly think carefully about the long-term consequences of any policies they introduce in the short term. And they should give thought too to the difficult choices that will confront this country once the challenge of the current consolidation has passed,” the study says. The OBR’s report coincides with the publication of new “whole of government accounts” from the Treasury, which include new – and much larger – estimates of the state’s long-term commitments, based on treating the government as though it were a business, with assets and liabilities. The “net present value” of paying public sector pension promises – a way of calculating the cost if they all had to be paid today – had already hit almost 79% of GDP, or £1.1trn, by March 2010, according to the Treasury’s calculations. The price of Labour’s Private Finance Initiative – Gordon Brown’s favoured method for building new schools, hospitals and infrastructure without the Treasury paying the whole bill up front – is put at £40bn. Meanwhile, the state’s other “contingent liabilities”, which the Treasury hopes it will never have to pay, such as guarantees to the crisis-hit banking sector, amount to more than £200bn. Set against the government’s assets, which the Treasury calculates to be worth £759bn, overall public sector liabilities now stand at £1.2trn, or 84.5% of GDP. Despite these eye-watering estimates, however, the OBR says the main reason taxpayers must get used to decades of austerity is the growing burden of an ageing population, with its inevitable knock-on effects in terms of pensions and healthcare. “Balance sheet measures look only at the impact of past government activity,” it says. “They do not include the present value of future spending that we know future governments will wish to undertake, for example maintaining health, education and pension provision. And, just as importantly, they exclude the public sector’s most valuable financial asset: its ability to levy future taxes.” They estimate that health spending will have to rise from 7.4% of national output in 2015-16 to almost 10% by 2060, while state pension costs will hit almost 8% of GDP over the same period, and social care costs increase to 2% of GDP. Despite the hefty estimate of the net present value of public sector pensions, the annual cost of paying retired public sector staff will actually decline over time, the OBR says, because of the chancellor’s decision to uprate them in line with the lower consumer price index measure of inflation, instead of the Retail Price Index. Government borrowing Tax and spending Economics Public finance Public sector cuts Economic growth (GDP) Pensions Healthcare industry George Osborne Heather Stewart guardian.co.uk

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