Financial support for jobs and businesses hit by coronavirus must continue until confidence and growth are back, even if it means putting off for years measures to rein in the UK’s ballooning state debt, Labour’s shadow chancellor has said.
Speaking to The Independent as chancellor Rishi Sunak began scaling back his job retention scheme, Anneliese Dodds said that so long as interest rates remain low, the government’s “number one goal” must be to preserve economic capacity, rather than risking growth with fiscal tightening measures to reduce a debt mountain already topping annual GDP at almost £2 trillion.
Labour has launched a ferocious attack on Mr Sunak’s blanket phase-out of furlough, calling on him to keep the scheme going longer for sectors hit hardest by social distancing, like hospitality and the arts. The 80 per cent wage subsidy has already cost £32bn, but is being gradually withdrawn between now and November, with employers required to start paying national insurance and pension contributions from this week, at an estimated monthly cost of £70 per employee.
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As Boris Johnson reversed lockdown relaxation plans to force bowling alleys, casinos and wedding reception venues to stay shut for longer, Ms Dodds made clear she sees the chancellor’s “one size fits all” approach as a “historic mistake” which will cost huge numbers of jobs in areas where employers are banned from returning to normal operations.
While accepting that Mr Sunak’s extraordinary financial package for jobs and the self-employed cannot continue indefinitely in its current form, she made clear it may be years before the economy is sufficiently robust to be fully weaned off state support.
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Arsenal’s Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang celebrates with the trophy and teammates after winning the FA Cup, as play resumes behind closed doors following the outbreak of the coronavirus disease
Pool via Reuters
2/50 31 July 2020
People enjoy the sunny weather at a Bournemouth Beach
Reuters
3/50 30 July 2020
An artist puts the finishing touches to a wax figure of Prime Minister Boris Johnson, in the entrance line at Madame Tussaud’s in London, as the attraction prepares to reopen to the public following the easing of lockdown restrictions in England
PA
4/50 29 July 2020
A member of staff stands on Ai Weiwei’s ‘History of Bombs’ during a photocall for the Chinese artist’s new work on display at the Imperial War Museum in London
PA
5/50 28 July 2020
Stuart Broad celebrates after taking the wicket of West Indies batsman Kraigg Brathwaite. It was a milestone wicket in his career, reaching his 500th Test Wicket for England. They went on to beat the West Indies in Manchester and therefore win the series 2-1
Getty/ECB
6/50 27 July 2020
Demonstrators protest outside the Tate Modern in London over proposed job losses in the wake of the Covid-19 lockdown. The group believe that the emergency money provided by the government to culture-based organisations should be used to retain all jobs and that any other use of the funding is unfair. The gallery on London’s South Bank, as well as the Tate Britain, Tate Liverpool and Tate St Ives, reopened today after closing in March due to lockdown measures meant to curb the spread of the novel coronavirus
Getty
7/50 26 July 2020
Harry Maguire shakes hands with Leicester City manager Brendan Rodgers after Manchester United beat the Foxes. The win meant they finished third in the Premier League and Leicester finished outside a Champions League place in fourth
Pool via Reuters
8/50 25 July 2020
Women exercise using pool noodles during an aqua fit class at a gym in Sunbury-on-Thames after gyms and swimming pools were allowed to reopen
AFP via Getty
9/50 24 July 2020
Mayor of London Sadiq Khan tries out a new Streetspace protected cycle lane in London at the launch a new online cycle training scheme
PA
10/50 23 July 2020
A customer has her hair cut outside at Blade Hairdressers in Soho in London
Getty
11/50 22 July 2020
Liverpool’s English midfielder Jordan Henderson lifts the Premier League trophy during the presentation following the English Premier League football match between Liverpool and Chelsea at Anfield in Liverpool. Liverpool on Wednesday lifted the Premier League trophy at the famous Kop stand at Anfield after their final home game of the season
AFP via Getty
12/50 21 July 2020
Vivienne Westwood demonstrates outside the Old Bailey in support of Julian Assange in London
Reuters
13/50 20 July 2020
Comet Neowise in the skies over the Lovell Telescope at Jodrell Bank in Cheshire
PA
14/50 19 July 2020
Mods and rockers unite on Madeira Drive, Brighton, for a demonstration to call for the reopening of the road which Brighton & Hove City Council plans to keep closed permanently
PA
15/50 18 July 2020
People enjoy the sunny weather at Painshill, an 18th century landscape garden in Cobham, Surrey
PA
16/50 17 July 2020
Captain Sir Thomas Moore receives his knighthood from Queen Elizabeth, during a ceremony at Windsor Castle
AP
17/50 16 July 2020
Red Arrows do a flypast during the Graduation Ceremony of the Queen’s Squadron at RAF College Cranwell, Lincolnshire
The Daily Telegraph/PA
18/50 15 July 2020
Jen Reid poses in front of a black resin and steel statue titled ‘A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020’, which is based on her by Marc Quinn, where it has been installed on the vacant Edward Colston plinth in Bristol city centre. The original statue was pulled down and thrown into Bristol Harbour during Black Lives Matter protests
PA
19/50 14 July 2020
Fields of echium and borage in full flower near the town of Thaxted in Essex
PA
20/50 13 July 2020
People ride a rollercoaster in a theme park next to Southend pier. Many businesses in tourism and hospitality have been able to reopen after some lockdown measures were eased
Getty
21/50 12 July 2020
West Indies’s John Campbell and Jason Holder celebrate winning the test as England’s Rory Burns and teammates look on dejected
Reuters
22/50 11 July 2020
Chicldren play in the water during a cricket match between Abinger and Worplesdon & Nurpham in Abinger Hammer, Surrey
Reuters
23/50 10 July 2020
People gather for the funeral of Dame Vera Lynn in Ditchling, England. During World War II she travelled to the frontlines, including Burma, entertaining British troops and boosting morale. She died on 18 June at her home in West Sussex
Getty
24/50 9 July 2020
Artist Anish Kapoor looks into his sculpture ‘Sky Mirror’ at Houghton Hall, King’s Lynn, ahead of the opening of his largest UK exhibition of outdoor sculptures
PA
25/50 8 July 2020
Players take a knee in support of the Black Lives Matter movement on the first day of the first Test cricket match between England and the West Indies at the Ageas Bowl in Southampton
AFP via Getty
26/50 7 July 2020
A circus performer from the Association of Circus Proprietors in Whitehall, London. The association handed a petition to Downing Street to ask Prime Minister Boris Johnson to allow circuses to reopen
EPA
27/50 6 July 2020
Bamburgh Castle in Northumberland, which re-opened to the public after being closed due to the coronavirus lockdown
PA
28/50 5 July 2020
People visit Columbia Road Flower Market, London, as it reopens following the easing of coronavirus lockdown restrictions across England
PA
29/50 4 July 2020
A member of bar staff wearing PPE in the form of a face mask, pours drinks inside the The Goldengrove in Stratford
AFP via Getty
30/50 3 July 2020
Cardboard cutouts of fans in the stands prior to the League One play-off semi final match between Portsmouth and Oxford United at Fratton Park
PA
31/50 2 July 2020
A diver cleans the inside window of the seal tank at Tynemouth Aquarium in North Shields, as it prepares to open on Saturday after further coronavirus lockdown restrictions are lifted in England
PA
32/50 1 July 2020
Slackliner Sandor Nagy practices on the beach in Boscombe, on the south coast of England
AFP via Getty
33/50 30 June 2020
(left to right) Sinn Fein leader Mary Lou McDonald, former Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams, and Deputy First Minister Michelle O’Neill attending the funeral of senior Irish Republican and former leading IRA figure Bobby Storey in west Belfast
PA
34/50 29 June 2020
Former Team GB Rhythmic Gymnastic dancer Hannah Martin during a training session at Ouse Valley Viaduct in Sussex
Reuters
35/50 28 June 2020
People visit Bolton Abbey in Yorkshire, that recently reopened following the easing of coronavirus lockdown restriction
PA
36/50 27 June 2020
A protest for Justice for Shukri Abdi on Trafalgar Square in London, following a raft of Black Lives Matter protests across the UK
PA
37/50 26 June 2020
Police at the scene of an incident at the Park Inn Hotel in central Glasgow. Scottish police said armed officers shot dead a man after a suspected stabbing in the city centre left six others injured, including one of their colleagues. Several roads were closed and the surrounding area was cordoned off
AFP via Getty
38/50 25 June 2020
A horse is washed down at Haydock Racecourse
PA
39/50 24 June 2020
People enjoy the hot weather on Margate beach
Reuters
40/50 23 June 2020
Tony Bennett the owner of The Devereux pub in Temple, London. Pub and hospitality bosses have cheered the Government’s proposals to allow customers through their doors again on July 4 as “a welcome relief”. PA Photo. Picture date: Tuesday June 23, 2020. Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Tuesday that pubs, restaurants and cinemas will be able to reopen from July 4, with “one metre-plus” distancing measures in place
PA
41/50 22 June 2020
Police forensics officers carry out a search near Forbury Gardens, in Reading town centre, the scene of a multiple stabbing attack which took place at around 7pm on Saturday, leaving three people dead and another three seriously injured
PA
42/50 21 June 2020
Soccer Football – Premier League – Everton v Liverpool – Goodison Park, Liverpool, Britain – June 21, 2020 Children play football outside the stadium before the match, as play resumes behind closed doors following the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19)
Action Images via Reuters
43/50 20 June 2020
Arsenal’s midfielder Nicolas Pepe kneels before the Premier League match against Brighton and Hove Albion at the American Express Community Stadium in southern England
AFP via Getty
44/50 19 June 2020
Bianca Walkden during a training session at the National Taekwondo Centre in Manchester
PA
45/50 18 June 2020
French President Emmanuel Macron gestures about social distancing alongside Prime Minister Boris Johnson as he arrives at Downing Street for a meeting. Macron also visited London to commemorate the 80th anniversary of former French president Charles de Gaulle’s appeal to French people to resist the Nazi occupation during World War II
AFP
46/50 17 June 2020
Players kneel, as well as, having ‘Black Lives Matter’ in place of names on their shirts prior to the start of the Premier League match between Aston Villa and Sheffield United at Villa Park in Birmingham. The league resumed after its three-month suspension because of coronavirus
AP
47/50 16 June 2020
Motakhayyel ridden by Jim Crowley, right, wins the Buckingham Palace Handicap during day one of Royal Ascot. This year, the flat racing’s biggest meeting, is behind closed doors due to the coronavirus outbreak
PA
48/50 15 June 2020
Queues form at Primark at the Rushden Lakes shopping complex after the government relaxed coronavirus lockdown laws significantly, allowing zoos, safari parks and non-essential shops to open to visitors
Getty
49/50 14 June 2020
A man kneels at a commemoration to mark the third anniversary of the Grenfell Tower fire in London. The fire claimed 72 lives on 14 June 2017
PA
50/50 13 June 2020
Protesters confront police in Whitehall near Parliament Square, during a protest by the Democratic Football Lads Alliance
PA
1/50
Arsenal’s Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang celebrates with the trophy and teammates after winning the FA Cup, as play resumes behind closed doors following the outbreak of the coronavirus disease
Pool via Reuters
2/50 31 July 2020
People enjoy the sunny weather at a Bournemouth Beach
Reuters
3/50 30 July 2020
An artist puts the finishing touches to a wax figure of Prime Minister Boris Johnson, in the entrance line at Madame Tussaud’s in London, as the attraction prepares to reopen to the public following the easing of lockdown restrictions in England
PA
4/50 29 July 2020
A member of staff stands on Ai Weiwei’s ‘History of Bombs’ during a photocall for the Chinese artist’s new work on display at the Imperial War Museum in London
PA
5/50 28 July 2020
Stuart Broad celebrates after taking the wicket of West Indies batsman Kraigg Brathwaite. It was a milestone wicket in his career, reaching his 500th Test Wicket for England. They went on to beat the West Indies in Manchester and therefore win the series 2-1
Getty/ECB
6/50 27 July 2020
Demonstrators protest outside the Tate Modern in London over proposed job losses in the wake of the Covid-19 lockdown. The group believe that the emergency money provided by the government to culture-based organisations should be used to retain all jobs and that any other use of the funding is unfair. The gallery on London’s South Bank, as well as the Tate Britain, Tate Liverpool and Tate St Ives, reopened today after closing in March due to lockdown measures meant to curb the spread of the novel coronavirus
Getty
7/50 26 July 2020
Harry Maguire shakes hands with Leicester City manager Brendan Rodgers after Manchester United beat the Foxes. The win meant they finished third in the Premier League and Leicester finished outside a Champions League place in fourth
Pool via Reuters
8/50 25 July 2020
Women exercise using pool noodles during an aqua fit class at a gym in Sunbury-on-Thames after gyms and swimming pools were allowed to reopen
AFP via Getty
9/50 24 July 2020
Mayor of London Sadiq Khan tries out a new Streetspace protected cycle lane in London at the launch a new online cycle training scheme
PA
10/50 23 July 2020
A customer has her hair cut outside at Blade Hairdressers in Soho in London
Getty
11/50 22 July 2020
Liverpool’s English midfielder Jordan Henderson lifts the Premier League trophy during the presentation following the English Premier League football match between Liverpool and Chelsea at Anfield in Liverpool. Liverpool on Wednesday lifted the Premier League trophy at the famous Kop stand at Anfield after their final home game of the season
AFP via Getty
12/50 21 July 2020
Vivienne Westwood demonstrates outside the Old Bailey in support of Julian Assange in London
Reuters
13/50 20 July 2020
Comet Neowise in the skies over the Lovell Telescope at Jodrell Bank in Cheshire
PA
14/50 19 July 2020
Mods and rockers unite on Madeira Drive, Brighton, for a demonstration to call for the reopening of the road which Brighton & Hove City Council plans to keep closed permanently
PA
15/50 18 July 2020
People enjoy the sunny weather at Painshill, an 18th century landscape garden in Cobham, Surrey
PA
16/50 17 July 2020
Captain Sir Thomas Moore receives his knighthood from Queen Elizabeth, during a ceremony at Windsor Castle
AP
17/50 16 July 2020
Red Arrows do a flypast during the Graduation Ceremony of the Queen’s Squadron at RAF College Cranwell, Lincolnshire
The Daily Telegraph/PA
18/50 15 July 2020
Jen Reid poses in front of a black resin and steel statue titled ‘A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020’, which is based on her by Marc Quinn, where it has been installed on the vacant Edward Colston plinth in Bristol city centre. The original statue was pulled down and thrown into Bristol Harbour during Black Lives Matter protests
PA
19/50 14 July 2020
Fields of echium and borage in full flower near the town of Thaxted in Essex
PA
20/50 13 July 2020
People ride a rollercoaster in a theme park next to Southend pier. Many businesses in tourism and hospitality have been able to reopen after some lockdown measures were eased
Getty
21/50 12 July 2020
West Indies’s John Campbell and Jason Holder celebrate winning the test as England’s Rory Burns and teammates look on dejected
Reuters
22/50 11 July 2020
Chicldren play in the water during a cricket match between Abinger and Worplesdon & Nurpham in Abinger Hammer, Surrey
Reuters
23/50 10 July 2020
People gather for the funeral of Dame Vera Lynn in Ditchling, England. During World War II she travelled to the frontlines, including Burma, entertaining British troops and boosting morale. She died on 18 June at her home in West Sussex
Getty
24/50 9 July 2020
Artist Anish Kapoor looks into his sculpture ‘Sky Mirror’ at Houghton Hall, King’s Lynn, ahead of the opening of his largest UK exhibition of outdoor sculptures
PA
25/50 8 July 2020
Players take a knee in support of the Black Lives Matter movement on the first day of the first Test cricket match between England and the West Indies at the Ageas Bowl in Southampton
AFP via Getty
26/50 7 July 2020
A circus performer from the Association of Circus Proprietors in Whitehall, London. The association handed a petition to Downing Street to ask Prime Minister Boris Johnson to allow circuses to reopen
EPA
27/50 6 July 2020
Bamburgh Castle in Northumberland, which re-opened to the public after being closed due to the coronavirus lockdown
PA
28/50 5 July 2020
People visit Columbia Road Flower Market, London, as it reopens following the easing of coronavirus lockdown restrictions across England
PA
29/50 4 July 2020
A member of bar staff wearing PPE in the form of a face mask, pours drinks inside the The Goldengrove in Stratford
AFP via Getty
30/50 3 July 2020
Cardboard cutouts of fans in the stands prior to the League One play-off semi final match between Portsmouth and Oxford United at Fratton Park
PA
31/50 2 July 2020
A diver cleans the inside window of the seal tank at Tynemouth Aquarium in North Shields, as it prepares to open on Saturday after further coronavirus lockdown restrictions are lifted in England
PA
32/50 1 July 2020
Slackliner Sandor Nagy practices on the beach in Boscombe, on the south coast of England
AFP via Getty
33/50 30 June 2020
(left to right) Sinn Fein leader Mary Lou McDonald, former Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams, and Deputy First Minister Michelle O’Neill attending the funeral of senior Irish Republican and former leading IRA figure Bobby Storey in west Belfast
PA
34/50 29 June 2020
Former Team GB Rhythmic Gymnastic dancer Hannah Martin during a training session at Ouse Valley Viaduct in Sussex
Reuters
35/50 28 June 2020
People visit Bolton Abbey in Yorkshire, that recently reopened following the easing of coronavirus lockdown restriction
PA
36/50 27 June 2020
A protest for Justice for Shukri Abdi on Trafalgar Square in London, following a raft of Black Lives Matter protests across the UK
PA
37/50 26 June 2020
Police at the scene of an incident at the Park Inn Hotel in central Glasgow. Scottish police said armed officers shot dead a man after a suspected stabbing in the city centre left six others injured, including one of their colleagues. Several roads were closed and the surrounding area was cordoned off
AFP via Getty
38/50 25 June 2020
A horse is washed down at Haydock Racecourse
PA
39/50 24 June 2020
People enjoy the hot weather on Margate beach
Reuters
40/50 23 June 2020
Tony Bennett the owner of The Devereux pub in Temple, London. Pub and hospitality bosses have cheered the Government’s proposals to allow customers through their doors again on July 4 as “a welcome relief”. PA Photo. Picture date: Tuesday June 23, 2020. Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Tuesday that pubs, restaurants and cinemas will be able to reopen from July 4, with “one metre-plus” distancing measures in place
PA
41/50 22 June 2020
Police forensics officers carry out a search near Forbury Gardens, in Reading town centre, the scene of a multiple stabbing attack which took place at around 7pm on Saturday, leaving three people dead and another three seriously injured
PA
42/50 21 June 2020
Soccer Football – Premier League – Everton v Liverpool – Goodison Park, Liverpool, Britain – June 21, 2020 Children play football outside the stadium before the match, as play resumes behind closed doors following the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19)
Action Images via Reuters
43/50 20 June 2020
Arsenal’s midfielder Nicolas Pepe kneels before the Premier League match against Brighton and Hove Albion at the American Express Community Stadium in southern England
AFP via Getty
44/50 19 June 2020
Bianca Walkden during a training session at the National Taekwondo Centre in Manchester
PA
45/50 18 June 2020
French President Emmanuel Macron gestures about social distancing alongside Prime Minister Boris Johnson as he arrives at Downing Street for a meeting. Macron also visited London to commemorate the 80th anniversary of former French president Charles de Gaulle’s appeal to French people to resist the Nazi occupation during World War II
AFP
46/50 17 June 2020
Players kneel, as well as, having ‘Black Lives Matter’ in place of names on their shirts prior to the start of the Premier League match between Aston Villa and Sheffield United at Villa Park in Birmingham. The league resumed after its three-month suspension because of coronavirus
AP
47/50 16 June 2020
Motakhayyel ridden by Jim Crowley, right, wins the Buckingham Palace Handicap during day one of Royal Ascot. This year, the flat racing’s biggest meeting, is behind closed doors due to the coronavirus outbreak
PA
48/50 15 June 2020
Queues form at Primark at the Rushden Lakes shopping complex after the government relaxed coronavirus lockdown laws significantly, allowing zoos, safari parks and non-essential shops to open to visitors
Getty
49/50 14 June 2020
A man kneels at a commemoration to mark the third anniversary of the Grenfell Tower fire in London. The fire claimed 72 lives on 14 June 2017
PA
50/50 13 June 2020
Protesters confront police in Whitehall near Parliament Square, during a protest by the Democratic Football Lads Alliance
PA
She pointed to employment support schemes in France, where payments are already envisaged to run two years into the future, and the German “Kurzarbeit” – short-time working – programme, which has been in place since the 2008 financial crash to offset losses in wages in sectors like the automotive industry when hours are cut.
And she warned against any attempt to rerun the austerity policies of 2010, when savage cuts to spending and hikes in tax to pay down the deficit led to a decade of stagnant wages and sluggish growth and, she argued, left Britain woefully unprepared to resist the ravages of Covid-19.
Ms Dodds has already warned the chancellor against rises in general taxes like VAT, income tax or national insurance in the autumn Budget, arguing that they would kill off consumer confidence at a time when business health remains fragile and that any additional burden must be borne by those with “the broadest shoulders”.
But while saying she would be “surprised if Labour didn’t end up arguing for a more progressive tax system at the time of the next general election”, she shied away from earlier suggestions that she would back a wealth tax on the assets of the richest, insisting policy decisions will not be taken until nearer the 2024 poll.
“Currently, the real challenge is for government to be focused on delivering that growth, because unless we do that, unless we preserve that economic capacity, how we then tax it is a second-order question,” she said. “We’ve got to get the economic capacity back up there in the first place.”
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Asked how long she was ready to see debt keep climbing to deal with the impact of the disease, Ms Dodds replied: “We are currently operating in a low interest rate environment. That may well not last forever, and we certainly shouldn’t assume that it will.
“But for as long as we are in that low interest rate environment, government really has got to focus on getting demand back up again, getting growth going again, preserving that economic capacity. That’s got to be the number one goal for government right now.”
Fiscal tightening measures like tax hikes on low and middle-income households or public spending cuts will be “damaging” if they are brought forward too soon, at a time when the UK should be trying to get back to a more normal pattern of economic growth, she said.
“Whatever fiscal measures are taken in the future are going to be compromised by whether we’ve seen that uptick in growth driven by resumption of demand, so I think that is what government really needs to be focused on.”
Asked if that might mean Covid-19 financial support packages being kept going through the years leading up to the 2024 election, Ms Dodds declined to put an end date on state interventions.
“The framework currently for government seems to be very much quite a short-term one,” she said. “You’ve got other countries looking at this in a much longer perspective – Germany and France for example taking a much longer perspective with regards to supporting wages.”
And she said: “The problem is we are at a point where it’s very difficult for anyone to foresee what the long-term impact of this crisis is going to be on consumption patterns.
“Now, if we end up three or four years down the line still having to have this degree of social distancing, clearly that would have a very clear structural impact on consumption.
“We need to do all that we can to try and ensure that we’re not seeing a depression of consumption that’s becoming more structural – and above all that we’re trying to maintain demand as much as possible.”
Ms Dodds said that cash from Mr Sunak’s £9bn job retention bonus, which offers £1,000 for each furloughed employee retained until January, could be reallocated as the chancellor’s current plans would save relatively few jobs while running up massive “deadweight” costs in cash for workers who were not under any threat of redundancy.
But pressed on how the chancellor should otherwise fund support schemes, she made clear her preference for continued borrowing, rather than tax hikes or spending cuts.
“We know what happened after 2010,” said Ms Dodds. “We know that spending cuts at that stage reduced a lot of people’s confidence. We had a slow recovery compared to many other countries. We really don’t want to be in a similar position again after this crisis.”
With vacancies few and far between and reports of hundreds of people applying for bar work and receptionists’ jobs, redundancies caused by the furlough rollback risk resulting in long-term unemployment, with lasting costs for the economy, she warned.
“We know already from research that somebody who’s been unemployed when they’re young is likely to be earning, even 20 years down the line, a fifth less than somebody who hasn’t experienced a period of unemployment,” said Ms Dodds. “If you can avoid that, there are savings in terms of social security but also the impact on their life-long earnings and the overall tax take for those individuals.
“I’ve asked the chancellor to provide publicly the evidence that he’s commissioned around the impact of unemployment of this one-size-fits-all approach to withdrawing support. He’s not been willing to do that, he hasn’t published that evidence.”
Covid-19 has been “a virus which thrives on inequalities”, with overcrowded housing and precarious finances fuelling its spread by making social distancing more difficult, she said, pointing to evidence that a quarter of families went into the crisis with less than £100 in savings.
But it has also had the effect of making people “question their assumptions” about priorities for the future direction of society, by highlighting the contribution of key workers including not only health and care staff but also low-paid private sector delivery drivers and by increasing awareness of the importance of well-resourced public services and community assets like high streets and parks, said Ms Dodds.
“I hope that awareness will lead to much more being done to deal with these issues, and above all to us never entering again another crisis with such a lack of resilience, whether it be in our public services or in our household finances,” she said.
After four months as shadow chancellor – and just three years as an MP – Ms Dodds played down the significance of her history-making position as first female holder of the office.
“I’m quite surprised that that is the first time, if I’m honest,” she said. “But to me, the critical thing is whether you have politicians in senior roles who are able to empathise and understand where different groups of people are coming from and what their concerns are.”
And the Oxford PPE graduate and former lecturer also shrugged off her lack of a background in the City, in comparison with hedge fund partner and Goldman Sachs alumnus Mr Sunak.
“People bring a variety of different kinds of experience to the table,” she said. “My father was an accountant, he was a small businessman. Worked six days a week for 30 years or so.
“He was a big influence on me in my view of how critical business is to different communities and the very positive impact that it can have, as well as my sense of injustice when businesses don’t do the right thing
“Also, I chaired the welfare advice centre on the council estate where I lived, which certainly gave me quite an insight into some of the downstream impacts of those major financial institutions on individuals, negative as well as positive.”