Low-rise council tax "means Birmingham people are better off"
Feb 25 2009 by Paul Dale, Birmingham Post
Four years of below inflation council tax increases have left the people of Birmingham £58 million better off, it was claimed last night.
The figure represents the additional amount of money that householders would have had to find if bills had risen in line with the average for English local authorities, city council leader Mike Whitby insisted.
Presenting his annual budget speech to the full city council, Coun Whitby said the fourth successive 1.9 per cent increase underlined the Tory-Liberal Democrat coalition’s commitment to “easing the tax burden in difficult economic times while delivering ever improving front line services”.
Average Band D council tax payers will only have to find an additional 39p a week, a figure that Coun Whitby said would be welcomed by those on pensions and low income families.
He said the coalition had managed through rigorous cost control to deliver one of the lowest council tax increases anywhere in the country, while still managing to pump an additional £21.8 million into frontline services.
The extra money also includes £5.5 million to protect the NEC Group from the impact of the downturn.
Coun Whitby said: “Birmingham is once again demonstrating how excellent and improving services can be delivered without excessively burdening the taxpayers. We continue to set the standard for service improvement and good fiscal discipline.”
Despite difficulties caused by the recession, Birmingham’s international reputation was at an all-time high with foreign inward investors showing keen interest in funding major city centre regeneration projects, he insisted.
“We are marching forward on our road to excellence,” Coun Whitby added.