Gordon Brown has promised the economy will return to growth by the
turn of the year, in his first reaction to news that the UK is still
in recession. His podcast was released on the Number 10 website a day
after official figures showed the economy was still shrinking. The
prime minister accepted times were tough but said the battle to stop
"a second Great Depression" was being won. But the Tories said the
recovery was set to be "feeble" and the UK was lagging behind other
leading countries. In his message, Mr Brown pledged to take action
against excessive bank bonuses and end "sharp practices" by credit
card operators. The prime minister said they should stop raising
interest rates on existing debts without explanation and issuing
unsolicited credit card cheques. BBC political correspondent Gary
O'Donoghue said there were no details of how the issue would be
tackled ahead of an expected announcement on Tuesday. Previously
ministers have suggested banning credit card cheques. Wall Street
Crash Mr Brown said: "We are announcing measures to make the credit
and store card companies clean up their act to get you a fairer deal.
"Sharp practices by lenders - such as hiking interest rates on
existing debts without explanation, sending out unsolicited credit
card cheques and raising credit card limits without being asked -
these sharp practices should end." " It would be suicidal to put
recovery at risk by suddenly cutting off the funding and investment
that is supporting young people, families and businesses " Gordon
Brown The podcast was released on the 80 th anniversary of the Wall
Street Crash and came after news that the UK economy shrank by 0.4 %
in the third quarter of 2009 - making the recession the longest since
records began. "My pledge to you is to make reform of the financial
sector a reality and to see Britain's economy return to growth by the
turn of the year," Mr Brown said. He said it would be "suicidal" to
start cutting spending, as the Conservatives have suggested.
"Although there are signs that confidence is beginning to return in
some areas, we need to be cautious," he said. "Now, more than ever,
is the time for steady and clear policies. That is why it would be
suicidal to put recovery at risk by suddenly cutting off the funding
and investment that is supporting young people, families and
businesses through the most challenging times in a generation." He
also insisted the fight to prevent "a second Great Depression" was
being won as a result of international co-operation. 'Feeble
recovery' Shadow Business Secretary Ken Clarke said he could not say
when the UK would come out of recession but that the prospects for
growth in 2010 were not encouraging. "Sooner or later we are going
to start getting a very feeble recovery but it is going to be feeble
and fragile," he told Sky News. "We are worse affected than pretty
well anybody else in the Western world, for some perfectly practical
reasons, part of which is the colossal scale of the public debt."
Substantial measures were needed to get banks lending again and to
help young people find work, Mr Clarke added, but he said he feared
nothing would happen before the next election as the government was
"inactive" and Mr Brown "burnt-out".