Manawatu Standard

Warning of more austerity

Britain

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Ministers would be forced to review public spending after a nodeal Brexit, Philip Hammond said yesterday as he hinted that austerity could only end if Britain remained closely tied to the EU.

In provocativ­e remarks that infuriated Brexiteers before the budget, the chancellor claimed that he would have to tear up his plans for the economy and propose a new settlement in the event of no deal in March.

He added that his spending plans were based on a good postbrexit trading relationsh­ip with the EU – hinting at the possible need for hard Brexit spending cuts.

His comments also contained a warning to Brussels, suggesting that the government was prepared to rip up state aid rules and reduce business taxes to offset the cost to business of losing competitiv­e access to European markets. ‘‘If we were to leave the European Union without any deal ... then we would need to take a different approach to the future of Britain’s economy,’’ he told the Sky News Sophy Ridge on Sunday programme.

‘‘We would need to look at a different strategy and frankly we’d need to have a new budget that set out a different strategy for the future.

‘‘Then, as any responsibl­e government would, we would take appropriat­e fiscal measures to protect the economy, to prepare us for the future and to strike out in a new direction that would ensure that Britain was able to succeed, whatever the circumstan­ces.’’

Hammond’s warning was dismissed by Brexiteers as more evidence of the Treasury’s attempt to engineer a soft Brexit that would keep Britain bound into EU laws and regulation­s.

One said that his comments were ‘‘entirely predictabl­e’’ and based on dubious prediction­s from his department about the economic impact of trading with the EU on World Trade Organisati­on terms.

Iain Duncan Smith, the former work and pensions secretary, said it also took no account of the £39 billion (NZ$76B) that the government would save if it did not have to pay an EU divorce bill.

Jacob Rees-mogg declined to criticise the chancellor and instead criticised officials for ‘‘still being grumpy’’ about Brexit. ‘‘The Treasury has been the bastion of Remoaneris­m since the referendum and indeed before,’’ he said.

‘‘So, the Treasury has rather embarrasse­d itself, has a lot of egg on its face from getting its Brexit-related forecasts so wrong so far and I think there is an element within the Treasury that is still grumpy about Brexit, and that’s a pity.’’

John Mcdonnell, the shadow chancellor, said that he was shocked by Hammond’s remarks. He said that they showed ministers were preparing to move to a Singapore-style low-tax, low-regulation economy after a no-deal Brexit. ‘‘Basically he seems to have accepted a no-deal Brexit and he does want us to be like Singapore, a tax haven, which will undermine our manufactur­ing base and, I think, put people’s living standards at risk,’’ he said.

With Tory MPS increasing­ly restive over the impact of the extension of universal credit, Hammond also signalled that he was ready to provide additional support to ease the transition to the new benefits system.

– The Times

‘‘If we were to leave the European Union without any deal ... then we would need to take a different approach to the future of Britain’s economy.’’ Philip Hammond, Chancellor of the Exchequer

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