Govt unveils new budget amid pay protest
LONDON: Britain’s finance minister unveiled a cost-of-living budget yesterday as the government seeks to keep a grip on public spending in the face of a fresh wave of strikes over pay.
Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt delivered his tax and spending plan to parliament at 12.30pm as teachers, junior doctors, civil servants, BBC journalists and drivers on London’s underground Tube railway staged the latest day of mass walkouts.
Public and private sector workers show little sign of ending strike action that began last year when rocketing inflation slashed the value of wages.
Ahead of the budget, Mr Hunt has flagged increased childcare funding and proposals to encourage Britons aged over 50 to rejoin the jobs market. The government is also expected to confirm plans to entice those who have dropped out of the jobs market back to work.
It is looking to fill 1.1 million staff vacancies — in part caused by a lack of EU workers following Brexit, and a record number of people classed as long-term sick.
Reports add that Mr Hunt could allow workers to put more tax-free money into their private pensions.
“Reports of senior doctors retiring early due to the impact of pension tax allowances... have undoubtedly been of particular concern to the government given the pressures already on the health system following the pandemic,” noted Tom Selby, head of retirement policy at AJ Bell.
“However, both the lifetime and annual allowance apply across all types of private pensions and so this announcement would increase the retirement savings limits for millions of Brits.”
In neighbouring France, the Senate at the weekend voted to approve a deeply unpopular reform to the country’s pension system. The headline measure is a hike in the minimum retirement age to 64 from 62.