Khaleej Times

UK’s budget gearing for Brexit, says chancellor

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london — Finance minister Philip Hammond said on Sunday he would keep chopping away at the deficit to get Britain fit to face Brexit, as he prepares to deliver his budget on Wednesday.

Hammond insisted it would be “reckless” to go on a spending splurge, as Britain needed to build up its economic resilience as it gets ready to leave the European Union.

Prime Minister Theresa May is due to start two years of divorce negotiatio­ns with Brussels by the end of the month.

“As we prepare to start our negotiatio­ns to leave the European Union and plan how we will make the most of the opportunit­ies that lie ahead, my budget on Wednesday will set out the next steps to creating a stronger, fairer and better Britain,” Hammond wrote in The Sunday Times newspaper.

“As we begin our negotiatio­ns with the EU we are embarking on a new chapter in our history.

“We need to maintain our commitment to fiscal discipline and to strengthen our economic position

We need to maintain our commitment to fiscal discipline and to strengthen our economic position as we forge our vision of Britain’s future in the world Philip Hammond, British Finance Minister

as we forge our vision of Britain’s future in the world.”

The chancellor of the exchequer said that when the centrerigh­t Conservati­ves entered government in 2010, Britain was borrowing one pound in every five spent but the deficit was now down by nearly two-thirds.

“We must, as a country, ensure we get back to living within our means,” he said, insisting that he would stick to his planned trajectory of reducing borrowing. “There are still some voices calling for massive borrowing to fund huge spending sprees. That approach is not only confused, it’s reckless, unsustaina­ble and unfair on our young people, who would be left to deal with the consequenc­es,” he said.

In his budget, Hammond will unveil a revamp of skills training for 16 to 19-year-olds, the Treasury announced.

The current 13,000-odd technical education qualificat­ions will be replaced by a more streamline­d model of 15 designed better to suit the needs of students and businesses.

The government will work with employers and colleges to design the routes.

The move is aimed at putting technical qualificat­ions on a level footing with the academic qualificat­ions open to 16 to 18-year-olds.

The plans involve increasing the amount of training by more than 50 per cent to more than 900 hours a year. — AFP

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