Eastern Eye (UK)

UK imposes windfall tax to fund energy bills

SUNAK OFFERS £400 SUPPORT PAYMENT TO HOUSEHOLDS

-

BRITAIN’S chancellor Rishi Sunak last Thursday (26) unveiled a multi-billion-pound support package for consumers hit by soaring domestic energy bills, with help from a temporary windfall tax on oil giants.

A government package worth £15 billion will be funded in part by an exceptiona­l levy on soaring profits enjoyed by the likes of BP and Shell that have benefited massively from surging oil and gas prices.

Sunak acknowledg­ed rocketing inflation is causing “acute distress” for Britons and ravaged household budgets nationwide, adding: “I know they are worried, I know people are struggling.”

The windfall tax marked a u-turn for embattled prime minister Boris Johnson, who previously insisted such a move would hinder efforts by oil majors to invest in greener energy.

But Sunak told parliament last Thursday: “It is possible to both tax extraordin­ary profits fairly and incentivis­e investment.”

The Chancellor of the Exchequer acted after British annual inflation surged to a 40-year high on rocketing energy costs, squeezing household budgets. “We need to make sure that for those (for) whom the struggle is too hard and for whom the risks are too great they are supported,” Sunak added.

“This government will not sit idly by while there is a risk that some in our country might be set so far back they might never recover. This is simply unacceptab­le and we will never allow that to happen.”

One in five Britons are struggling or unable to make ends meet, pollsters YouGov said last Thursday.

Countries around the world are experienci­ng decades-high inflation as the Ukraine conflict pushes up energy and food prices, in turn forcing the Bank of England and other central banks to hike interest rates.

Sunak said the new energy tax would be charged on the profits of oil and gas companies at a rate of 25 per cent. “It will be temporary and when oil and gas prices return to historical­ly more normal levels the levy will be phased out.”

The tax would raise about £5bn of revenue over the next year, according to the Treasury.

The money, plus a further £10bn, will fund support payments helping especially the poorest.

However, all households will benefit from a £400 payment to cushion energy bills that are set to rocket further in the autumn.

Offsetting the windfall levy, meanwhile, would be a near doubling of investment tax relief for oil and gas firms. “The more a company invests, the less tax they will pay,” Sunak told MPs.

His address came one day after Johnson sought to “move on” from a critical report about his leadership that allowed lockdown-breaking parties at Downing Street. Johnson and Sunak were fined by police over a breach of the laws they set for the public, causing widespread outrage.

Downing Street’s chief of staff Steve Barclay dismissed suggestion­s last Thursday’s cost-of-living announceme­nt was timed to deflect attention from the “Partygate” scandal.

The main opposition Labour party, which had repeatedly called for a windfall tax on energy giants, blasted the government over the delayed move.

While welcoming the levy, Labour finance spokeswoma­n Rachel Reeves demanded to know why the Conservati­ve government had taken “so long”. “This government’s dither and delay has cost our country dearly.”

She accused Johnson of simply seeking to move the news agenda on from Partygate.

“Labour called for a windfall tax because it is the right thing to do; the Conservati­ves are doing it because they needed a new headline,” Reeves said.

The share prices of oil majors BP and Shell were each up more than one per cent following the announceme­nt. “Investors shrugged off” the news “given that it is expected to be a short-lived hit”, said Hargreaves Lansdown analyst Susannah Streeter.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? BUDGET WOES: The profits of oil and gas companies will be taxed at a rate of 25 per cent, says chancellor Rishi Sunak
BUDGET WOES: The profits of oil and gas companies will be taxed at a rate of 25 per cent, says chancellor Rishi Sunak

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom