Manchester Evening News

Sunak ‘not under pressure’ from PM

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THE Chancellor has said there was no pressure from the Prime Minister to announce a package of financial support for UK households a day after Boris Johnson came under pressure due to the release of the Sue Gray report.

Speaking to the Treasury Select Committee, Rishi Sunak denied suggestion­s that his £21 billion package of support to offset soaring inflation and energy prices was used to direct attention away from the fallout over the report.

Committee member and Labour MP Rushanara Ali asked Mr Sunak if he came under political pressure to announce the package in May after he suggested he may wait until the autumn to hand out funds to hard-hit households.

The Chancellor said: “No. The way the price cap works, there is an observatio­n window from February to August, until you are through you don’t know what it will be while there were estimates, there was no actual data.

“We couldn’t do it for the spring statement because the observatio­n window had barely opened for the price cap, so anything could have the potential to be very wrongly sized. I have always said I want to strike the right balance about reassuranc­e to people and waiting for enough informatio­n to ensure it is appropriat­ely sized.

“There is no perfect time but we had to do it.”

He also denied that there was pressure from regulator Ofgem and said he felt informed after receiving sufficient weekly estimates over the potential price cap increase later this year.

Consumers are braced for the energy price cap to rise by more than £800 to £2,800 in October as the squeeze on living standards continues.

It comes after UK consumer price index (CPI) inflation struck a 40-year high of 9% in April, and it is expected to soar above 10% by the end of 2022.

Mr Sunak stressed that the support measures introduced last month are “temporary” and shrugged off suggestion­s he has left the door open for further measures.

He told the Treasury Select Committee: “When I’m asked about further measures I always give the same response – I wouldn’t read anything more or less into it.

“It is that in the last two years I’ve always tried to be responsive to the economic situation as I see it and as it is affecting the country.

“The structure of what we have put in place is by definition temporary and it is a careful and well-constructe­d package which will minimise the issue of inflation.”

The Chancellor added that Treasury officials have not modelled what impact his cost-of-living support will have on child poverty in the UK.

Mr Sunak also defended the decision not to provide cash support for businesses last month, after coming under fire from trade bodies such as the Confederat­ion of British Industry and Federation for Small Businesses.

 ?? ?? Rishi Sunak answering questions at a Treasury Select Committee hearing yesterday
Rishi Sunak answering questions at a Treasury Select Committee hearing yesterday

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