The Scotsman

Labour slam budget ‘omnishambl­es’ from ‘out-of-ideas’ Tories

◆ Government and opposition are accused of a ‘conspiracy of silence’ over size of public spending cuts needed after election

- Alexander Brown Westminste­r Correspond­ent

Shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves has claimed Jeremy Hunt delivered an“omni shambles” Budget after think-tank analysis painted a sobering picture of the nation’s finances.

Chancellor jeremy hunt delivered the Budget on Wednesday in which he announced a 2p cut to national insurance. however, economists have now suggested it will do little to impact a dramatic collapse in living standards over the next few years.

It comes as the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) accused the Conservati­ves and Labour of being engaged in a “conspiracy of silence” about public spending after the looming general election. The respected think tank’ s analysis comes just hours after there solution foundation found, despite the Budget, taxes were still going up while living standards fell.

Opening day two of the budget debate, ms reeves said :“they’ re giving with one hand and taking twice as much with the other. The stark reality of yesterday’s Budget is clear–taxes rising, living standards falling, growth stalling and yet again making promises they can’t deliver. The Tories have failed on the economy. They are out of ideas and they are out of time.”

Ms reeves criticised the chancellor­for floating the prospect of ending national insurance altogether, saying :“In what seemed to be a casual afterthoug­ht, the Chancellor has made a £46 billion unfunded commitment, leaving a ga ping hole in the publicfina­nces; even bigger than the unfunded tax cuts announced in the Tory kamikaze mini budget just 18 months ago.”

Ms Reeves questioned how such a policy would affect borrowing and public spending, adding :“or has he simply found the same magic money tree that his predecesso­r was so found of?

“This is an omnishambl­es Budget from a desperate Tory party. Instead of recklessne­ss, Labour will take a different approach. As chancellor, I will never make a commitment without saying where the money will come from.”

Mr Hunt conceded yesterday the aim to end National Insurance would not happen “any time soon”.

Earlier ifs director paul johnson claimed Mr Hunt had not been transparen­t about the challenges facing the UK, and not set out the significan­t cuts to public spending that would be required after the election.

The prospectiv­e cuts are needed to ensure the government meets its fiscal rule to have debt falling in five years’ time, and involve cutting spending on unprotecte­d department­s – including courts, prisons and local councils – by around £20bn, and cutting public investment by £18bn a year in real terms.

They also assume the “temporary” freeze on fuel duty will end, something that has not happened in the past 15 years.

Mr Johnson said: “Maybe that is possible, but keeping to these plans would require some staggering­lyhard choices, which the government has not been willing to lay out. Indeed, we heard yesterday that the next spending review, in which these choices will have to be announced, will rather convenient­ly not happen until after the election.

“One only has to look at the scale of NHS waiting lists, the number of local authoritie­s at or near bankruptcy, the backlogs in the justice system, the long-term cuts to university funding, the

Britain remains a country where taxes are heading upnotdown Torsten Bell, chief excecutive of the Resolution Foundation

struggle soft he social care system, to wonder where these cuts will really, credibly come from .”

While he was doubtful the Conservati­ves would deliver their existing spending plans, Mr Johnson also expressed scepticism that Labour would over see significan­t cuts to public spending if it won the election.

He said: “Government and opposition are joining in a conspiracy of silence in not acknowledg­ing the scale of the choices and trade-offs that will face us after the election. They, and we, could be in for a rude awakening when those choices become unavoidabl­e.”

The Resolution Foundation separately found the Budget would leave those earning £19,000 or less worse off, while middle-earners – those on salaries between £26,000 and £60,000 – will see their personal tax bills fall.

Chief executive Torsten Bell said: “A pre-election Budget produced another round of pre-election tax cuts. To deliver them, the Chancellor has continued to throw fiscal caution to the wind, cutting his fiscal headroom to just a third of the average level seen since 2010. he would fail to meet three out of the four sets of fiscal rules used by his Conservati­ve predecesso­rs since 2010.

“Britain remains a country where taxes are heading up not down, rising by the equivalent of £3,900 per household, and wherein comes are set to remain below their level at the last generalele­ction when voters return to the polls.”

First Minister Humza Yousaf said the £237 million coming to Scotland in Barnett consequent­ials following the Budget was “nowhere near enough”. He claimed the cut to National Insurance and the Autumn Statement last year would mean £1.6 billion less in“potential consequ en ti als”f or Scotland.

The Scottish Government had also been hoping for capital funding to flow from the budget, with Deputy First Ministersh­o na rob is on saying a cut in the Scottish housing budget of more than £200m would be first to be reversed if extra money became available.

Earlier yesterday, Alyson Stafford – the director-general of the Scottish Exchequer – said there would be no capital consequent­ials coming to Scotland as a result of the Budget, and total funding would drop by 8.7 per cent in real-terms by 2026/27.

Mr Yousaf declared: “The absence of investment in public services and infrastruc­ture is nothing, frankly, short of a betrayal of our public services by the UK government.”

 ?? ?? Main: Chancellor Jeremy Hunt hinted at the abolition of National Insurance in his Budget, but yesterday admitted that would not happen ‘any time soon’. Above: Labour’s shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves. Right: IFS director Paul Johnson
Main: Chancellor Jeremy Hunt hinted at the abolition of National Insurance in his Budget, but yesterday admitted that would not happen ‘any time soon’. Above: Labour’s shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves. Right: IFS director Paul Johnson
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