Western Mail

Chancellor may need £19bn in tax hikes to end austerity – report

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CHANCELLOR Philip Hammond would have to increase taxes by £19bn – the equivalent of one penny on income tax, National Insurance and VAT – to meet Theresa May’s promise to end austerity while sticking to his plans to eliminate the deficit, a new report has found.

And the report by the Institute for Fiscal Studies said there will be “virtually no Brexit dividend” to relieve spending pressure on the Chancellor, despite Mr Hammond’s hopes of a boost if a withdrawal deal is agreed.

Even without taking into account the likely hit to tax revenues following Brexit, the Treasury can expect only a “modest” £1bn-a-year saving on EU contributi­ons by 2022/23 – a figure which could “easily” be outweighed by additional spending on bureaucrac­y, such as new border guards.

Unless economic growth is much better than expected, Mr Hammond will face the choice between “substantia­l” tax hikes or ditching his target of balancing the books by the mid-2020s, the IFS warned in its annual Green Budget.

If the Chancellor chooses to fund the end of austerity by raising taxes by 1% of national income, this would bring the overall tax burden close to its highest level since the end of the Second World War – though it would still be in the middle of the range for developed industrial countries.

Even £19bn of tax increases by 2022/23 would be enough only to meet existing commitment­s on additional funding for health, defence and aid – including the the first three years of the five-year £20bn boost promised to the NHS – while halting real-terms cuts in other areas, said the respected economic think-tank.

And this would still leave social security cuts totalling £7bn to work their way through the system.

Describing this goal as “a minimal definition of the end of austerity”, the IFS warned: “Unless there are substantia­l tax rises, or much-betterthan-expected economic growth, the Prime Minister’s aim of ‘ending austerity’ is unlikely to be compatible with the Chancellor’s aim of balancing the books by the mid-2020s.”

The IFS found that the Government has already committed to £13bn of additional spending on health, defence and aid between 2019/20 and 2022/23. To end austerity, it would also have to halt £4bn worth of cuts to day-to-day spending in other department­s planned for next year, along with a further £2 billion pencilled in for the years to 2022/23.

Mr Hammond could find this £19bn sum by hiking every rate of income tax, all National Insurance contributi­ons and the main rate of VAT by 1p each, said the report.

But it also set out a series of alternativ­e tax hikes to target the pain on better-off members of the older generation, including:

■ Ending the practice of writing off Capital Gains Tax on assets in a deceased person’s estate, estimated in 2012 to cost £490m a year;

■ abolition of Entreprene­urs Relief, which cost £2.7bn in 2017/18;

■ charging employee National Insurance contributi­ons on those over state pension age, raising around £1.1bn;

■ reforming the “indefensib­ly generous” treatment of pension pots bequeathed after death, which are not subject to tax if the holder dies before the age of 75; and

■ reforming council tax so bills are proportion­al to the value of a property, with a potential £8bn a year raised if rates on the top four bands were doubled.

Mr Johnson said Mr Hammond’s tax and spend choices for the next spending review period, beginning in 2020, will be “the biggest nonBrexit-related decision this Chancellor will make”.

“He has a big choice. He could end austerity, as the Prime Minister has suggested. But even on a limited definition of what that might mean would imply spending £19bn a year more than currently planned by the end of the Parliament.

“Alternativ­ely, the Chancellor could stick to his guns on the deficit and leave many public services to struggle under the strain of a decade and more of cuts.

“This is going to be the toughest of circles to square.”

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