Western Mail

Chancellor made ‘political choice’ over fuel duty freeze and pay rises

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JEREMY Hunt’s decision to freeze fuel duty rather than funding a costof-living pay rise for public sector workers is a “political choice”, the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) has said.

In his initial Budget analysis, IFS director Paul Johnson said the £6bn the Chancellor committed to holding fuel duty for a 12th successive year could have paid for an inflationm­atching offer for hundreds of thousands of striking workers.

“That’s a political choice. Money for motorists, but not for nurses, doctors and teachers,” he said.

While Mr Johnson broadly welcomed the measures to boost employment, he warned that the impact on the numbers in work would be limited.

“Overall these look like a sensible set of changes which could have the sort of marginal, but positive, impact which is perhaps as much as we can expect from measures in a single Budget,” he said.

Mr Johnson said the pension tax changes were designed to encourage a relatively small number of better-off workers to stay in the workforce a bit longer and were “unlikely to have a big effect on overall employment”.

Meanwhile, the “likely doubling” of spending on childcare would potentiall­y help “tens, but not hundreds, of thousands” of parents back into the labour market provided it was properly funded, he said.

Neverthele­ss, Mr Johnson said that it appeared close to ending a “25-year long journey” in which a new arm of the welfare state had effectivel­y been created.

Overall, he said households still faced an “enormously difficult” period ahead with a series of big personal tax rises due to kick in next month.

The freezing of income tax thresholds, announced by Mr Hunt in the autumn statement in November, will mean basic rate taxpayers will pay an extra £500 in 2023-24, while for higher rate taxpayers it will be an additional £1,000.

“These tax rises may be necessary from a fiscal point of view, but they are an important part of the reason why household incomes are still expected to fall more over the current two-year period than at any point in living memory,” Mr Johnson said.

“The government remains on track to meet its relatively loose fiscal targets by only the barest of margins, despite a historical­ly high tax burden and some extremely tight post-election numbers for spending on public services.

“Debt interest spending is forecast to remain well above what was forecast a year ago. And we are still in the midst of an enormously difficult period for households. We’re by no means out of the woods yet.”

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