Deccan Chronicle

Rishi Sunak is new UK fin min

Murthy son-in-law is viewed as "next prime minister"

- ALEX MORALES, JOE MAYES & JESSICA SHANKLEMAN

London: Infosys founder Narayana Murthy’s son-inlaw Rishi Sunak became the next finance minister of Britain in a Cabinet reshuffle, after the resignatio­n of incumbent Sajid Javid. Rishi Sunak’s wife is the daughter of co-founder of Infosys, Narayana Murthy will join Home Secretary Priti Patel on the top government bench as UK Chancellor of the Exchequer.

Vodafone Idea reported widening of losses to Rs 6,438.8 crore in the December quarter against Rs 5,004.6 crore in the year-ago quarter due to higher finance costs and depreciati­on. Its total income fell by 5% to Rs

11,380.5 crore. Finance costs surged 30% to Rs 3,722.2 crore while depreciati­on went up by

23% to Rs 5,877.4 crore. The telco’s losses are substantia­lly lower than Rs 50,922 crore suffered in the September quarter.

Who is Rishi Sunak, the man who in a stunning turn of events was appointed UK Chancellor of the Exchequer less than a month before the first budget of Boris Johnson's new government?

The former Goldman Sachs banker and son-inlaw of Infosys co-founder Narayana Murthy is 39 and has been viewed as a rising star in the Conservati­ve Party, with the Conservati­veHome website anointing him "the next prime minister" earlier in the year. In July he was made chief secretary to the Treasury--the second most important job in the finance ministry.

His appointmen­t, and the dramatic circumstan­ce in which his predecesso­r quit, have created a stir and raise questions abut the direction of economic policy on the heels of Brexit.

Pakistan-origin Sajid Javid also had a background in finance but goes down in history as the shortest-serving finance minister in the country since 1970. He was seen as fiscal hawk. Under the new guy, there may be what Citi calls a "Trumpstyle stimulus." This debate comes after a decade of austerity under the Conservati­ves.

Sunak is a more proBrexit chancellor than Javid, who campaigned for Remain back in 2016 (Sunak was a Leaver). In 2017, he co-authored an article highlighti­ng five benefits of Brexit, including striking new trade deals, improving regulation and being free of EU state aid rules.

"It's time to shout about that idealistic and hopeful vision for post-Brexit Britain," he wrote. "Opportunit­ies like these are what Brexit means to us."

Sunak co-founded a 1-billion pound global investment firm and specialise­d in investing in small British businesses before his entry into politics. He strongly believes that small businesses in the UK would flourish as a result of Brexit as the "vast majority of British businesses (94 per cent) don't have anything to do with the EU; but they are still subject to all EU law".

Sunak entered Parliament in 2015, elected to represent Richmond in Yorkshire. Theresa May appointed him as a junior minister and he went on to back Johnson in last year's leadership campaign in a joint piece in The Times. That earned him a promotion to the cabinet when Johnson won.

The pound rose on the news, on expectatio­n that the new chancellor will loosen the purse strings. According to a research note by Capital Economics, his previous votes in Parliament "suggest his views are perhaps more aligned with those of the Prime Minister and his Chief Special Adviser Dominic Cummings than Javid's."

"His voting history shows he's an ardent Brexiteer, supports reductions in corporatio­n tax, cuts to capital gains tax and he's gone on the record as favouring infrastruc­ture investment," the note said. "So this is either going to be a meeting of minds or Sunak will be the Prime Minister's yes man living in Number 11."

He's frequently been sent out by the government to do the morning round of TV and radio interviews, a clear sign that he's seen by Number 10 as a solid performer. Notably, he deputised for Johnson in televised leadership debates during the election campaign.

A Hindu and son of a doctor and a pharmacist, Sunak attended Winchester College, one of the country's most prestigiou­s private schools, before studying at Oxford and Stanford Universiti­es. After graduating, he worked for Goldman Sachs, before spending about three years at billionair­e activist hedge fund manager Chris Hohn's TCI Fund Management. Later he moved on to join his TCI colleague Patrick Degorce's hedge fund Theleme Partners.

Sunak married to Akshata Murthy, the daughter of Narayana Murthy. They have two daughters together. On his own website, Sunak lists his hobbies as keeping fit, soccer, cricket and the movies.

His voting history shows he's an ardent Brexiteer, supports reductions in corporatio­n tax, cuts to capital gains tax and he's gone on the record as favouring infrastruc­ture investment CAPITAL ECONOMICS

 ??  ?? Rishi Sunak with spouse Akshata Murthy and daughters
Rishi Sunak with spouse Akshata Murthy and daughters

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