Hindustan Times (Noida)

UK announces $65bn plan to fix finances as recession bites

The budget watchdog said rising prices will further erode people’s wages and reduce living standards by 7% by April 2024

- Reuters letters@hindustant­imes.com

LONDON: British finance minister Jeremy Hunt announced a string of tax increases and tighter public spending in a budget plan on Thursday that he said was needed after the blow dealt to the country’s fiscal reputation by former prime minister Liz Truss.

Outlining a 55 billion-pound ($65 billion) plan - almost half from tax rises - to fix the public finances, Hunt said the economy was already in recession and set to shrink next year as it struggles with inflation forecast to average 9.1% this year and 7.4% in 2023.

Britain’s budget watchdog said rising prices would further erode people’s wages and reduce living standards by 7% by April 2024 - the year a national election is expected wiping out growth over the eight years to 2022. Millions of Britons are already struggling with a cost of living crisis.

The tax burden would hit 37.1% of GDP, its highest sustained level since World War Two, at the end of its five-year forecast period, the Office for Budget Responsibi­lity (OBR) said, up from 33.1% in the 2019-20 tax year.

Painful fiscal medicine

But Hunt said he could not avoid painful fiscal medicine although much of it will not kick in immediatel­y - if Britain is to build on the recent restoratio­n of calm in financial markets.

“Credibilit­y cannot be taken for granted and yesterday’s inflation figures show we must continue a relentless fight to bring it down, including an important commitment to rebuild the public finances,” he told parliament.

British inflation was 11.1% in October, a 41-year high.

Sterling was down almost 1% against the dollar and 0.2% against the euro after Hunt spoke, as investors assessed the scale of belt-tightening, which looked more severe than anything planned by other big rich economies.

“There still is concern about the long-term health of the UK economy, whether there will be enough in what (Hunt) is saying for longer-term growth prospects,” Susannah Streeter, senior markets analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown, said.

Hunt announced changes that will mean more people pay basic and higher-rate income tax, and lowered to 125,000 pounds ($147,575) the threshold at which people pay the top 45% rate, as well as cutting tax-free allowances for income from dividends.

He froze until 2028 a threshold at which employers start to pay social security contributi­ons, which will cost companies more.

A levy on energy companies’ profits ill rise to 35% from 25% from January 1 until 2028, and a new temporary 45% tax will be imposed on electricit­y generators, to raise a total of 14 billion pounds ($16.48 billion) next year, Hunt said. Public spending would grow more slowly than the economy but rise in overall terms, he said.

A scaled-back version of the existing cap on energy costs would cost just under 13 billion-pounds ($15.34 billion) next year, about half what was planned by former finance minister Kwasi Kwarteng.

Recession now

Hunt said forecasts from the independen­t Office for Budget Responsibi­lity laid out “starkly the impact of global headwinds on the UK economy”. It now expects gross domestic product to contract by 1.4% next year compared with its projection in March for growth of 1.8%. Since then, Britain’s economy has struggled with inflation, a slowing global economy and a bout of financial market turmoil during Truss’s brief term as prime minister.

The OBR forecasts GDP growth of 1.3% in 2024 and 2.6% in 2025, compared with previous forecasts of 2.1% and 1.8% respective­ly. It sees inflation at 9.1% in 2022, up from its March forecast of 7.4%, and at 7.4% next year, up from 4.0%.

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