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Hunt set to pitch tax increases, spending cuts

UK struggling to avoid economic headwinds

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LONDON: Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt faces a clear yet far from straightfo­rward task: reassure markets he can stabilise UK public finances, but without inflicting devastatin­g damage on public services.

If he gets it wrong during his statement to the House of Commons, Hunt risks putting the Conservati­ves on course for a seismic loss at the next general election, which is due in about two years at the latest.

Britons facing a record squeeze on living standards and seeing the National Health Service in crisis would be unlikely to forgive the Tories, who have been in power since 2010.

“We will face into the storm,” Hunt will say, according to remarks released by the Treasury that reference “global” energy and inflation crises – but not Brexit – as economic headwinds facing the United Kingdom.

Fixing problems “depends on taking difficult decisions now,” he will also say.

Hunt and Prime Minister Rishi Sunak want Britain’s debt to be falling as a share of the economy by 2027-2028, a goal that will require £55bil (Us$65bil or Rm295bil) of savings. Hunt is expected to set out plans achieving that aim with a 60-40 split between spending cuts and tax rises.

Hunt will frame his economic plans against the latest forecasts from the Office for Budget Responsibi­lity – and most economists expect them to follow the Bank of England in forecastin­g a recession in the year ahead.

Interest rates – which were at 0.1% a year ago - are now expected to reach 4.5%, hitting businesses and mortgage borrowers.

Inflation is at a 41-year-high, squeezing household spending power and fuelling unrest among public-sector workers over real-terms cuts in wages.

Deutsche Bank economist Sanjay Raja expects the fiscal watchdog to also say that the UK’S growth capacity is smaller than thought, partly due to labour market problems.

Structural­ly weaker growth means the UK can raise less in tax to pay for the public services it wants, complicati­ng Hunt’s main challenge.

Former Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne famously coined that phrase during the last round of austerity from 2010, and Hunt is likely to at least try to repeat the sentiment.

He has pledged to protect the most vulnerable, even as he warned of decisions of “eye-watering” difficulty.

He is expected to highlight an expanded windfall tax on oil and gas profits, plus tax hikes aimed at wealthier Britons.

They could include making more people pay the top rate of income tax, raising the levy on capital gains and hitting dividend income.

At the same time, he’s expected to raise revenue by freezing the thresholds where different income tax rates kick in.

Increase in minimum wage

Hunt will try to mitigate criticism of raising taxes during a cost-of-living crisis by announcing an increase in the minimum wage, extra support to help with rising prices and boosting both welfare and pension payments in line with inflation, according to the Times newspaper.

Also borrowing from the Osborne approach, Hunt and Sunak will argue there’s no alternativ­e to their fiscal tightening given the urgent need to tame inflation, which is at 11.1%.

The chancellor will blame Russia’s war in Ukraine and ongoing supply chain issues as the world emerges from the pandemic.

“High inflation is the enemy of stability,” Hunt will say. “It means higher mortgage rates, more expensive food and fuel bills, businesses failing and unemployme­nt rising.” He will also say fiscal and monetary policy must work together.

That was not the case during Liz Truss’s short-lived administra­tion.

Persistent high inflation worries Hunt because it threatens higher interest rates, which further weaken the UK’S fiscal footing.

Every one percentage point rise adds about £10bil (Rm54bil) to debt servicing costs. Investec Economics estimates the bill will reach £105bil (Rm568bil) this year, or about a tenth of government revenue – a level not seen since the early 1980s.

Over the next five years, higher interest rates will add more than £100bil (Rm542bil) to Britain’s debt servicing costs, according to Bloomberg Economics.

Hunt is due to reveal real-terms cuts to most department­al budgets, heralding fresh pain for Britain’s already overstretc­hed frontline public services.

Yet he’s expected to ensure most of the squeeze is not felt until after 2024 – so only once the next general election is out of the way.

That would be a naked attempt to maximise the Conservati­ve Party’s chances of re-election, while giving Hunt the flexibilit­y to scale back the level of austerity if Britain’s economic outlook improves in the meantime.

With the Tories trailing Labour by about 20 points in the polls, the question is whether future cuts look better to voters than current ones. Chancellor­s are known for trying to pull a “rabbit from the hat” at the end of a budget speech to lift the mood and steal the headlines.

Hunt has warned “this is not going to be a time for rabbits,” but Sunak was well known for under-promising and over-delivering while in charge of the Treasury.

According to Treasury officials familiar with Hunt’s thinking, the chancellor is planning to announce billions of pounds of funding to help people insulate homes and upgrade boilers, as part of a plan to cut Britain’s energy demand.

 ?? — AFP ?? Reaching a consensus: Sunak (left) and Hunt in the House of Commons. Both argue that there is no alternativ­e to their fiscal tightening given the urgent need to tame inflation.
— AFP Reaching a consensus: Sunak (left) and Hunt in the House of Commons. Both argue that there is no alternativ­e to their fiscal tightening given the urgent need to tame inflation.

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