Khaleej Times

UK budget predicted to be a nightmare before Christmas

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On Thursday, Britain will hike taxes and slash public spending in a government budget signalling a return to austerity despite millions suffering a cost-of-living crisis in an economy facing recession.

Conservati­ve Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, who took office just three weeks ago, has vowed to fix the economic havoc created by his short-lived predecesso­r Liz Truss, keeping in mind the sky-rocketing energy bills, decades-high inflation and the rising interest rates that are squeezing households.

Finance minister Jeremy Hunt will present his crucial budget in parliament, alongside official economic and inflation forecasts — with recent data signalling a grim outlook.

Chancellor of the Exchequer Hunt is expected to unveil fiscal consolidat­ion totalling between £50 billion and £60 billion ($58.7 - $70.5 billion), media reports suggest.

"We're all going to be paying a bit more tax, I'm afraid," Hunt told UK media over the weekend, likening himself to the pennypinch­ing miser Ebenezer Scrooge in Charles Dickens' festive favourite "A Christmas Carol".

"We will be asking everyone for sacrifices," he said, stressing however that the pain would fall disproport­ionately on the better off.

In more gloomy news, Britain's economy shrank in the third quarter as inflation soared, recent data showed, likely confirming it was already in a recession.

The Bank of England has said the UK economy would also contract in the current final quarter, meaning the economy was in a

recession, which it warned could last until mid-2024.

"The big fiscal tightening ... is coming just as the recession begins," noted Capital Economics analyst Ashley Webb.

"The clear risk is that the fiscal consolidat­ion deepens the recession," he cautioned.

Truss' unfunded tax-slashing

budget sparked a collapse in the pound and an explosion in state borrowing costs during her 49day tenure that began in September.

Investors fretted over a black hole of as much as £200 billion, forcing emergency interventi­on from the Bank of England.

She then fired her finance minister Kwasi Kwarteng and replaced him with Hunt, who set about reversing the much-criticised budget and curtailed a costly freeze in domestic fuel bills.

Yet, it was not enough to keep Truss in Downing Street.

Markets have since regained an even keel, after Sunak took the helm and political turmoil subsided, but retail lenders' mortgage rates remain elevated.

"What we are seeing now is that stability has returned to the United Kingdom," Sunak told Sky News in Bali, Indonesia, where he is attending the G20 summit.

"That's because the expectatio­n is that the government will make those difficult but necessary decisions to ensure that we can get a grip of inflation, reduce it for people with the cost of living, also limit the increase in mortgage rates.

"I would really want people to be reassured that ... all the decisions we make will have fairness and compassion at their heart."

Economic storm clouds could darken further this week, with unemployme­nt and inflation data due for release on Tuesday and Wednesday respective­ly.

The BOE this month sprang its biggest interest rate hike since 1989 to fight sky-high inflation, which stands at a four-decade peak above 10 per cent, as energy and food prices soar due to the Russia-ukraine conflict.

The bank's key rate has rocketed from 0.1 per cent to 3.0 per cent in under one year, in turn ramping up home loan repayments and worsening the cost-of living crisis. — reuters

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