Eastern Eye (UK)

‘SUNAK SHOULD CUT TAXES NOW’

Peer urges former chancellor to be bold and take more financial risks

- By BARNIE CHOUDHURY

THE former president of the Confederat­ion of British Industry (CBI), Lord Karan Bilimoria, is urging Rishi Sunak to cut taxes now, and not, as he has declared, in seven years.

He told Eastern Eye that reducing rates will not necessaril­y mean that inflation will rise.

Speaking in a personal capacity, the peer said the government had the ability to borrow money without harming the economy and stop businesses going bust.

“Business needs certainty,” said Bilimoria. “The attitude seems to be, ‘well, we’ve helped you enough during the pandemic, now we can’t help you any more.

“They [government] have given £37 billion help to consumers, including, by the way, the windfall tax, which we at the CBI did not agree with.

“I personally do not think that is the way, and it’s only £5bn out of the £37bn. You disincenti­vise investment again, but there’s no help for businesses at all.

“The help, including on energy, is for consumers, but not for businesses.

“Businesses get no help on energy at all, and in my business, this is 25 per cent of my costs.”

Sunak told the BBC that he would cut the basic rate of income tax to 16 per cent, but not until the end of the next parliament, seven years from now.

“I want to make sure that we can pay for it. I want to make sure that we can do it alongside growing the economy,” said the former chancellor.

“I don’t think embarking on a spree of excessive borrowing at a time when inflation and interest rates are already on the rise would be wise.”

Bilimoria, a crossbench peer, made clear that his

interventi­on was personal, and that he regarded both Tory leadership candidates as friends and respected them.

But he said he “completely disagreed” with the former chancellor that he could not cut taxes now.

“They can help in two ways,” said Bilimoria. “One is you make sure there are incentives to invest.

“Second, you reduce taxes, because if you reduce taxes that takes the burden off businesses and encourages investment, and gives you that bandwidth to be able to survive and grow.

“If you reduce taxes, that also helps consumers because they are being completely squeezed as well, because wages are not keeping up with inflation.

“The worry about the fact that it will increase inflation is, I think, completely misplaced at this time, because the inflation that we are suffering at the moment is caused by external factors such as the Ukraine war, and energy costs and fuel prices.”

Bilimoria said economists have told the government it can spend money now without causing harm to the country.

In March, after the former chancellor’s spring budget, the Office for Budget Responsibi­lity (OBR) told the government that it had about £30 billion worth of “financial headroom”.

This is when businesses need to spend upfront in order to deal with, say, an unexpected order before they get paid by the customer.

They will use their savings, reserves or ask the bank for more money, so they can complete the job knowing they would repay or reinvest or replenish their funds once they get their money.

Several businesses, parliament­arians, and political operatives, who did not want to speak on the record, said they thought Sunak’s strategy was wrong.

They told Eastern Eye the government could borrow money, cut taxes and pump cash into the economy, easing the pressure on entreprene­urs and consumers during this cost-of-living crisis.

Taking that risk would reap dividends, they said.

The foreign secretary and Conservati­ve leadership frontrunne­r, Liz Truss, favours this strategy.

Bilimoria, the founder and chair of global brand Cobra Beer, said while inflation for consumers may be above nine per cent, for his company it was running at 25 per cent, which he could not pass on to customers.

He said the government could borrow against the UK’s GDP – gross domestic product or how much the UK earns.

“Our borrowing is far lower as a percentage of GDP than many other countries, including the United States,” he said.

“At the end of the Second World War, our debt to GDP was 250 per cent.

“It took from 1945 to 1963 to get it down to below 100 per cent, but we needed to do it. We are not even at 100 per cent of GDP.

“We have had the worst global crisis since the Second World War, the pandemic and [it is] now exacerbate­d by the Ukraine war. We are in a situation that is an emergency crisis in a global situation, so if you need to borrow at a time like this, you have to do it.”

Bilimoria repeated his previous messages that the government must reform business rates taxes, which is going up to 25 per cent in April next year, and look at the apprentice levy which allows companies to invest in new talent.

He also wants the new prime minister to consider replacing the current “super deduction” tax of 130 per cent when it ends in March 2023.

On its website, the Treasury explained this policy.

“[Companies] investing in qualifying new plant and machinery assets will be able to claim a 130 per cent super deduction capital allowance on qualifying plant and machinery investment­s; a 50 per cent first-year allowance for qualifying special rate assets.

“The super deduction will allow companies to cut their tax bill by up to 25p for every £1 they invest, ensuring the UK capital allowances regime is among the world’s most competitiv­e.”

However, other business owners disagreed with Bilimoria about cutting taxes when inflation was rampant and recession a possibilit­y.

Lord Rami Ranger, a Tory donor and member of the party, said he was backing the former chancellor to get Britain back on a sound economic footing.

“The best policies are with those who know how to generate wealth, and not with those who know how to spend it,” Ranger explained.

“The one who creates the environmen­t where people are able to compete, work, and develop businesses and export competitiv­ely is the right candidate.

“Rishi has the sound policies – that you have to contain inflation first, and then watch it under control.

“Once the economy has recovered, it will automatica­lly generate the money needed to pay for public services.

“But you can’t spend money when the economy is faltering.

“Unfortunat­ely, people never look at the bigger picture. They are only interested in ‘what’s in it for me’, short-term gains not long-term losses.

“Therefore, only a pragmatic person will understand that we can’t eat our cake without baking it; in other words, we cannot consume resources until we generate them.”

So, does he agree with Sunak that it would be our children who will pick up the debt for borrowing billions of pounds to cut taxes?

“Rishi is 100 per cent correct. There is no such thing as a free meal because we will end up paying huge interest on the money we borrow,” Ranger said.

“It’s only going to be a temporary fix, not a permanent solution.

“The permanent solution is we bring inflation under control, and that the prices stop rising.

“Otherwise, we’ll be just printing money, paying money and we will just be throwing good money after bad. “Inflation will go up. “It’s no good borrowing money and spending it – that was the hallmark of the Labour party.

“They will bring a feelgood factor temporaril­y and then leave a very big black hole in the economy for somebody else to pick up the tab,” he said.

“A tough policy is pursued by tough people.”

Ranger, founder of distributi­on company Sun Mark warned that borrowing to cut taxes could lead to British goods becoming unaffordab­le.

“In the end, you we will know what who was right who’s wrong.

“They may not support Rishi now, but they will realise that he had the sound policies where we could contain inflation, we could create employment, and we could make British exports competitiv­e,” he said.

“If our prices go through the roof due to inflation, we will go back to the time where it will be too expensive to buy British products, let alone export them.

“Interest rates will go up, mortgages will go up, your credit card payments will go up.

“So, it is a knock-on effect. Therefore, I would say that we should really sacrifice little short-term gains for the sake of bigger and better in the future.”

Even though she wants help for businesses and her customers, the founder and owner of the popular Darjeeling Express restaurant, Asma Khan, told Eastern Eye Sunak had the better strategy than Truss’ idea to borrow and cuts taxes out of trouble.

“This is not a viable solution. It is a knee-jerk reaction

and populism about cutting taxes,” Khan said. “It may get you elected, but it will not solve my problem as a businesspe­rson. We can see the impact of inflation on our business as well.

“The cost of everything is rising dramatical­ly, and this is going to put off people from coming out to eat, because this is one of the first things they would cut out of their list of things they do.

“You’ve got to pay for your gas and electricit­y and all the essentials. You wouldn’t go out to eat in a restaurant because you have less to spend.

“So, I think inflation is something that we definitely need to deal with.”

According to Khan, the government should instead be looking at how retailers and the hospitalit­y industry get workers during the cost-of-living crisis.

Brexit and the pandemic have not helped, she admitted.

“I’m in between restaurant­s, and moving locations, but we had a mix of very diverse people in our restaurant, from all kinds of background­s, including Eastern Europeans, for service.

“It is an industry where the people you need are skilled, hardworkin­g, and who are also interested in learning new skills.

“We have not been able to find that for the local population.

“It is a cultural thing, and for most of them, this is not something they would want to do.

“I admit that it is not an easy industry to work in, with long hard hours.

“In the past, many restaurant­s actually didn’t pay enough.

“Now that’s not happening because I think everyone is willing to pay the London living wage.

“With the cost of living, no one’s gonna come and work for minimum wage now. In London, prices are too high.”

Meanwhile, Dinesh Dhamija, an entreprene­ur and former European Parliament representa­tive for the Liberal Democrats, said although Sunak may have the experience, Truss was playing to the party faithful.

“I don’t think Liz Truss cares about inflation, she cares about becoming prime minister,” said Dhamija, the founder of the successful online holiday travel agency, Ebookers.

“The Brexit debate was all about claims that couldn’t be substantia­ted, yet they won, and this is what Liz Truss is doing.

“Then in the spin room afterwards, they spin all the negativity in whatever Rishi says.

“So, the logic doesn’t count in politics it seems, especially with the Conservati­ves faithful.

“All Tory government­s have come in and borrowed a lot in the debt markets.

“Both of them understand about borrowing and spending and tax and spend – one through advisers and the other through experience.”

He told Eastern Eye that entreprene­urs would always find ways to be successful.

Dhamija is currently investing in solar power in Romania on a 900-acre site.

However, Bilimoria said his argument was backed by economic forecaster­s the Centre for Economics and Business Research (CEBR).

Its latest analysis [on July 18] suggested that the government had £60 billion financial headroom.

Asked why he thought Sunak was being so cautious, the Cobra Beer founder and chair said, “Of course, you want to be seen to be fiscally prudent and want to be seen to be conservati­ve.

“But I’m sorry, there’s a time for caution, and there’s a time to be bold.

“And the Duke of Wellington’s motto was ‘fortune favours the bold’, and this is the time to be bold.

“This is the time to say ‘I’m going to cut tax’. This is the time to say ‘I’m going to increase investment’.

“That’s what one has got to do at a time like this, as he [Sunak] did in a big way during the pandemic.”

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 ?? ?? MAKING THE ARGUMENT: Lord Karan Bilimoria; and (clockwise from inset below) Lord Rami Ranger; Dinesh Dhamija; and Asma Khan
MAKING THE ARGUMENT: Lord Karan Bilimoria; and (clockwise from inset below) Lord Rami Ranger; Dinesh Dhamija; and Asma Khan

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