The Daily Telegraph - Saturday

Cut income tax not IHT, Lamont tells Sunak

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Charles Hymas Home AffAirs editor

LORD LAMONT, the chancellor whose budget helped Sir John Major win the 1992 election, has said that Rishi Sunak should prioritise cutting income tax over inheritanc­e tax to revive his party’s fortunes.

The former chancellor, whose tax-cutting budget of 1992 introduced the 20 per cent rate on income, said raising thresholds would maximise the number of voters who would benefit ahead of the general election next year.

Income tax thresholds were frozen by Mr Sunak in April 2021 in an aim to balance vast spending during the pandemic, with Jeremy Hunt, the current Chancellor, extending that freeze until 2028. Lord Lamont’s giveaway budget in March 1992, in which he lowered the basic rate of income tax from 25 per cent to 20, was seen as framing John Major’s successful campaign in which he defeated Neil Kinnock, the Labour leader, against the odds.

Like Mr Sunak, he had succeeded an unpopular prime minister in Margaret Thatcher, just two years earlier.

His interventi­on comes amid a battle within the party, with some MPs demanding that Mr Hunt use his Budget on March 6 to abolish inheritanc­e tax as a political move that would create a clearer dividing line with Labour.

However, Lord Lamont warned that axing or cutting inheritanc­e tax would benefit a smaller number of people, given only 4 per cent of estates pay the levy compared to the nation’s 31 million income taxpayers.

He said that he “did not buy” the argument that it was universall­y hated.

“The largest number of people should benefit from whatever is possible,” he said, adding that the Budget

‘IHT cuts benefit a small number of people. I don’t really buy the argument that it is much hated by everyone’

should be presented as “relief” for the high price paid by workers in the higher taxes required to fund pandemic bailouts.

“My priority would be [raising] income tax thresholds. They affect the most people. I think you want to give some relief to people who have paid the price and have had to pay for some of the measures that were introduced during the pandemic.

“The reason the tax burden is high is because we had a lot of expenditur­e during the pandemic that was then magnified by interest rates and caught us in a tax trap.

“It’s the public in general who have paid the price. You would normally expect thresholds to go up with inflation. I think the average person would like to see a little light at the end of the tunnel.

“I am not unsympathe­tic to IHT cuts but it benefits a small number of people. I don’t really buy the argument that it’s much hated by everyone.”

It comes as new data showed Mr

Sunak is facing the bleakest economic backdrop to any election in more than three decades as businesses and households reel from the cost of living crisis and high interest rates.

The economy is expected to grow by 0.7 per cent next year, according to the Office for Budget Responsibi­lity.

This is worse than the 1.6 per cent growth recorded in 2019, 2.7 per cent in 2017 and 2.2 per cent in 2015, when the Tories successful­ly held onto power.

Lord Clarke, another former chancellor, urged caution, saying Mr Hunt and Mr Sunak should make a “very careful study” of the public finances and state of the economy before deciding whether to go ahead with tax cuts.

“The first thing you have to do in any budget is to have regard to the national interest and need to get ourselves out of the present economic crisis back to a healthy economy in two or three years’ time,” said Lord Clarke, who served under Sir John when the Conservati­ves suffered a landslide loss to Labour in 1997. “Calls from my Right-wing friends

‘If people think that you have lost control and you are not tackling that debt problem, you will cause great financial problems’

that you borrow or print money to win voters are unwise.”

Asked if he believed Mr Hunt should go ahead with tax cuts in March, Lord Clarke replied: “Is it appropriat­e? He will have to make a judgement but he will have to bear in mind that we have a very big debt problem. We have a colossal level of debt with interest payments. It is a huge problem.

“If people think that you have lost control and you are not tackling that debt problem, you will cause great financial problems.

“I am not suggesting he will repeat the Liz Truss experiment. She gave us ample warning of the effects you have if you have a serious debt crisis.

“The only chance to be re-elected is if people think Rishi Sunak and Jeremy Hunt have restored the Conservati­ve reputation for competent management of the economy and they look like responsibl­e people who will take us back to the sort of growth and economic security that we are used to in this country.”

Former chancellor says the average person would like to see a little light at the end of the tunnel

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