The Independent

Public sector staff will suffer the most from Hunt’s plans

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After a decade of austerity-linked pay freezes and below-inflation rises (effectivel­y pay cuts) public sector staff are earmarked for pay rises of no more than 2 per cent for the next two years when inflation is still likely to be close to double figures.

I, like thousands of others, work for local authoritie­s whose budgets – and therefore staffing levels – have been cut to the bone. I work far in excess of my contracted 37 hours per week, often close to 50, with these additional hours being unpaid. I volunteere­d during Covid to work with rough sleepers to keep them and the public safe – and caught Covid and communitya­cquired pneumonia. Yet we are the default target group when it comes to making cuts, whilst the non-doms and banker bonuses are protected.

It makes me laugh when you hear the chancellor promising to provide high-quality public services while cutting back the wages of those he expects to deliver them.

Anonymous Address supplied

Hooray for non-doms!

What a relief to learn – thanks to Jeremy Hunt – that the nondom tax loophole helps our economy. Just imagine how dire our predicamen­t would be if some overzealou­s politician (or even worse: a borderline socialist) had abolished such altruistic legislatio­n years ago.

We wouldn’t be now looking at those imminent sunlit uplands and glorious futures for another 30 years at least. Aren’t Conservati­ve chancellor­s just great.

Robert Boston Kent

The truth about Brexit

We need to remind ourselves and Keir Starmer, that only 37.4 per cent of the UK electorate actually voted to leave the EU, so 62.6 per cent did not. Starmer is therefore wrong to say the “the people decided” – the referendum bar was set too low and should have been over 50 per cent of the electorate. Then there could be no argument with the result.

Alan Froy Southend-on-Sea

Losing patience with the Tories

I read Ed Dorrell’s column (Labour has a great new ‘clunking fist’ in Reeves, yesterday) and after the delivery of Jeremy Hunt’s dire autumn statement, it was good to see Rachel Reeves rise to her feet with her confrontat­ional but smart fiscal take on it.

Dorrell is correct that the failure to lay much of the blame on the mini-Budget crassly orchestrat­ed by Liz Truss and Kwasi Kwarteng is wearing thin with the British public, and establishi­ng the fact that Labour would not have gone anywhere near this strategy plays to the party’s economic strength.

She is right that Labour have to be truly authentic but not kamikaze in their spending plans and commitment­s and come the next election, they might indeed be in power to reaffirm the virtues of public spending and show that there is a different and credible way to do things. Because the public are fast losing patience and belief in this latest Conservati­ve administra­tion.

Judith A Daniels Great Yarmouth

I’m concerned about windfall taxes

Measures in the autumn statement to help the low-paid and the most vulnerable should be supported. However, I do have concerns over windfall taxes on oil. At this time “UK PLC” needs incentives for the companies to invest every penny of their “windfalls” into oil and gas expansion in the North Sea. That way lies greater self-sufficienc­y and greater resilience, complete with lower prices for UK industry given the role of oil as an industrial feedstock.

The end result will be improved tax revenues based upon genuine success, not short-term tax raids. Finally, the profile of the governing party will be broadened with more jobs in oil and its supply chains in both Scotland and the red-wall North. By lucky coincidenc­e, more jobs in these areas will lessen housing pressure in the blue-wall South.

John Barstow Address supplied

Decarbonis­e the economy

The 2015 Paris Agreement committed to keep global warming to within 1.5C. We are now on track to far exceed this target.

Now more than ever before government­s and industry must rethink their priorities. Growth will no longer be possible when the markets have collapsed, and materials will slowly become redundant when the foundation­s of society are chipped away.

Our report, authored by Eunomia Research & Consulting, Is Net Zero Enough for the Materials Sector? recommends that an early adoption of proven emission reduction practices, such as the decarbonis­ation of the energy grid, should be made a priority in the near term. Innovative technologi­es, too, are undoubtedl­y needed to achieve a better future – but these will be substantia­lly less effective if we have passed a point of no return.

The only way forward is to reduce resource consumptio­n, particular­ly in the Global North. Businesses, government­s and

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