Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Chancellor: UK must pay its way

- DOMINIC MCGRATH

NEXT week’s much-anticipate­d Autumn statement will show the UK can “pay our way” as the country learns the lesson of the disastrous minibudget, the Chancellor has suggested.

His comments come after his predecesso­r Kwasi Kwarteng used his first interview since the fall-out from the mini-budget forced his exit from Government to argue that Rishi Sunak and Jeremy Hunt cannot put the blame for the massive black hole in the nation’s finances on Liz Truss.

But Mr Hunt, who was brought in by Liz Truss to steady the nation’s finances and was kept on by Mr Sunak, suggested that the mini-budget had forced the UK into learning lessons about the need for balanced budgets.

The mini-budget triggered turbulence in the financial markets, sparking an economic and political crisis that eventually led to Ms Truss’s resignatio­n as prime minister. Mr Hunt said yesterday: “When we produced a fiscal statement that didn’t show how we were going to bring our debts down over the medium term, the markets reacted very badly and so we have learned that you can’t fund either spending or borrowing without showing how you are going to pay for it and that is what I will do.”

The Chancellor, who is due to deliver the Autumn Statement next Thursday, acknowledg­ed that there was “some choice” over the fiscal rules a government follows, but insisted that the UK had to “pay our way”.

Mr Hunt was meeting with the Prime Minister to discuss the pair’s plans for next week’s Budget.

“There isn’t uncertaint­y about a basic choice we make as a country, which is whether we’re going to pay our way,” he said. “And if we don’t give that certainty to the world, what we’ll see is higher interest rates, higher inflation, more instabilit­y, and more worries for families and businesses.

“And that’s why it’s so important to show the world that we are a country that pays our way.”

He added that “if we are going to bring down debt over the medium term and give people confidence we are paying our way as a country, then yes, there is a very substantia­l gap in our national finances”.

Saying that it was “not just us”, he added: “These are global factors, partly because of what’s happening in Ukraine, partly because of the pandemic, but all of us are having to come to terms with and the sooner we do that, the quicker we can give families and businesses hope that there is a way through the very difficult challenges we face.”

 ?? Joe Giddens ?? > Lisa Lindfield inspects the crop of Poinsettia­s at Bridge Farm Group in Lincolnshi­re. UK growers are taking over from the Dutch as the main suppliers of poinsettia­s
Joe Giddens > Lisa Lindfield inspects the crop of Poinsettia­s at Bridge Farm Group in Lincolnshi­re. UK growers are taking over from the Dutch as the main suppliers of poinsettia­s

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