wasi Kwarteng has unveiled a mini budget offering billions of pounds worth of tax cuts – including a surprise move to scrap the top 45% income tax rate paid by the UK’s wealthiest. The chancellor announced sweeping moves to revive the economy at the much-anticipated “fiscal event” on Friday morning. The government calls it a “growth plan” at a time when the UK is facing a cost of living crisis, recession, soaring inflation and rising interest rates. The chancellor told MPs the planned corporation tax rise would be scrapped as he announced the cap on bankers’ bonuses would be scrapped. He also announced that the basic rate of income tax would drop to 19p in the pound from April 2023. And he said the 45% top rate of income tax would be “abolished”.

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Mr Kwarteng said his economic vision would “turn the vicious cycle of stagnation into a virtuous cycle of growth”. But shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves said the strategy amounted to an “admission of 12 years of economic failure” under successive Conservative governments. The Labor MP described the Prime Minister and Mr Kwarteng as “two desperate gamblers in a casino chasing a losing streak”.

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The West End welcomes the return of VAT-free shopping for tourists

West End business leaders have hailed the return of VAT-free shopping for overseas visitors as “a big win” for London. Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng said he would reverse the scrapping of benefits that made shopping in the capital 20% cheaper for foreign tourists. Dee Corsi, interim chief executive at business group New West End Company, said: “Today’s decision to bring back duty free shopping for overseas visitors is a big win for London International Centres. “Now the West End can compete on a level playing field with Paris, Milan and Madrid as one of the world’s leading shopping and leisure destinations.” Linda Ellett, head of UK consumer markets, retail and leisure at KPMG, added: “The return of VAT-free shopping for tourists increases London’s competitiveness in attracting the spending power of international visitors.” Read our full story here. 1663940253

Truss: Our vision defines how we will rebuild our economy

Liz Truss said the government’s economic vision would set out “how we rebuild our economy and deliver for the British people”. She tweeted: “Growth is key to delivering more jobs, higher pay and more money to fund public services such as schools and the NHS. “Our Growth Plan sets out how we will rebuild our economy and deliver for the British people.” 1663938590

Renewable energy industry cautiously welcomes plans to make it easier to build wind turbines

The renewable energy industry has provisionally welcomed the government’s plan to make it easier for developers to build wind turbines in England for the first time in seven years. The government said it would bring in rules for onshore wind farms in line with other developments. Rules that came into force in 2015 have effectively stopped the construction of any onshore wind farms in the UK since then. Jess Ralston, senior analyst at the Energy and Climate Information Unit, said: “Nearly eight in 10 people support onshore wind, so the ban was a major anomaly in British energy policy given that it is both cheap and popular with the public. “So a decision to lift the ban suggests the new government has listened to the experts and understands that building more British renewables reduces our reliance on expensive natural gas and so lowers bills.” But energy insiders also cautioned that more details will be needed and the rules will have to change before they know how significant the move will be. 1663937369

The conservative donor and businessman welcomes the tax cuts

Sir Rocco Forte, a Conservative donor and chairman of Rocco Forte Hotels, welcomed Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng’s series of tax cuts. He told BBC Radio 4’s World At One programme: “I think it’s great. I have never seen a government hit the ground running as quickly as this one when it comes to power. “This is going to be a massive boost to the economy and it’s just the beginning I think of what the government plans to do. “I’m very, very encouraged by that. It’s a budget that will help businesses, allow individuals to reap the rewards of their efforts and hard work.” 1663936977

Tax increases or spending cuts will be needed in the future, the think tank warns

The Institute for Fiscal Studies has warned that future tax increases or spending cuts will be needed to pay down the mounting debt. Deputy director Carl Emmerson estimated that even when the energy support package expires in two years’ time, the government will still be borrowing £110bn a year, meaning debt will continue to rise. He told BBC Radio 4’s The World at One: “Maybe the government will get lucky and growth will come… but as we stand it looks like these tax cuts will not be sustainable and that other tax increases or spending cuts will be needed for their payment. “These tax cuts alone will not produce sufficient increases in growth to make them self-financing.” The government argues that the growth the tax cuts will promote will lead to higher tax revenue in the long run. 1663934570

The mini-budget will “embed justice across the UK”, says Wales’ finance minister

Wales’ finance minister says she believes the Chancellor’s mini-budget will “embed the injustice” across the country. Rebecca Evans MS said: “Today’s announcements show that the UK Government is heading in a deeply worrying direction, with misplaced priorities leading to a retrograde statement that will embed injustice across the UK. “Instead of providing meaningful, targeted support to those who need help most, the chancellor is prioritizing funding for tax cuts for the wealthy, unlimited bonuses for bankers and protecting the profits of big energy companies.” 1663934098

The changes will benefit those on the highest incomes, London’s mayor says

London Mayor Sadiq Khan criticized the government’s mini-budget, suggesting the new economic plan benefits the wrong sectors. 1663932841

Nurses union says government has ‘wrong priorities’, urges strike

The Royal College of Nursing described the mini-budget as “billions to the bankers and nothing to the nurses”. Chief secretary and chief executive Pat Cullen said it was a clear sign the government had its “wrong priorities”. “Nursing will be disappointed by the decision to prioritize wealthy bankers over NHS and social care staff, some of whom use food banks and live in a financial crisis,” he said. “Ministers have taken advantage of the goodwill of nursing staff for far too long and we urge our members to vote for strike action when our polls open on October 6.” 1663932579

Government borrowing will increase by £72 billion

Government borrowing will rise by £72 billion as a result of Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng’s mini-budget, according to Treasury documents. The Debt Management Office’s net funding requirement has been revised upwards from £161.7bn in April to £234.1bn. It will be financed through additional gold sales of £62.4 billion and net sales of Treasury bills of £10 billion. 1663931749

Kwarteng: I am happy to join the calls for cuts in fuel consumption charges

Kwasi Kwarteng said he was pleased to be “involved” in a call for fuel duty cuts as MPs asked the Chancellor to help with a wide range of tax and spending issues. After his first major set of budget announcements in the Commons as Chancellor, Conservative backbenchers sought to test Mr Kwarteng’s instincts and draw his attention to a number of policy issues, including aid spending, business rates and Sunday opening hours . Conservative MP Robert Halfon, a long-time fuel duty cut campaigner, said petrol and diesel prices were at “all-time highs”. He asked the chancellor if in the next budget he could “please do what he can to reduce fuel tax”. Mr Kwarteng replied: “I would be very happy to deal with my right honorable friend on that.”


title: “Latest Mini Budget Live Kwasi Kwarteng Prepares To Announce Tax Cuts For Millions " ShowToc: true date: “2022-11-25” author: “David Safford”


wasi Kwarteng has unveiled a mini budget offering billions of pounds worth of tax cuts – including a surprise move to scrap the top 45% income tax rate paid by the UK’s wealthiest. The chancellor announced sweeping moves to revive the economy at the much-anticipated “fiscal event” on Friday morning. The government calls it a “growth plan” at a time when the UK is facing a cost of living crisis, recession, soaring inflation and rising interest rates. The chancellor told MPs the planned corporation tax rise would be scrapped as he announced the cap on bankers’ bonuses would be scrapped. He also announced that the basic rate of income tax would drop to 19p in the pound from April 2023. And he said the 45% top rate of income tax would be “abolished”.

read more

Mr Kwarteng said his economic vision would “turn the vicious cycle of stagnation into a virtuous cycle of growth”. But shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves said the strategy amounted to an “admission of 12 years of economic failure” under successive Conservative governments. The Labor MP described the Prime Minister and Mr Kwarteng as “two desperate gamblers in a casino chasing a losing streak”.

Live updates

Show latest updates 1663946905

Kwarteng rejects suggestion his financial plan is a ‘gamble’

Kwasi Kwarteng dismissed the suggestion his economic announcement in Parliament on Friday was “a gamble”. During a visit to the Berkeley Modular Housing Factory in Ebbsfleet, Kent on Friday, he told reporters: “It’s not a gamble. “What’s a gamble is thinking you can keep raising taxes and have prosperity, which obviously hasn’t worked. “We cannot have a tax system where you are at a 70-year high, so the last time we had tax rates at this level before my tax cuts was actually before her late majesty came to the throne. “That was completely unsustainable and that’s why I’m delighted to have been able to cut taxes across the track this morning.” 1663945845

See: The chancellor’s mini-budget at a glance

The Chancellor’s mini budget: At a glance 1663944822

Ex-Tory minister calls tax cuts ‘wrong’

Conservative former cabinet minister Julian Smith said the chancellor’s decision to impose a “huge” tax cut on the wealthy was “wrong”. “In a statement with many positive business measures, this huge tax cut for the very wealthy at a time of national crisis and real fear and anxiety among low-income workers and citizens is wrong,” he tweeted. 1663944001

The government is “completely out of touch with the public”, says Davey

Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey said the chancellor’s mini budget speech proved the government was “completely out of touch” with the general public. Speaking on College Green on Friday, Sir Ed said the fact that the pound had fallen to a 37-year low against the dollar during Kwasi Kwarteng’s speech in the House of Commons also showed global investors were “very concerned” about the government’s new economic strategy. . He said: “This budget shows how the Conservatives are out of touch with the people. Millions of families and pensioners are struggling with rising bills for energy, food, mortgages and it seems the Conservatives either don’t get it or don’t care. “We needed a plan to help people and this is not a plan for our economy.” He added: “It seems to me that investors around the world are very concerned about this economic package, whether it’s the currency markets with the pound falling, or the cost of government borrowing, which has gone up because of it. believe that people are signaling a lack of confidence in the Conservatives. “So it’s not just struggling members of the public who feel the government is out of touch, but also international investors.” 1663943013

The drinks industry welcomes the duty freeze

The planned increase in alcohol tax was among the measures put on hold by the Chancellor in the Commons on Friday. In a mini-budget that put tax cuts front and center, Kwasi Kwarteng announced that duty increases on beer, cider, wine and spirits would be scrapped. Alongside an 18-month transitional measure for wine tax, he also said he would extend relief to smaller casks to help support smaller breweries. The Scotch Whiskey Association praised the Chancellor’s move, saying the government had “delivered”. “The tariff freeze will not only support our industry, but the hospitality industry and the wider economy,” he said. 1663941825

IFS: Chancellor ‘bets the house’ on risky high borrowing strategy

The Institute of Fiscal Studies (IFS) think tank analyzed the Chancellor’s statement and said he was “betting the house” on a risky strategy. Director Paul Johnson said: “Bringing demand into this hyperinflationary economy leaves the government moving in exactly the opposite direction to the Bank of England, which is likely to raise interest rates in response. “Early signs are that the markets – which will have to lend the money needed to plug the gap in the government’s fiscal plans – are not impressed. This is worrying.” He said cabinet members could be forgiven for whipping out such is the sudden change of government economic policy. “Mr Kwarteng is not just betting on a new strategy, he is betting the house,” he said. 1663941257

The West End welcomes the return of VAT-free shopping for tourists

West End business leaders have hailed the return of VAT-free shopping for overseas visitors as “a big win” for London. Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng said he would reverse the scrapping of benefits that made shopping in the capital 20% cheaper for foreign tourists. Dee Corsi, interim chief executive at business group New West End Company, said: “Today’s decision to bring back duty free shopping for overseas visitors is a big win for London International Centres. “Now the West End can compete on a level playing field with Paris, Milan and Madrid as one of the world’s leading shopping and leisure destinations.” Linda Ellett, head of UK consumer markets, retail and leisure at KPMG, added: “The return of VAT-free shopping for tourists increases London’s competitiveness in attracting the spending power of international visitors.” Read our full story here. 1663940253

Truss: Our vision defines how we will rebuild our economy

Liz Truss said the government’s economic vision would set out “how we rebuild our economy and deliver for the British people”. She tweeted: “Growth is key to delivering more jobs, higher pay and more money to fund public services such as schools and the NHS. “Our Growth Plan sets out how we will rebuild our economy and deliver for the British people.” 1663938590

Renewable energy industry cautiously welcomes plans to make it easier to build wind turbines

The renewable energy industry has provisionally welcomed the government’s plan to make it easier for developers to build wind turbines in England for the first time in seven years. The government said it would bring in rules for onshore wind farms in line with other developments. Rules that came into force in 2015 have effectively stopped the construction of any onshore wind farms in the UK since then. Jess Ralston, senior analyst at the Energy and Climate Information Unit, said: “Nearly eight in 10 people support onshore wind, so the ban was a major anomaly in British energy policy given that it is both cheap and popular with the public. “So a decision to lift the ban suggests the new government has listened to the experts and understands that building more British renewables reduces our reliance on expensive natural gas and so lowers bills.” But energy insiders also cautioned that more details will be needed and the rules will have to change before they know how significant the move will be. 1663937369

The conservative donor and businessman welcomes the tax cuts

Sir Rocco Forte, a Conservative donor and chairman of Rocco Forte Hotels, welcomed Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng’s series of tax cuts. He told BBC Radio 4’s World At One programme: “I think it’s great. I have never seen a government hit the ground running as quickly as this one when it comes to power. “This is going to be a massive boost to the economy and it’s just the beginning I think of what the government plans to do. “I’m very, very encouraged by that. It’s a budget that will help businesses, allow individuals to reap the rewards of their efforts and hard work.”