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Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng hails “new era” as he unveils tax cuts

Income tax and the stamp duty on home purchases will be cut, and planned rises in business taxes have been scrapped

Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng has unveiled the biggest package of tax cuts in 50 years, as he hailed a “new era” for the UK economy.

Income tax and the stamp duty on home purchases will be cut and planned rises in business taxes have been scrapped.

Kwarteng said a major change of direction was needed to kickstart economic growth.

But Labour said it would not solve the cost-of-living crisis and was a “plan to reward the already wealthy”.

It comes as the Bank of England warns the UK may already be in recessionThe pound sank to a fresh 37-year low as the chancellor gave his statement.

In a departure from Boris Johnson’s economic policies, Kwarteng has scrapped plans to push up taxes to pay for public services, with the aim of boosting economic growth.

In a Commons statement, being dubbed a mini-Budget, he said high tax rates “damage Britain’s competitiveness”, reducing the incentive to work and for businesses to invest.

He announced that the basic rate of income tax would be reduced by 1 percentage point to 19% in April – one year earlier than planned.

He also unveiled a cut to the top rate of income tax from 45% to 40%, meaning the UK will have a single higher rate from April.

Other measures include:

  • The threshold people in England and Northern Ireland start paying stamp duty on home purchases will rise to £250,000
  • For first-time buyers the threshold will rise to £425,000 and the value of the property on which they can claim relief will increase from £500,000 to £625,000
  • Planned increases in the duty rates for beer, cider, wine and spirits will be axed
  • The cap on bankers’ bonuses will be lifted
  • New investment zones – where business will benefit from tax cuts and planning rules will be relaxed to encourage housebuilding – will be established

Kwarteng fulfilled promises to reverse the rise in National Insurance payments introduced by Johnson to pay for social care and tackle the National Health Service backlog.

He confirmed a planned corporation tax increase from 19% to 25% would also be scrapped.

Chart showing the amount saved by employees in the first year by not introducing the health and social care levy

 

The total cost of the permanent tax cuts announced by the chancellor are estimated at almost £45bn by 2027, which, the chancellor said, would “turn the vicious cycle of stagnation into a virtuous cycle of growth”.

“We need a new approach for a new era, focused on growth,” he added.

Government borrowing will increase by £72bn as a result of the announcements, according to the Treasury.

The changes to income tax do not apply in Scotland but cuts to corporation tax and National Insurance are UK-wide.

Paul Johnson, the director of the independent Institute for Fiscal Studies, said the statement amounted to the biggest tax cuts since the 1972 Budget, with the cuts 50% bigger than had been expected.

He said that the UK could be borrowing £120 billion in three years’ time to afford the measures.

Johnson added that the plans were a “big gamble”, with money being pumped into the economy when inflation remains high. However, he said they would be “manageable” if economic growth “really picks up”.

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Analysis box by Nick Eardley, political correspondent

This is not a mini-Budget. This is a radical tax-cutting economic intervention, which is a significant change of course.

Boris Johnson’s tax plans have been junked. Many households will save some money, but some of the biggest tax cuts will be for those with the biggest salaries.

And this will cost a lot of money.

The chancellor’s calculation is that it’s worth it. People need help with bills and slashing tax will stimulate growth. If you grow the economy, there will be more tax raised and that will help pay the debt in the medium term.

But many are sceptical it will work.

Senior Conservatives have been warning for months that the strategy is wrong and will saddle future generations with debt.

The Treasury hasn’t said when it expects to achieve its desired economic growth. Opposition parties believe this is the wrong strategy with the wrong priorities.

The chancellor is determined to press ahead with a radical change of direction. The big question now: will it work?

Labour described his statement as “an admission of 12 years of economic failure”.

“The Conservatives cannot solve the cost-of-living crisis, the Conservatives are the cost-of-living crisis, and our country cannot afford them any more,” the shadow chancellor, Rachel Reeves, said.

“The chancellor has made clear who his priorities are today. Not a plan for growth. A plan to reward the already wealthy. A return to the trickle-down of the past. Back to the future, not a brave new era.”

The statement also included details of the cost of the government’s plan to cap energy bills for households and businesses.

Kwarteng said these estimated costs were “particularly uncertain, given volatile energy prices”, but based on recent prices the total cost of the package for the six months from October was expected to be around £60 billion.

“We expect the cost to come down as we negotiate new, long-term energy contracts with suppliers,” he added.

The government normally releases an independent forecast of how major tax changes will affect the economy, but Kwarteng has opted not to do this, as his statement is not technically a Budget.

However, Kwarteng promised the Office for Budget Responsibility would publish a full economic forecast before the end of the year, with a second to follow in the new year.

The huge increase in borrowing comes at a time when inflation – the rate at which prices rise – is at a 40-year high, leading to higher interest payments.

On Thursday the Bank of England raised interest rates from 1.75% to 2.25% – the highest level in 14 years – in an attempt to cool soaring prices.

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