April 25, 2024

How should the UK heal |  Economy |  DW

How should the UK heal | Economy | DW

The new British government headed by Prime Minister Rishi Sunak wants to plug deep holes in the budget with a restructuring plan. Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt presented his financial plans on Thursday. This aims to fill a budget gap of around £55 billion (about €62.8 billion) over the next few years.

Approximately half of this must be met on the tax side. Among other things, taxes on excess profits of oil and gas companies will be increased and electricity suppliers will be required to pay in the future. The tax burden on higher earners is also increasing.

Radical course correction

The threshold for paying the highest rate of income tax will drop from £150,000 to £125,140 per annum. Hunt stressed that it is a matter of asking more of those who have more. “Today we are unveiling a plan to address the cost of living crisis and rebuild our economy,” the finance minister said.

He had announced “tough but necessary” decisions that would also help curb rampant inflation on the island. The path of austerity is a drastic change of course after a short reign of Sunak’s predecessor, Liz Truss, sparked turmoil in bond markets with fiscally unsecured tax cut plans, which only blinked after central bank intervention.

The recession is here and it will remain

Great Britain stands on a mountain of debt of £2.45 trillion (about €2.8 trillion). With his restructuring path, Hunt wants to make sure that lost investor confidence is returned and that government funding costs are kept under control. “Trust doesn’t come for free,” Hunt said. “We conservatives don’t leave religion to the next generation.”

See also  Gloss: No alcohol and equal rights: Where are the Brits roaming about?

The finance minister said the UK economy was already in recession, according to the UK’s independent budget body. In 2023, economic output is expected to contract by 1.4%. The central bank fears that the recession could last for years.

dk / hb (rtr, dpa)