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Tax Cuts: Kwasi Kwarteng's Measures Benefit Richest, Labour Says

September 24, 2022

The government's tax cuts will benefit the richest 1% and make the next generation worse off, Labour has said.

Deputy leader Angela Rayner said the chancellor's approach of "trickle-down economics" was a "dangerous gamble".

Independent think tank the Institute of Fiscal Studies said the richest 10% of households would gain the most.

But Chief Secretary to the Treasury Chris Philp said tax cuts for all would get the economy growing.

Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng unveiled the biggest package of tax cuts in 50 years on Friday, including the scrapping of the top rate of income tax.

He also cut stamp duty for homebuyers, and brought forward a cut to the basic rate of income tax, to 19p in the pound, a year early to April.

The measures will be paid for by a sharp rise in government borrowing amounting to tens of billions of pounds. There was an immediate reaction in financial markets, as the pound sunk and UK stocks fell.

Speaking ahead of Labour's party conference, Ms Rayner called the plans "a very dangerous gamble on our economy and future generations".

"I don't accept the argument of trickle down economics - which is what this is - give those at the top loads more money and that will filter down to those at the bottom. That's not how it works."

She added: "We're going to saddle the next generation with more debt."

But minister Mr Philp told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "Yesterday's tax package cut taxes for everybody across the income spectrum as we want to get Britain growing.

"It's a growth plan and to get Britain growing, we need to get rid of the burden of taxation. You can't tax your way to growth."

The announcements by Mr Kwarteng came after the Bank of England warned the UK may already be in a recession and raised interest rates to 2.25%.


'Betting the house'
Meanwhile, the IFS published analysis suggesting only those earning over £155,000 would see any benefits from the tax policies over the current Parliament, with the "vast majority of income tax payers paying more tax".

The think tank also said the chancellor was "betting the house" by putting government debt on an "unsustainable rising path".

IFS director Paul Johnson told BBC Breakfast: "If looked straightforwardly at people's incomes with these tax changes, the more money you have, the more you gain.

"In fact, because there was one big tax increase the chancellor didn't reverse - and that is the fall over time in the point at which you start paying income tax. If you take that into account, in three or four years' time, the only people gaining from this will be earning more than about £150,000 a year."

Another independent think tank, the Resolution Foundation, said the package would do nothing to stop more than two million people falling below the poverty line amid soaring living costs.

The richest 5% will see their incomes grow by 2% next year (2023-24), while the other 95% of the population will get poorer, it said.

The package will also see London and south-east England "disproportionately" better off than those living in Wales, the North East and Yorkshire, according to the think tank.

Chief executive Torsten Bell, a former Labour adviser, said: "The backdrop to yesterday's fiscal statement was an ongoing cost-of-living crisis that will mean virtually all households getting poorer next year as Britain grapples with high inflation and rising interest rates."

In an interview with BBC News political editor Chris Mason on Friday, Mr Kwarteng said the UK needed "a reboot, a rethink".

He added: "I don't think it's a gamble at all. What was a gamble, in my view, was sticking to the course we are on."

















Source: BBC
Image source: Getty Images