Rishi Sunak to promise ‘security for working
families’ in spring statement
Chancellor expected to announce fuel duty cut in
package of measures to tackle cost of living crisis
Larry
Elliott and Heather Stewart
Tue 22 Mar
2022 22.00 GMT
Rishi Sunak
will promise “security” to cash-strapped families as he announces a fresh
package of measures to tackle the cost of living crisis on Wednesday, but will
continue to underline the importance of fixing the public finances.
The
chancellor has been under intense pressure to take action to help households
with the rocketing cost of fuel and other essentials. The financial expert
Martin Lewis told MPs on Tuesday that many households are facing a “fiscal
punch in the face” when the energy price cap rises next month.
Sunak is
widely expected to use his update on the economy to announce a cut in fuel duty
of at least 5p a litre, but hinted on Tuesday night that he might come up with
a more extensive package of support, saying he would “stand by” hard-working
families.
Options
open to him include raising the threshold at which workers start paying
national insurance contributions (NICs), deferring the 1.25-point NICs increase
for employers and employees, uprating state benefits in line with the 8%
inflation rate expected for April, and providing help to energy-intensive
businesses.
The NICs
increase, which is earmarked for health and social care, is loathed by many of
the chancellor’s Tory colleagues, including some cabinet ministers, who would
like to see it scrapped. However, Sunak and the prime minister signed a joint
op-ed in January insisting it was “the right plan”.
Raising the
threshold at which it starts to be paid, which will stand at £9,880 from April,
closer to the personal allowance of £12,570 that applies to income tax, would
exempt lower earners, a move likely to be popular with Sunak’s party.
The Labour
leader, Keir Starmer, accused the chancellor of introducing the controversial
tax rise to give himself the scope to promise tax cuts ahead of the next
general election.
“What the
chancellor, I think, is doing here is introducing a tax that doesn’t need to be
introduced, that’s really going to hurt people, and he’s not doing that for
good economic reasons, he’s doing that – he hopes – so that just before the
election he can cut taxes and claim to be a tax-cutting government. That is
cynical. It’s not the right economic answer; it is cynicism,” he told the BBC’s
The World at One.
A fuel duty
cut has been demanded by many Conservative backbenchers, as prices at the pump
have soared in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. However, critics have
warned that it is not the best way of helping those hardest hit by the cost of
living crisis.
Ryan
Shorthouse, chief executive of the Conservative thinktank Bright Blue, said:
“The fairest way to support the broadest range of struggling households is to
increase broad subsidies such as universal credit or cut broad taxes, such as
national insurance, income tax or VAT.”
He added
that a fuel duty cut would be “poorly targeted, since fewer than half of the
poorest 20% of households have a car”.
Sunak’s
statement comes against the backdrop of mounting public concern about the
economic outlook. In a new YouGov poll published on Tuesday, almost two-thirds
of respondents (63%), including 40% of Conservative voters, said the government
is handling the economy badly.
The
statement was originally planned to be simply an update on the prospects for
the economy and the public finances, but has been turned by the war in eastern
Europe into the latest of a string of mini-budgets.
In
pre-released extracts of his speech, Sunak portrays the spring statement as
part of the war effort against Russia, saying: “We will confront this challenge
to our values not just in the arms and resources we send to Ukraine but in
strengthening our economy here at home.”
That
includes “security for working families as we help with the cost of living,” he
says, as well as “the security of more resilient public finances”.
The
cross-party Treasury select committee on Wednesday added its voice to those
calling for help for the hardest-hit households, in a new report warning that
the invasion of Ukraine will damage the economy.
In its
report on the impact of sanctions on Vladimir Putin, the committee said Russia
was heading for “economic catastrophe” but warned the war would have as yet
unquantifiable costs to the UK.
Mel Stride,
the committee’s chair, said the costs were worth bearing to support Ukraine’s
fight for freedom but added it was “becoming increasingly clear that the
government will need to support those who are hit hardest by price rises”.
He added;
“Recent reports show that the public finances are in a stronger position than
anticipated, and the chancellor should use this additional fiscal firepower to
bring forward support for those on the lowest incomes.”
The MPs
said better-than-expected government borrowing figures provided the chancellor
with the opportunity to help those on the lowest incomes cope with soaring
energy bills.
Official
figures released on Tuesday showed in the first 11 months of the current
financial year the state borrowed £26bn less than had been predicted by the
independent Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) in October.
The OBR
will set out updated forecasts on Wednesday that are likely to point to the
potential damage to the economy from the war in Ukraine.
Sunak
released a series of glossy pictures of himself preparing for the statement on
Tuesday, including standing over a long table with the 24 pages of what
appeared to be his speech laid out on it.
He was
derided by Labour for a tweet that said: “Delivering greater economic security
for our people, accelerating growth and productivity, and making sure the
proceeds of that growth are shared fairly. That is not the work of any one
statement. But that work begins tomorrow.”
A Labour
spokesperson said: “The Conservatives have been in power for 12 years, not 12
days. After presiding over weak economic growth for more than a decade and
raising the tax burden to levels not seen for 70 years, how can the chancellor
talk about the work only starting now?”

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