Kwasi Kwarteng dashes home early from US amid tax
U-turn chaos
Chancellor cuts short International Monetary Fund
meetings after insisting his job is safe, as Liz Truss appears to take reins on
corporation tax cut
Larry
Elliott Economics editor
Fri 14 Oct
2022 01.58 BST
Kwasi
Kwarteng has dramatically cut short his visit to the International Monetary
Fund, flying home early from Washington in response to the mounting political
crisis over his tax-cutting budget.
Adding to
signs that the government is preparing to announce a U-turn over its plan to
scrap a rise in corporation tax, the chancellor left the US capital a day
earlier than planned.
Treasury
sources said the chancellor had two constructive days in Washington but was
keen to get back to London to engage with colleagues over his medium-term
fiscal plan, due to be announced on 31 October.
But his
unscheduled departure on a late-night flight from Washington capped a day of
drama for the Truss government and prompted comparisons with the sterling
crisis suffered by the Labour government in 1976.
Then, the
chancellor Denis Healey turned around at Heathrow rather than fly out to an IMF
meeting in Manila after pressure mounted on the pound.
Treasury
sources refused to comment on whether Kwarteng’s decision meant a U-turn on
corporation tax was imminent, but the chancellor was under pressure to make a
decision before the financial markets open for business on Monday.
The pound
and government bonds – or gilts – rallied yesterday at rumours of a change of
heart on tax. But the Bank of England’s support scheme for bonds comes to an
end on Friday.
“This is
all about the medium-term fiscal plan,” a treasury source said. “The chancellor
wanted to make sure he had as wide a range of colleagues as possible engaged
with it.”
Earlier,
Kwarteng was forced to deny his position as chancellor was in peril, insisting
he was “absolutely, 100%” confident he would still be in post next month
despite a growing Tory rebellion.
But there
were signs yesterday that decisions on tax were being taken by Liz Truss in
London rather than by the chancellor 3,000 miles away across the Atlantic.
On another
febrile day in Westminster, government sources told the Guardian that No 10
officials – rather than their Treasury counterparts – were reviewing the
mini-budget in the prime minister’s efforts to balance the books.
Truss has
repeatedly promised to cancel the former chancellor Rishi Sunak’s plans to put
up corporation tax from 19% to 25%. Sources suggested that a potential
climbdown could involve putting it up by just one or two percentage points,
rather than the full 6%.

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