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New UK Chancellor says mistakes were made and 'difficult decisions' are ahead
Published in The Saudi Gazette on 15 - 10 - 2022

Britain's new finance minister suggested that he may reverse much of Conservative Prime Minister Liz Truss' tax-cutting plans in order to bring stability to the country after weeks of economic and political turbulence.
Jeremy Hunt, who was brought in Friday to replace Kwasi Kwarteng as Chancellor of the Exchequer and restore order in Truss' administration, acknowledged his predecessor's mistakes and warned of "difficult decisions" to come.
He said taxes could rise, and public spending budgets would likely be squeezed further in the coming months.
"It was wrong to cut the top rate of tax for the very highest earners at a time where we're going to have to be asking for sacrifices from everyone to get through a very difficult period," Hunt told the public broadcaster BBC on Saturday.
"And it was wrong to fly blind and to announce those plans without reassuring people with the discipline of the Office for Budget Responsibility that we actually can afford to pay for them," he added. "We have to show the world we have a plan that adds up financially."
Truss on Friday fired Kwarteng and ditched her pledge to scrap a planned increase in corporation tax as she sought to hang on to her job — after just six weeks in office.
Truss, a free-market libertarian, had previously insisted that her tax-cutting plans were what Britain needs to boost economic growth.
But a "mini-budget" that she and Kwarteng unveiled three weeks ago, which promised 45 billion pounds (approx. €50bn) in tax cuts without explaining how the government would pay for them, sent the markets and the British pound tumbling and left her credibility in tatters.
The policies, which included cutting income tax for those on the highest incomes, were also widely criticized for being tone-deaf in the face of Britain's cost-of-living crisis.
Hunt said Truss recognizes her mistakes and he is going to put them right. Hunt is expected to meet with Treasury officials later and with Truss on Sunday.
Hunt also indicated that taxes could rise and warned, "it's going to be difficult," though he declined to give details about how he plans to balance the books ahead of a full fiscal statement expected on Oct. 13.
"Spending will not rise by as much as people would like and all government departments are going to have to find more efficiencies than they were planning to. And some taxes will not be cut as quickly as people want," he said.
Hunt, the son of an admiral, twice ran in the Conservative Party's leadership contests and is an experienced lawmaker who previously served in top government posts, including as foreign secretary.
Although he is said to have considered leaving politics altogether after losing the Tory leadership race to former PM Boris Johnson in 2019 and rejecting his offer of the defense chief post, the new assignment might be an opportunity for Hunt to resurge.
Truss' U-turn on her pledge to stop a planned rise in corporation tax came after an earlier climbdown on her plans to cut the top rate of income tax for the highest earners.
Her position remains fragile. She has faced heavy pressure from across the political spectrum, including reports that senior members of her Conservative Party were plotting to force her from office.
On Friday, she avoided repeated questions about why she should remain in office when she and Kwarteng were equally responsible for the government's economic plan and the fallout it triggered.
"I am absolutely determined to see through what I have promised," she said.
Asked Saturday how long Truss would remain as leader, Hunt said that "what the country wants now is stability", and she would be judged by what she delivers until the next general election in 2024.
"She has been prime minister for less than five weeks, and I would just say this — I think that she will be judged at an election," he said. — Euronews


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