UK's Truss refuses to rule out welfare cuts to fund economic plan
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[October 04, 2022]
By Andrew MacAskill and Kylie MacLellan
BIRMINGHAM, England (Reuters) -Britain's
new Prime Minister Liz Truss triggered a fresh row in her party on
Tuesday by suggesting that she could limit increases in benefit payments
by less than soaring inflation as she seeks ways to fund her tax-cutting
growth plan.
Britain's new leader has endured a tumultuous time since she came to
power on Sept. 6, first leading national mourning for Queen Elizabeth
before releasing an economic package that immediately roiled financial
markets.
Seeking to snap Britain out of more than 10 years of economic
stagnation, Truss and her finance minister Kwasi Kwarteng set out 45
billion pounds of unfunded tax cuts on Sept. 23 alongside promises to
deregulate the economy to stoke growth.
On Monday they bowed to pressure to scrap the most divisive policy -
eliminating the top rate of income tax for the highest earners - and are
now working urgently on the full details of the plan and how they will
be able to afford it without leaving a huge black hole in the country's
public finances.
"We have to look at these issues in the round. We have to be fiscally
responsible," Truss told BBC Radio when asked whether benefit payments
would rise in line with record-high inflation to prevent the poorest in
society from becoming poorer.
Immediately lawmakers in Truss's Conservative Party - some fresh from
forcing top tax rate reversal - opposed any move to reduce the increases
in benefits at a time when millions are struggling with higher costs of
food and energy.
Penny Mordaunt, who is in Truss's cabinet of senior ministers, said
benefits should rise in line with inflation. Damian Green, part of the
Conservatives' centrist faction, said he doubted any real-terms
reduction would pass a parliamentary vote.
"I think there will be many of my colleagues who think that when you're
reaching for spending cuts, benefit payments are not the way to do it,"
Green told BBC Radio. Another lawmaker, Roger Gale, also signalled his
opposition.
Kwarteng has set Nov. 23 as the date for his next fiscal statement but
the government is considering bringing that forward.
POLITICAL TURBULENCE
Truss became Britain's fourth leader in six years last month, promising
to reignite the economy and bring some political stability after the
chaotic leadership of Boris Johnson.
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British Prime Minister Liz Truss returns
to her hotel as Britain's Conservative Party's annual conference
continues, in Birmingham, Britain, October 4, 2022. REUTERS/Hannah
McKay
Chosen by her party's members, not the broader electorate, she was
not the most popular candidate among the more than 350 Conservative
members of parliament and her decision to stake out a tax cut plan
and then concede defeat has left lawmakers and investors questioning
her judgement and authority.
At the annual Conservative Party conference in Birmingham, central
England, some lawmakers and commentators have questioned whether she
has a mandate to take Britain back to a 1980s-style Reagonomics
policy without a national election.
The Conservatives won the 2019 election with Johnson promising to
increase spending on public services.
"It is not a great thing to sell the public on one type of package
and vision, and then completely flip it and appear not to care,"
Rachel Wolf, the co-author of the Conservatives 2019 manifesto, said
at the start of the conference.
Investors have also taken fright at the new economic policy
direction, hammering the value of British assets so hard that the
Bank of England had to intervene last week with a package worth up
to 65 billion pounds to shore up the bond market.
Mohamed El-Erian, an adviser to financial services giant Allianz,
said the government needed to get its house in order. "We are not a
developing country and we need to stop acting like a developing
country," he told Sky News.
The BoE action has calmed markets, at least for now, while investors
also took some comfort from the tax U-turn and the hoped-for move to
bring forward the publishing date for the next fiscal plan from Nov.
23.
But Boris Glass, senior economist at S&P Global ratings agency, said
Britain faced a difficult winter, and spending cuts could counter
efforts to boost the economy.
"Unless strong medium-term growth can fully fund the extra spending,
medium-term fiscal tightening appears inevitable, which may weigh on
future growth," he said.
($1 = 0.8782 pounds)
(Writing by Kate Holton, Reporting by Andrew MacAskill, Elizabeth
Piper and Alistair Smout in Birmingham, Kylie MacLellan and Sarah
Young in London. Editing by William Maclean and Jon Boyle)
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