This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-63129555
The article has changed 12 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 1 | Version 2 |
---|---|
Kwasi Kwarteng brings forward debt plan to 31 October | Kwasi Kwarteng brings forward debt plan to 31 October |
(36 minutes later) | |
Kwasi Kwarteng will set out his plan for balancing the government's finances on 31 October, nearly a month ahead of the original date. | Kwasi Kwarteng will set out his plan for balancing the government's finances on 31 October, nearly a month ahead of the original date. |
The fiscal statement is expected to detail how the chancellor intends to pay for £43bn of tax cuts as well as plans to reduce debt. | The fiscal statement is expected to detail how the chancellor intends to pay for £43bn of tax cuts as well as plans to reduce debt. |
An independent forecast of how the economy will perform in coming years will be published at the same time. | An independent forecast of how the economy will perform in coming years will be published at the same time. |
Mr Kwarteng had previously insisted he would announce plans on 23 November. | Mr Kwarteng had previously insisted he would announce plans on 23 November. |
However, financial markets reacted badly to a lack of detail when he laid out his mini-budget last month. Mr Kwarteng's refusal to publish a draft report by the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) to accompany the mini-budget on 23 September also rattled markets and some MPs. | However, financial markets reacted badly to a lack of detail when he laid out his mini-budget last month. Mr Kwarteng's refusal to publish a draft report by the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) to accompany the mini-budget on 23 September also rattled markets and some MPs. |
The new date means Mr Kwarteng's fiscal statement will be published before the Bank of England announces its latest decision on interest rates on 3 November. | The new date means Mr Kwarteng's fiscal statement will be published before the Bank of England announces its latest decision on interest rates on 3 November. |
The Bank's Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) is widely expected to raise interest rates for the eighth time since last December with many economists forecasting a sharper rise than previous increases. | The Bank's Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) is widely expected to raise interest rates for the eighth time since last December with many economists forecasting a sharper rise than previous increases. |
But Mel Stride, chairman of the Treasury Select Committee, tweeted that he hoped Mr Kwarteng's decision to release the report earlier would result in a smaller rate rise. | But Mel Stride, chairman of the Treasury Select Committee, tweeted that he hoped Mr Kwarteng's decision to release the report earlier would result in a smaller rate rise. |
He tweeted: "If this lands well with markets then MPC meeting on 3rd Nov may result in smaller rise in interest rates. Critical to millions of mortgage holders." | He tweeted: "If this lands well with markets then MPC meeting on 3rd Nov may result in smaller rise in interest rates. Critical to millions of mortgage holders." |
The OBR, the independent budget watchdog, will now publish a report alongside Mr Kwarteng's statement at the end of October. Its forecasts will give an indication of the health of the nation's finances. | The OBR, the independent budget watchdog, will now publish a report alongside Mr Kwarteng's statement at the end of October. Its forecasts will give an indication of the health of the nation's finances. |
The chancellor bringing forward his explanation of how he intends to get down government debt and the official watchdog's assessment of his plans to Hallowe'en is aimed at quelling the market turmoil which has driven up borrowing costs for households and government. | |
Providing reassurance on that score will likely mean confirming unpalatable news for others. For most economists reckon that, even if the government can boost growth, it will realistically need to find savings of perhaps £40bn or more, if it is to bring down debt in a few years. | |
But by anyone's measure that's not small change, it's an amount greater than the defence budget, and won't be raised through efficiency savings. Many public services are already hampered by pandemic disruption and rising inflation. The Institute for Fiscal Studies reckons the latter means departments alone have to £18bn from existing budgets just to provide planned services. | |
On top of that balancing act, they'll be bracing for a new wave of austerity. | |
Borrowers have faced paying the price for the markets lack of faith in the government's plans - millions more may feel the cost of regaining it. | |
There was confusion last week after government sources briefed journalists that Mr Kwarteng would bring forward his fiscal statement to October, only for the chancellor and prime minister to contradict this a day later. | There was confusion last week after government sources briefed journalists that Mr Kwarteng would bring forward his fiscal statement to October, only for the chancellor and prime minister to contradict this a day later. |
Quizzed on Tuesday by GB News, the chancellor said there had been no change. "People have been reading the runes and the pauses, it's going to be the 23rd," he said. | Quizzed on Tuesday by GB News, the chancellor said there had been no change. "People have been reading the runes and the pauses, it's going to be the 23rd," he said. |
However, Treasury sources then clarified that the chancellor would, indeed, bring the statement forward and that it had simply been waiting to officially announce the change of date in Parliament. | However, Treasury sources then clarified that the chancellor would, indeed, bring the statement forward and that it had simply been waiting to officially announce the change of date in Parliament. |
Concerns that Mr Kwarteng's tax plans were unaffordable prompted the pound to hit a record low against the dollar of $1.03 and the Bank of England to step in to stop pension funds from collapsing. | |
Climbdowns | |
Since then the government has been forced into a series of embarrassing climbdowns under growing pressure from its own MPs. | |
Last Monday, Mr Kwarteng scrapped a decision to cut the top rate of income tax. | |
Prime Minister Liz Truss also faces a rebellion from her MPs after declining to say whether she would increase benefits in line with inflation next April. | |
Her approval ratings have plummeted since the mini budget. The prime minister says her tax cuts will boost the UK economy after years of lacklustre growth. | |
But there are fears the government will have borrow huge sums to fund this. The cost of government borrowing consequently jumped, as investors demanded higher rates of interest on UK government bonds. | |
It has fed through to the mortgage market where hundreds of products were pulled over concerns about how to price these long-term loans. | |
Last week, interest rates on typical two- and five-year fixed rate mortgages topped 6% for the first time in over a decade. |