Vancouver Sun ePaper

Truss pulls a U-turn on tax cut

Humiliating U-turn on cuts she'd defended

ELIZABETH PIPER, ANDREW MACASKILL AND ALISTAIR SMOUT

BIRMINGHAM • British Prime Minister Liz Truss was forced on Monday into a humiliating U-turn after less than a month in power, reversing a cut to the highest rate of income tax that helped spark turmoil in financial markets and a rebellion in her party.

Finance Minister Kwasi Kwarteng said the decision had been taken with “humility and contrition,” after some lawmakers reacted with fury to suggestions that public and welfare spending could be cut to fund tax cuts for the richest.

Addressing the Conservative party's annual conference where lawmakers and supporters had gathered, Kwarteng acknowledged the turbulence of the last week, but argued the government needed to press ahead with a new course to revive growth.

“What a day,” he said, to muted applause. “It has been tough, but we need to focus on the job in hand, we need to move forward.”

Truss — elected as prime minister by party members but not the broader public — is seeking to jolt the economy out of its decade of stagnant growth with a 1980s-style plan to cut taxes and regulation, all funded by vast government borrowing.

Signalling a break with “Treasury orthodoxy,” she and Kwarteng also fired the most senior official in the government's finance department and released the tax cut plan without accompanying forecasts on how much it would cost.

Investors, used to Britain being a pillar of the global financial community, were aghast. The pound hit a record low against the dollar and the Bank of England had to intervene to prevent pension funds from collapsing.

“It is astonishing,” one Conservative lawmaker said, declining to be named. “The damage has already been done. We just look incompetent now, too.”

While the removal of the top rate of tax only made up around two billion out of the 45 billion pounds of unfunded tax cuts, it was the most divisive element of a package that also stumped up tens of billions of pounds to subsidize energy costs.

Less than a day after Truss went on BBC television to defend the policy, Kwarteng released a statement Monday to say he now accepted it had become a distraction.

“We listened to people,” he told BBC Radio. “I'm happy to own it.”

The decision to reverse course is likely to put Truss and Kwarteng under even greater pressure, the latest threat to political stability in a country that has had four prime ministers in six years.

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2022-10-04T07:00:00.0000000Z

2022-10-04T07:00:00.0000000Z

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