Summary
- The chancellor has pledged £30bn of extra spending in a number of sweeping measures to protect the economy against the coronavirus in a budget he described as the biggest fiscal boost to the UK in decades, Phillip Inman and Kate Proctor report. They go on:
Rishi Sunak, who replaced Sajid Javid only weeks ago, said he would intervene to protect public services and the economy over the coming months while providing the biggest boost to public investment for several generations to drive longer-term growth.
Delivering his first budget speech to the Commons, Sunak said the virus outbreak would be temporary but costly for businesses and the economy.
He said: “Let me say this: we will get through this together … We will rise to this challenge,” adding that the UK would respond with measures that were brave and bold.
“The British people may be worried but they are not daunted.”
The government will boost NHS spending to cover “whatever it costs” to treat patients and increase the level of testing.
And here is the story in full.
- Here is a summary of the key points in the budget, with snap analysis from Rowena Mason.
- A Guardian’s panel - Polly Toynbee, Katy Balls, Tom Kibasi and Miatta Fahnbulleh - has delivered its verdict on the budget here.
You can read all our budget coverage here.
That’s all from us.
Thanks for the comments.
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Sunak fails to address climate emergency
The road to hell is paved with good intentions, and in his budget the chancellor, Rishi Sunak, headed off down the motorway towards climate catastrophe, all the while proclaiming his intention to protect the environment.
“Over £27bn of tarmac,” he announced, for 4,000 miles of major new roads. In stark contrast, low-carbon transport was put in the slow lane, getting £1bn.
Worse, Sunak flunked a golden opportunity to end the decade-long freeze on fuel duty that has pushed up traffic and pollution and suppressed bus and train travel. The oil price is now plummeting, but even if it had been raised drivers might not have seen any change in the price at the pump.
Transport emissions are now the biggest contributor to the UK’s carbon emissions and they are rising; 90% come from the roads. Emissions from transport are a key reason the government is on track to miss its own legally binding carbon targets.
The other key reason is the UK’s terribly energy inefficient buildings, which lose heat up to three times as quickly as homes in neighbouring countries. Making homes cleaner, cosier, and cheaper to heat, is a no-brainer. Yet there was not a single word on this in Sunak’s speech or the 125-page budget document.
This failure really matters, with the UK hosting a crucial UN climate in just eight months’ time. The summit, Cop26, in Glasgow, is a pledging party at which the world’s nations must offer much bigger emissions cuts to head off the climate crisis. The host needs to start the party with a splashy pledge, but Sunak just tossed in a crumpled fiver found in a back pocket.....
More here:
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Here is a verdict on the budget from the Resolution Foundation, the thinktank specialising in equality and low pay issues. Among other points, like the TUC (see 4.11pm), it is critical of some of the measures to help people who need to take time off work because of coronavirus. It says:
The government’s failure to extend statutory sick pay (SSP) to two million low earners is unwise, leaving them reliant on UC with its waits and means tests. The foundation notes that with SSP set at £94.25 a week, and UC and ESA worth just £73.10 a week (or £57.90 for under 25s), a typical self-employed worker on £284 a week could still face their primary income falling by three-quarters if they need to self-isolate, while a typical worker eligible for SSP only would lose over two-thirds of their normal pay.
And this is from Torsten Bell, the foundation’s chief executive.
For the years ahead, the chancellor has increased public spending significantly while being very reluctant to raise taxes to pay for it. While the Conservative government even a few years ago aimed for a smaller state and zero borrowing, these plans mean a bigger state than under Tony Blair paid for by more borrowing than Gordon Brown.
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Britain’s stock market fell again today, despite Rishi Sunak’s promise of the biggest spending splurge in almost 30 years - and the first emergency interest rate cut since 2008.
The FTSE 100 dropped another 1.4%, meaning it’s lost more than a fifth of its value this year. You might hope that higher government spending would boost stocks, but clearly the coronavirus crisis (now officially a pandemic) is overshadowing the budget.
City economists are pleased that Downing Street and the Bank of England are working together, but concerned that the economic damage could still be considerable.
That means today’s forecasts could easily be too optimistic, as Japanese bank Nomura warns:
While some of the measures were paid for by a) not lowering corporation tax, b) dealing with tax avoidance and c) the end of contributions to the EU (net of the divorce settlement), the problem with the numbers in today’s budget is that they do not take into account the cost of dealing with the virus, nor the likelihood of a more serious effect on economic growth and financial markets than the OBR had assumed when finalising its forecasts a few weeks ago.
As a result, we should view these new deficit figures (headline deficit of 2.4% in 2020-21) as an “absolute best case” and we should therefore be braced for the possibility of upward revisions to borrowing and issuance to come.
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Despite Boris Johnson’s repeated promises to “fix the crisis” in social care, the budget offered few pointers as to how government will address underlying funding problems faced by overstretched services for vulnerable older and disabled people.
The chancellor, Rishi Sunak, announced that local government would be able to draw upon a short term £5bn coronavirus emergency fund shared with the NHS to support social care services and vulnerable people affected by Covid-19.
However, there was no mention in the chancellor’s speech of longstanding pressures on adult social care, other than a vague commitment to address “in the next few months” an issue that has left services at breaking point and hundreds of thousands of older people without care, or struggling to pay for it.
Prof John Appleby of the Nuffield Trust thinktank said:
We are about to rely on these threadbare services to keep thousands of vulnerable patients out of hospital – and yet we still will not give them the funding and reform they have desperately needed for years. Coronavirus may serve as a reminder that inaction has consequences.
Sally Copley, director of policy and campaigns at Alzheimer’s Society, said:
The fact that the chancellor appears to have completely ignored social care is astonishing, and crushing for people with dementia. Every day we hear of people with dementia trapped in unacceptable conditions, of families struggling to cover the astronomical cost of dementia care. Coronavirus risks making this crisis into a catastrophe.
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From Stefan Rousseau, the Press Association’s chief political photographer
From the Press Association’s Ian Jones
From Jack Hunter, from the IPPR North thinktank
From Prospect’s Tom Clark
Javid urges Sunak not to abandon fiscal rules in Tory manifesto
Sajid Javid, the former chancellor, used his speech in the budget debate to urge Rishi Sunak not to abandon the fiscal rules that he (Javid) announced during the general election campaign. Under these rules, that were included in the Conservative manifesto, the party committed to: 1) not borrowing to fund day-to-day spending; 2) capping average net public sector net investment at 3% of GDP; and 3) ensuring that debt interest payments don’t exceed 6% of government revenue.
Sunak did not formally abandon the three rules. But he said that he would review the fiscal framework, and report back in the autumn, implying that he wants to loosen Javid’s rules.
Echoing the point made by Theresa May in her speech earlier (see 3.55pm), Javid said the government should not abandon its reputation for fiscal responsibility. He urged the government “get on to the front foot to support the financially vulnerable, who will be as fearful for their economic security as they are for their health”. And he went on:
Whilst I welcome the actions that [Sunak] has set out today, he must stand ready to do more as the situation demands, and not wait necessarily for the comprehensive spending review or the next budget.
The British economy is in a strong position to weather the current storm, but we mustn’t forget that [Sunak] is only able to deploy that fire power that he has done so today because of the choices consecutive Conservative chancellors have made.
Choices to control spending, to control borrowing and to control debt. That’s why the fiscal rules that we set out in our manifesto are important.
Sticking to those rules in normal times is what separates us from the parties opposite. They help us keep our economy strong, they help us to keep taxes low and they preserve our flexibility for when we need it most.
A £5 million pilot project for specialist domestic abuse courts was among initiatives announced in the budget but lawyers warned that the piecemeal approach would not repair the under-resourced justice system. Amanda Pinto QC, chair of the Bar Council which represents barristers in England and Wales, said:
Measures announced in the chancellor’s budget to tackle youth crime and provide better support for victims, especially of domestic abuse, are a positive step, but they only tackle part of the problem. A fragmented approach to repairing the justice system is not the answer. We have been calling for 10 key areas of investment across the entire justice system to reverse declining confidence in justice in our country.
And Mandu Reid, of the Women’s Equality party, said:
We welcome the chancellor’s decision to take further steps to address the national crisis of violence against women and girls by putting forward two £15m packages to tackle both sexual violence and domestic abuse, including a pilot scheme of specialist courts for domestic abuse.
However, without a drastically improved funding offer this eye-catching policy announcement looks more like political virtue signalling than a meaningful commitment to ending abuse.
Kate Forbes, the Scottish finance secretary, has asked the Treasury for ‘urgent clarification’ on how much extra money the Scottish government will get to help cover the substantial costs of coping with the coronavirus outbreak.
Chancellor Rishi Sunak said the devolved government in Edinburgh would get an extra £640m in Treasury funding for everyday policy areas as its share of the extra UK government spending unveiled in Wednesday’s budget.
Sunak said Scotland would also receive an extra £5m to trial 5G mobile in Scotland, £10m to decarbonise the whisky industry and new money for ultrafast broadband in rural areas.
Forbes said the £640m extra money for general spending was in line with expectations, but it was far from clear how much money would follow from the extra spending he pledged to fight the coronavirus epidemic.
While I’m pleased to see the UK government’s economic response to coronavirus following my calls for this at the UK Treasury yesterday, we need confirmation on what this will mean for Scotland.
We require urgent clarification on what funding Scotland will receive from the announcements made by the UK government, at a time when the prospects for the economy and public finances remain very uncertain as the short term impacts of Covid-19 unfold.
It is vital that our businesses, employees, health service and the most economically vulnerable in our society are all protected through this time, and this additional funding will help us in our response.
Alister Jack, the Scottish secretary, said that including previously announced Treasury budget increases, the Scottish government would now receive nearly £2bn more than originally planned.
“This is a great budget for Scotland,” he said.
People and businesses right across Scotland will see the benefits – with money for broadband, research and development, green technology and support to promote Scottish produce overseas among the many measures we’ve announced today.
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Here is the Guardian’s latest Politics Weekly podcast. Rowena Mason is joined by Heather Stewart, Larry Elliott, James Morris and Rachel Wolf to discuss what will make Rishi Sunak’s budget a success or failure, the Tory rebellion over Huawei, and how the Labour party should deal with discrimination investigations.
Tom Clark, editor of Prospect and a former Labour special adviser, on the budget, has posted a good thread on Twitter on the budget. It starts here.
And here are his conclusions.
Vote Leave veterans abandon pledge to abolish VAT on household fuel bills
One charge levelled against Boris Johnson is that he is actually running a Vote Leave government flying under Conservative party colours as a flag of convenience. Johnson, Michael Gove and Dominic Cummings ran the Vote Leave campaign, and many of their Vote Leave colleagues are in top jobs. Only this morning there were reports that Chris Grayling, another leading Vote Leave campaign, is being lined up to chair the intelligence and security committee. (See 11.03am.)
At one stage during the 2016 referendum campaign Vote Leave started acting like a shadow government and making manifesto promises. In a joint article for the Sun, Johnson, Gove and the Labour MP Gisela Stuart announced that after the UK voted to leave the EU, they would be able to abolish VAT on household fuel bills. They wrote:
In 1993, VAT on household energy bills was imposed. This makes gas and electricity much more expensive. EU rules mean we cannot take VAT off those bills.
The least wealthy are hit particularly hard. The poorest households spend three times more of their income on household energy bills than the richest households spend. As long as we are in the EU, we are not allowed to cut this tax.
When we Vote Leave, we will be able to scrap this unfair and damaging tax. It isn’t right that unelected bureaucrats in Brussels impose taxes on the poorest and elected British politicians can do nothing.
This is the first budget since Brexit - but this particular Vote Leave pledge appears to have been abandoned. It would have cost the Treasury almost £2bn, according to a calculation the campaign made four years ago. Instead the government is marking the departure from the EU by abolishing the tampon tax, a more modest measure costing the government £15m a year.
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Small print alert: wealthier families to gain more than poorer families from budget tax measures
The government is committed to levelling up, and Rishi Sunak used that phrase seven times in his speech. That implies measures that help the poor more than the rich. But, when taking decisions about tax, he ended up favouring wealthier families over poorer families.
The Treasury has published a distributional impact assessment (pdf) of the budget and, at first glance, it appears to be a model of progressive policymaking. Look at this chart. It shows the impact of decisions made in the budget and in last year’s spending round on households as a percentage of net income. And the poorest 10% of households gained most and the richest 10% gained least.
This chart presents the impact on households in cash terms, not as a percentage of household income, and this presents a different picture (because a £350 per week gain is worth more in percentage terms to a poor household than a rich one). On this measure, all households are getting much the same, apart from the wealthiest 10%.
But these charts measure the impact of changes to taxes, benefits and “benefits-in-kind from public services” and most of the gain to people in most groups comes from the third category. For the poorest 10%, all the gains come from higher spending on public services. (The Treasury tries to make a calculation showing, for example, how much extra NHS spending might be worth to each household in cash terms.)
These “benefits-in-kind” gains are not fictitious, and poorer families are generally more reliant on public services than wealthier families. But, if you look at the gains from tax policy alone (the dark green bars), most of the benefits are going to families in the richest half of the population. That is because the government’s main tax announcement, lifting the threshold for national insurance, benefits higher earners.
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And these are from Tony Wilson, director of the Institute for Employment Studies, on the budget measures for people who have to take time off work because of coronavirus.
SSP is statutory sick pay. And JCP is Jobcentre Plus.
Frances O’Grady, the TUC general secretary, has criticised the government for saying that people who do not qualify for sick pay (the self-employed and low-earners) should claim benefits if they lose out because they need to take time off work because of coronavirus. She says that instead there should be “decent sick pay for all”. In a statement she says:
The government’s coronavirus plans will leave millions of workers behind. Without urgent action, too many will be plunged into poverty and debt.
Today’s announcements won’t help the nearly 2m people who miss out on sick pay because they don’t earn enough. Telling them to turn to the broken benefits system isn’t good enough. We need decent sick pay for all.
Ministers must now urgently bring together unions and employers to talk about how to support jobs, including through wage subsidies for short time working schemes, and further help for public services – especially social care.
Sovereign ratings agency Moody’s has given a thumbs up, and a thumbs down, to today’s budget.
Senior vice-president Sarah Carlson says the increased spending will boost growth at a difficult time, but at a cost:
The fiscal stimulus announced by Chancellor Rishi Sunak in today’s budget should help to support economic growth given the economic headwinds created by Covid-19, but the resulting deterioration in the UK’s fiscal position highlights the sovereign’s ongoing difficulty in meaningfully reducing the UK’s gross general government debt burden from its current high levels.
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The full text of Rishi Sunak’s budget speech is now here, on the Treasury’s website.
This is from Sir Ed Davey, the acting Lib Dem leader, on the budget.
This budget reveals the UK economy was alarmingly weak even before coronavirus. The government is desperate to blame anyone or anything but the reality is that it’s the Conservatives’ Brexit which is costing Britain’s economy dearly.
Whilst the government is taking some action to deal with the Coronavirus, after five years of Tory governments the NHS and our social care sector are chronically under-funded, under-resourced and under-staffed, just at the moment we need them most.
Theresa May warns Johnson not to abandon 'restraint and caution' in public spending
Theresa May, the former Conservative prime minister, has been speaking in the budget debate and, while she did not explicitly criticise the government for spending too much, she urged the government not to abandon “restraint and caution”. She told MPs:
I trust in the discussions that were held prior to the delivery of the budget that there was the necessary tension between No 10 and the Treasury in developing this budget.
Generally speaking, prime ministers want to spend money and chancellors want to manage the public finances prudently ...
That sound management of the public finances has always been one of the USPs of the Conservative party and in my time in politics I have seen more than once a Labour government come in, trash the economy, leave office with more people unemployed than when they came into office, and then a Conservative government having to come in, restore the economy, restore the public finances and save the day.
So while spending a lot of money may be popular and may seem the natural thing to do, there is of course that necessity of having a realistic assessment of the longer-term impact of those decisions, the longer-term consequences, and a necessity to ensure that we have that restraint and caution that enables us to make the public finances continue to be strong into the future.
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Small print alert: UK national debt to hit £2tn
The OBR chief, Robert Chote, is discussing the fiscal watchdog’s new forecasts at a press conference in London now.
He points out that public sector net debt is forecast to hit £2tn in 2024-25 (£2,031bn, to be precise).
But it’s more sensible to look at debt as a share of the economy, where UK government debt is expected to hover around 75% of GDP.
On coronavirus, Chote predicts that it will push up government borrowing in the short term. In the long term, he hopes it will have less impact.
But the economic disruption caused by the virus could make it harder for the government to actually implement its capital spending plans, Chote cautions.
Chote also refuses to comment on whether the government’s borrowing assumptions are a “gamble”, even though he leaves the OBR soon and should be “demob happy”.
I’m neither demob nor happy, Chote tells reporters.
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Small print alert: Brexit has made economy 2% smaller than it would have been, says OBR
In its Economic and Fiscal Outlook report (pdf), the Office for Budget Responsibility says Brexit has led to the economy being 2% smaller than it would have been. In paragraph 1.2 it says:
We estimate that the economic effects of the referendum vote have so far reduced potential output by around 2%, relative to what would have happened in its absence. Part of this reflects lower net inward migration, but mostly it reflects weaker productivity growth on the back of depressed business investment and the diversion of resources from production towards preparing for potential Brexit outcomes. Real business investment has barely grown since the referendum, whereas our March 2016 forecast assumed it would have risen more than 20% by now. We expect this shortfall to be partly reversed as the specifics of the trading relationship are clarified, hence reducing uncertainty. But, working in the other direction, we expect the adverse effect of higher trade barriers to build through our five-year forecast period and beyond.
The OBR also says that most of the negative impact that Brexit will have on UK productivity is still in the pipeline. It says:
Broadly speaking, we believe that around one-third of the long-run hit to productivity from Brexit has already happened, that another third is likely to come over the forecast period and the rest comes through beyond our forecast horizon.
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Small print alert: house price inflation up
Rishi Sunak’s giveaway budget is going to drive house prices up.
The OBR predicts that house price inflation will hit 7.5% in the third quarter of 2021, then ease back to 4.1% by 2024.
Overall, the watchdog expects house prices to rise by 23% between the fourth quarter of 2019 and the first quarter of 2024. It had previously expected a 17% increase, before today’s measures were taken into account.
That’s because the OBR believes real household income growth will be stronger (good news for families), and that interest rates will stay low.
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Small print alert: Brexit savings are being spent
The OBR’s forecasts show that the money saved by leaving the European Union is being recycled into substitute UK spending.
That includes support for the farming sector, industrial strategy and science programmes.
As you can see, these “direct Brexit fiscal savings’ are only worth £4.3bn this financial year. That’s £82m a week – not what you may have read on the side of a bus in 2016! But that’s because Britain’s EU divorce payments are frontloaded.
By 2024-25 it’s worth £14.6bn (£11.3bn in lieu of EU transfers, and £3.3bn of estimated customs duties). That’s £280m per week. But, of course, much of that will be replacing funding that came from the EU before …
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Small print alert: UK doing ahead with digital sales tax, despite US opposition
Buried in the policy papers published alongside the budget is what would once have been headline news: confirmation that the government intends to impose a “digital sales tax”, a 2% levy on the UK revenues of search engines, social media services and online marketplaces, from 1 April.
The move, first announced in the 2018 budget, is an attempt to onshore some of the economic value created by technology companies such as Google and Facebook.
Currently, those companies argue that the economic activity generated in sales of services such as advertising and digital media should accrue where their HQs are based, in low-tax environments such as Ireland or Luxembourg. That allows them to keep their tax burden low in the UK, even as their importance to the British economy grows.
The move will be unpopular with the US, since the limitations put in place by the Treasury ensure that almost all of the revenues will come from American tech giants: only companies with £25m of revenues are covered at all, and the list of affected businesses is seemingly carefully drawn to include Google, Facebook and Amazon, while excluding European digital successes like Spotify (which doesn’t operate in the affected areas of “search engines, social media services and online marketplaces”) or Monzo (with “financial services providers” given an explicit carve-out of the “online marketplaces” coverage).
Those carve-outs do also limit the revenue raising possibilities of the act, however: the OBR currently expects it to raise £280m in its first year in effect, rising to a little over £500m by the end of 2025.
So the move looks like a PR win more than a financial coup – but if that’s the case, why not celebrate it at the despatch box? It may be a desire that this budget be seen as more tech-first than techlash: the chancellor also announced billions of investment in R&D, billions more in high-speed broadband, and a tax cut for digital media, allowing digital books, newspapers, magazines and academic journals to be sold VAT free, like their print counterparts.
Or it may be the uncomfortable fact that the government is about to barrel head-first into complex trade negotiations with a US government that views any digital taxes as a direct attack on American interests, and has said as much to the French when they proposed their own version – threatening massive tariffs on wine, cheese, handbags and cookware in response
Small print alert: coronavirus-specific measures worth £12bn, rather than £30bn
In his budget speech Rishi Sunak said that the coronavirus rescue package he was announcing was worth £30bn. Having announced a series of coronavirus-specific measures, he told MPs:
Those measures are on top of plans that I will set out later in this budget, which provide an additional fiscal loosening of £18bn to support the economy this year.
That means I am announcing today, in total, a £30bn fiscal stimulus to support British people, British jobs and British businesses through this moment.
In other words, more than half of the £30bn is made up of general spending measures to boost the economy already in the pipeline. Sunak acknowledged this, of course, and measures to boost the economy will be welcome. But it does mean that £12bn is more accurate price tag for the coronavirus-specific measures than £30bn.
This Treasury briefing paper (pdf) has a good summary of these measures, which starts by saying Sunak set out “a £12bn package of temporary, timely and targeted measures to support public services, individuals and businesses through the economic disruption caused by Covid-19”.
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It’s a good budget for media organisations with a paywall, points out our colleague Jim Waterson.
Corbyn says 'smoke and mirrors' budget will not reverse damage done by Tory policies
Here are some extracts from Jeremy Corbyn’s speech responding to the budget.
- Corbyn said the budget would not reverse the damage done to the economy by Tory economic policies over the last decade. He said:
Today’s budget was billed as a turning point, a chance to deliver, in particular on the promises made to working class communities during the general election. But it doesn’t come close.
The government’s boast of the biggest investment since the 1950s is frankly a sleight of hand. It’s in fact only the biggest since they began their slash and burn assault on our services, economic infrastructure and living standards in 2010.
Having ruthlessly forced down the living standards and life chances of millions of our people for a decade, the talk of levelling up is a cruel joke.
The reality is that this is a budget which has an admission of failure - an admission that austerity has been a failed experiment. It didn’t solve our economic problems, but made them worse, that held back our own recovery and failed even in its own terms ...
Today’s measures go nowhere near reversing the damage that has been done to our country ...
Amid a blizzard of hype, [the chancellor is] claiming today marks the biggest capital injection since the 1950s, but this is actually all smoke and mirrors. As a percentage of GDP it only returns us to the levels we had before the Conservatives slashed investment so drastically in 2010.
- He said the cuts over the last 10 years would make the fight against coronavirus harder. He said:
We’ll only overcome this virus because of the dedication of our NHS staff, carers and public servants.
The steps the government has announced today to head off the economic impact of the coronavirus are obviously welcome but I have some points I wish to raise.
We have to be straight with people, it is going to be much tougher because of the last 10 years of deeply damaging and counter-productive cuts to all of our essential public services.
We’re going into this crisis with our public services on their knees and as today’s figures confirm, with a fundamentally weak economy which is now flat-lining with zero growth even before the impact of coronavirus.
- Corbyn said austerity was not over. He said:
Now one has to believe austerity is over - but it’s not true.
According to the Institute for Fiscal Studies, it’d take at least £54bn of current spending this year, excluding health and social care, to get us back to 2010 levels. We’ve heard nothing approaching that scale from the chancellor today. Without it, the IFS says austerity is baked into our economy.
- He said the budget showed the government was not serious about tackling climate change. He said:
The government has maintained the freeze on fuel duty without lowering bus and rail fares, showing complacency about the climate emergency.
When the chancellor announced with such aplomb a huge investment in road building across the country - where is the environmental impact assessment being made of that policy?
- He criticised the decision not to abolish entrepreneurs’ relief in its entirety. He said:
A huge subsidy mainly benefiting 5,000 people who make an average of £350,000 per year. I can only assume those who fund the Conservative party have had a quiet word with the chancellor and told him to back off.
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Small print alert: Tax take is UP!
The government will be taking in more tax, as well as spending more and borrowing more.
The net tax rise announced in the budget reduces borrowing by an average of £5.5bn a year, the OBR says.
That’s primarily due to cancelling next month’s cut in corporation tax, from 19% to 17%. That will bring in £6.4bn per year on average.
A boost for the Treasury, but one which must leave UK firms with less money to invest or fund pay rises.
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In the government’s budget red book the most valuable chart is the scorecard (pages 65 to 69), which explains either how much the measures announced will raise (a + number) or how much they will cost (a - number).
There are 62 measures in the table, and another 14 previously announced ones.
Here are the final numbers, showing that by the end of this parliament the measures announced in this budget will be costing the government an extra £40bn a year. These figures are extraordinary. In a normal budget, even at the end of the forecast period, the change rarely goes much beyond +/-£10bn.
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The budget includes ‘significant increases in departmental spending plans’, the OBR confirms - both in terms of current spending, and capital (investment in the future).
And it means that Boris Johnson’s government is reversing the Cameron-era cuts.
As the OBR puts it:
As regards current spending, the budget completes the reversal of the cuts to real departmental spending per person undertaken by the coalition government.
The turnaround started in the Conservative government’s postelection budget in July 2015, but really took hold with the multi-billion pound NHS settlement in June 2018. The capital spending turnaround is more dramatic still – the coalition government’s early cuts (which had been a feature of the previous Labour government’s March 2010 Budget plans) will have been almost fully reversed this year. Spending is set to be around a third higher at the end of our forecast than in 2010-11.
How is Rishi Sunak achieving this? By borrowing, of course!
The OBR says:
Rather than aim for budget balance and a clear decline in the debt-to-GDP ratio – as Philip Hammond did initially as Chancellor – the new administration is content to borrow significant sums on an ongoing basis and merely to stabilise the debt-to-GDP ratio.
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This chart from the OBR shows clearly how the government is planning to borrow a lot more, to fund its infrastructure spending.
The red bars show that today’s policy measures mean increased borrowing every year – either through spending more, or taxing less (eg, through the abolition of some business rates).
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OBR: Biggest fiscal boost since Lamont's 1992 giveaway
Today’s budget is the biggest giveaway since Norman Lamont was chancellor.
That’s according to the Office for Budget Responsibility, which just released its verdict (online here).
The OBR confirm that the government is breaking free from the chains of austerity – with the “largest sustained fiscal loosening” since the pre-election budget in 1992.
In the medium term, this takes real day-to-day spending per person back to pre-austerity levels, the watchdog says.
However.... the domestic effects of the coronavirus outbreak and the government’s response to it came too late to include in its projections. So today’s growth figures are no longer the ‘central’ forecast.
Loosening the purse strings will drive UK government debt up by £125bn over the next five years, the OBR says:
Turning to those policy decisions, the government has proposed the largest sustained fiscal loosening since the pre-election budget of March 1992 (which was reversed within months after the UK left the European exchange rate mechanism in September that year).
Relative to our pre-measures baseline forecast, the government’s policy decisions increase the budget deficit by 0.9 per cent of GDP on average over the next five years and add £125 billion (4.6 per cent of GDP) to public sector net debt by 2024-25.
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You can read all the Treasury’s budget documents here.
Here is the red book (pdf), the key document with all the budget tables.
Sunak's budget - Snap political verdict
Jeremy Corbyn has just been delivering his response now (highlights coming soon), and he faced a challenge because Rishi Sunak has just delivered a set of measures that would have sat very happily in a Labour budget. The opposition has spent the last five years at least denouncing austerity and demanding higher spending on public services and a massive programme of investment. And that is what the Treasury has delivered. You can quibble about the details, we have not had time to read the small print yet, and these announcements will not repair all the damage done to services over the last decade, but on the basis of these headline figures the profile of public spending will look noticeably different over the next few years. This is from the IFS’s Paul Johnson.
It is common for governments to use the first budget after a general election to raise the overall tax burden. Sunak seems to have avoided this temptation, and most of the ideas floated over the last few weeks about possible tax increases for high earners (the cut to pensions tax relief, some version of the mansion tax) don’t seem to have materialised. Borrowing seems to be doing all the heavy lifting instead.
But in the short term this budget will probably just be judged by whether Sunak has done enough to help the economy, and the country, deal with coronavirus. Sensibly he put these measures at the start of his speech and the £30bn stimulus sounded like the sort of “big bazooka” required by the occasion. But will it still look like that in May? Who knows? The chancellor can announce as much spending as he wants, but he, and the government, are partly at the mercy of events beyond their control.
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Snap economic verdict: Spending taps on
Faced with the gloomiest economic clouds since his hedge fund days, Rishi Sunak has taken a sensible choice - spend!
People have joked about Dominic Cummings writing the budget – but the chancellor’s boast that infrastructure spending will boost growth in dark times could have been written by John Maynard Keynes.
Today’s £30bn programme to protect the UK from the coronavirus compares favourably with similar moves from other countries (Italy plumped for a €25bn (£21.5bn).
It seems to cover the key issues — financial assistance to keep small firms operating, and help for people who can’t work because they’re ill or isolated. Plus that £5bn emergency funding for the NHS.
Combined with the Bank of England’s emergency interest rate cut at 7am today, it’s the co-ordinated fiscal and monetary response that is needed at time of crisis.
Sunak’s ‘whatever it takes’ message should have cheered the City too. But actually, there’s little immediate reaction in the markets — partly because the UK was facing five more years of weak growth before the coronavirus struck (and the picture may be rather worse now).
Plus – the bigger the package, the more nervous the government must be about a recession....
Sunak has also repudiated his own party’s decade-long austerity message, with the “largest sustained fiscal boost in 30 years”.
He proudly told the House that his £175bn of extra infrastructure spending would boost the UK’s long-term productivity. Critics of Osbornomics pointed this out years ago.
But increased spending means increased borrowing — and it’s clear that balancing the books is off the agenda. Rightly so, given the prospect of a global downturn if Covid-19 becomes a pandemic.
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Sunak says this is a budget delivered in challenging times.
It delivers security. But it also lays the foundation for prosperity, he says.
He says it is the budget of a government that get things done.
And that’s it. The speech is over.
The budget is the biggest day in Sunak’s career, but does he already have an eye on the future? Our colleague Aditya Chakrabortty suggests he might....
Sunak says he is launching a new spending review, to conclude in July.
The OBR says this budget is the largest sustained fiscal boost for 30 years, he says.
He says by the end of this parliament day to day spending on public services per year will be £100bn higher than it is now.
Sunak says work will start on building the 40 new hospitals promised by the government.
Sunak says he is changing the rules on pensions that have led to some doctors deciding not to work because it is not worth their while given the loss in pension they experience. The tapered annual allowance will be raised to £90,000.
Sunak says there will be national insurance relief for employers that hire veterans.
Sunak says the NHS should not be abused. The immigration health surcharge will rise to £620, although there will be a discount for children, he says.
Sunak says he will expand the affordable homes programme.
He says Robert Jenrick will set out comprehensive reforms to planning tomorrow.
- Sunak says he will spend £650m tackling rough sleeping, funding 6,000 new places for rough sleepers. He says the government wants to eliminate the problem by the end of this parliament.
He says this will be funded by the promised stamp duty surcharge on non-UK residents, worth 2%, coming in from April 2021.
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Sunak says he will remove VAT on digital publications
Sunak says it is not right that digital publications are subject to VAT.
- Sunak says he will remove VAT on digital publications.
And he includes a joke. There will be no VAT on works of fiction, “like John McDonnell’s Economics for the Many”, he says.
Sunak says he will spend £1.5bn over five years to improve the quality of the further education estate. He says this was a cause his predecessor Sajid Javid was passionate about.
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Sunak says every region in the country will get funding for specialist maths schools.
And there will be £25,000 per secondary school for arts activities.
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Sunak says the government will also press ahead with the A303 project, protecting Stonehenge. People have talked about it for years, he says. He say this government will get it done.
Sunak says he is announcing the biggest ever investment in strategic roads and motorways.
And there will be a new pothole fund, worth £500m a year, which is enough to fill 50m potholes, he says.
Sunak announces £5bn spending on gigabit broadband.
Sunak announces extra money for the devolved administrations.
Sunak says the government wants to level up. Public investment will be the highest it has been in real terms since 1955.
He says the details will be set out at the spending review.
But he will set out the outlines today.
First, he wants to ensure the whole country benefits. More than 750 staff from the Treasury and other departments will move to a campus in the north of England. Eventually the government wants to move 22,000 civil servants out of London.
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Sunak says carbon capture and storage (CCS) is exactly the sort of technology where the UK should be excelling. He says he will spend £800m to establish two or more CCS clusters by 2030.
Sunak turns to flooding.
- He says £120m will be made immediately to repair damage caused by recent floods.
- And spending on flood defences will double, he says.
Sunak says he will increase the roll-out of rapid charging hubs, so that drivers are never more than 30 miles away from one.
Sunak says the tax relief on red diesel funds pollution. So he will abolish it for most sectors, he says.
He says this change will not take effect for two years.
And, in response to concerns raised by farmers, he says agriculture will retain this relief. He says the relief will also stay for rail and for fishing.
Sunak says he will introduce a new plastic packaging tax.
Sunak says at least £800m will be invested in a new blue-skies research agency, modelled on ARPA in the US.
(ARPA, the Advanced Research Projects Agency, is an obsession of Dominic Cummings, the PM’s chief adviser. After Brexit, establishing a British version of ARPA is about his top priority.)
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Sunak says investment in R&D is increasing.
Sunak says businesses need a fair tax system.
He says he has reviewed entrepreneurs’ relief. It is expensive, costing more than £2bn a year, ineffective and unfair, with just 5,000 people getting most of the benefit.
He says he has heard representations that it should be completely abolished.
He is sympathetic to that, he says. But he thinks we need more risk-taking. So he won’t abolish it completely. Instead he will reduce the lifetime limit from £10m, to £1m. That will save £6bn over five years.
He says this money will be used to cut other business taxes.
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UK growth forecasts
Today’s growth forecasts are decidedly mixed, showing that the UK economy was expected to grow rather slowly over the next five years, even before Covid-19.
Predicted growth has been cut this year, and in 2022 and 2023 – although 2021 did look rosier. But the coronavirus crisis could change that.
For the record, here they are:
- 2020: Growth of 1.1%, down from 1.4% forecast in the 2019 spring statement
- 2021: Growth of 1.8%, up from 1.6%
- 2022: Growth of 1.5%, down from 1.6%
- 2023: Growth of 1.3%, down from 1.6%
- 2024 Growth of 1.4% – new forecast
But given the fiscal stimulus announced today, the Office for Budget Responsibility will want to rework these numbers.
We also don’t have much clarity on the government’s borrowing plans yet – so stay tuned (we’ll go through the budget smallprint later).
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Sunak says alcohol duties and fuel duty to be frozen
Sunak says all alcohol duties will be frozen next year.
And fuel duty will be frozen next year too, he says.
Sunak turns to duty. He says the UK will continue to lobby the US to remove tariffs. He says he will allocate £1m to promote the Scottish food and drink industry. And there will be £10m to help distilleries go green.
And the planned increase in spirit duty will be cancelled.
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Sunak says, now the UK has left the EU, the tampon tax will be abolished.
Sunak says the Conservatives are “the real workers’ party”.
Sunak says the government will increase the national living wage to two-thirds of median earnings by 2024. That means £10.50 an hour, he says.
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Sunak says this is the first budget of a new decade, the first for almost 50 years outside the EU, and the first of a new government.
While talent is evenly spread, opportunity is not, he says.
He says this is a budget from a government that gets things done.
Sunak says debt is forecast to fall over the course of this parliament, going down from 79.5% of GDP this year to 75.2% in 2024-25.
Sunak says he will review Treasury's fiscal rules
Sunak says there is a live global debate about what the low-interest environment means for fiscal policy.
He says he wants to take time to consider these issues over the coming months.
He will review the fiscal framework, and report back in the autumn, he says.
- Sunak says he will review the Treasury’s fiscal rules. (That implies that the new rules announced by his predecessor Sajid Javid during the election campaign are no longer considered sacrosanct.)
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Economists welcome Rishi Sunak’s £30bn fiscal stimulus
Here’s EY’s chief UK economist, Mark Gregory:
Foreign exchange analyst Simon Harvey agrees that it will affect the real economy:
PwC predict there could be more easing this autumn:
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Sunak says the OBR is forecasting inflation at 1.4% this year, increasing to 1.8% next year, and then remaining on or around target (2%).
Sunak announces £170bn investment programme over five years, saying it will boost growth by 0.5% of GDP
Sunak turns to the growth forecasts.
He says even before coronavirus hit, the economy was slowing.
He says the UK will respond with a response that is brave and bold.
The government is investing in world-class infrastructure.
He says he is funding investment worth £170bn over the next five years.
He says the OBR says this means growth will be 0.5% higher than it otherwise would have been.
And he says the OBR is also saying this will increase long-term productivity by 2.5%.
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The Treasury has been summing up those fiscal stimulus measures on a Twitter feed starting here.
Sunak says total value of his coronavirus stimulus measures is £30bn
Sunak says the total value of his fiscal stimulus is £30bn.
He says this is one of the most comprehensive responses of any government around the world to date.
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Sunak says he has another measure.
- Sunak says business rates will be abolished this year for firms with a rateable value below £51,000.
Second, Sunak says statutory sick pay will be available to anyone advised to self-isolate. They will be able to get a sick note through 111.
And, for those who do not qualify for sick pay, it will be easier to get benefits. They will be able to claim benefits from day one.
Temporarily, the minimum income level will be removed from universal credit.
- Sunak says relaxed rules will amount to a £500m boost to the welfare system. There will also be a £500m hardship fund for local authorities.
Third, there will be help for businesses.
He says the cost of a business having to have someone off work for up to 14 days will be refunded.
- Sunak says £2bn will be allocated to cover firms that lose out because staff are off sick. He says this will apply to firms that employ fewer than 250 staff.
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By pledging to do “whatever it takes” to protect the UK economy from the coronavirus, Rishi Sunak is quoting the famous promise that saved the eurozone back in 2012.
It worked for Mario Draghi then – fingers crossed that it does the trick this time too.
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NHS to get 'whatever it costs', says Sunak
Sunak says he has a three-point plan.
First the NHS will get whatever help it needs, “whatever it costs”.
Sunak is now summarising some of the measures announced by the Bank this morning.
The government will use fiscal action to support public services, households and businesses, he says.
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Sunak says he wants to provide support for people who get sick, or who cannot work.
And he wants to support businesses facing loss of income.
This help will be temporary, he says.
He says he has been working with the Bank of England. The Bank and the government’s response are coordinated, he says.
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Sunak says he wants to thank MPs who contributed to the discussions on how to respond to coronavirus, MPs from both sides.
The health secretary is working around the clock to protect people, he says.
And he says he will do whatever it takes to protect the economy.
There is likely to be a “temporary disruption”, he says.
He says at any one time up to 20% of people could be off work.
And there could be shortages in supply, he says.
For a period, our productive capacity will shrink.
But the country will get through this, he says.
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Sunak says:
Let me say this: we will get through this together ... We will rise to this challenge.
But it is not the only challenging facing the UK, he says.
We have had an election where people voted for change. He says the budget will deliver on change.
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Rishi Sunak's budget statement
Rishi Sunak, the chancellor, is delivering his budget statement now.
He starts by saying he wants to get straight to the issue of coronavirus.
He knows how worried people are.
He says the government is doing “everything we can” to keep people healthy and the country financially secure.
This is an issue “above party”, he says.
He says the Commons has always been willing to put aside party politics and act in the national interest.
Today he will set out the economic response.
The Lib Dem acting leader Sir Ed Davey asks whether the three Conservative governments of the last decade should have fixed the roof while the sun was shining.
Johnson says Davey was a member of one of those governments.
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Boris Johnson’s promise of an “infrastructure revolution” in today’s budget will intrigue the City.
Bond traders are expecting a substantial jump in infrastructure spending, and a debt-financed stimulus package to shore up growth.
Britain’s 10-year bonds, or gilts, are trading at an interest rate (yield) of just 0.3% per year today. It’s never been so cheap to borrow – so the chancellor, Rishi Sunak, may take advantage today.
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Andy Carter, a Conservative, asks about the IRA attack in Warrington in the 1990s. Will the government continue to fund support for victims?
Johnson says that funding will continue.
Labour’s Zarah Sultana says, if the PM cannot live on £95 per week sick pay, other people should not be expected to live on it either.
Johnson says the government will ensure that people who do the right thing do not lose out.
Johnson says the budget will contain “an infrastructure revolution”.
The SNP’s Neil Gray asks about an inquiry into avoidable deaths linked to failures in the welfare system. When will the PM order such an inquiry?
Johnson says there have been some tragic cases. He says the DWP is looking at this issue, to ensure that the needs of families are met.
Labour’s Bill Esterson says the banks must fulfil their coronavirus responsibilities. Some of them are shoring up their balance sheets.
Johnson says the chancellor will be meeting the banks continuously to ensure they work for the people.
The SNP’s Allan Dorans says the government has cut funding for veterans’ charities.
Johnson says Dorans was right to raise this issue. The government has appointed a veterans minister, he says. He says there will be more on veterans in the budget.
The House Of Commons is as packed as ever for today’s budget statement.
Obviously, the health minister Nadine Dorries is not there, having tested positive for Covid-19. As we reported earlier, Labour’s Rachael Maskell is also self-isolating having met Dorries last week. But as there aren’t enough seats for all the UK’s MPs, it’s standing room only.
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Labour’s Rachel Hopkins asks about child poverty in Luton. More people are in low-paid jobs. Does the PM agree that it is unacceptable that children are growing up in poverty?
Johnson says the national living wage is getting its biggest increase. That will benefit people to the tune of £4,000 a year, he says.
Johnson says support for independence in Scotland is declining. Maybe that is because of the tax rates in Scotland and the failing schools.
Jane Hunt, a Conservative, asks the PM to congratulate a local swimming team. Johnson is happy to congratulate Loughborough swimming team.
Labour’s Naz Shah asks about hate crime against Muslims. What is he doing to assure Muslims he is not an Islamophobe?
Johnson says there is no room for hatred in his party. He wishes he could say the same about Labour.
Julian Lewis, a Conservative, asks about the 265 war widows whose pensions were cancelled when they remarried. Will the PM meet two of them to put an end to this “dishonourable” situation?
Johnson says the MoD is looking at this.
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Labour’s Alex Davies-Jones asks about immigration rules and NHS staff. Will the PM ensure that consultants can get visas?
Johnson says that is why the government has introduced a fast-track NHS visa.
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Ian Blackford, the SNP’s leader at Westminster, asks about support for workers who have to give up work because of coronavirus. He asks what the statutory sick pay rate is in Ireland, compared with in the UK.
Johnson says it is not for him to comment on other countries’ sick pay arrangements. On the UK’s plans, he urges Blackford to wait for the budget.
Blackford says the Irish have just raised sick pay to £266 per week. But in the UK it is £94.25 per week. He says if the PM is committed to levelling up, statutory sick pay must be a good place to start. Will he raise it to the average EU level?
Johnson says, unlike other countries in the EU, the UK has a universal health system and an extensive welfare system.
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Neil Parish, a Conservative, asks whether the PM will meet with MPs representing rural constituencies to discuss how to protect them in trade deal.
Johnson says the government will not compromise on food standards and animal welfare in trade talks.
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Corbyn says domestic violence could increase if people have to self-isolate. Will the PM commit to the extra money need to ensure survivors of domestic abuse get the help they need?
Johnson says the government has an outstanding record of tackling violence against women. He says it is introducing a domestic violence bill.
Corbyn says that without funding, that will be meaningless. He says the PM has made repeated offensive remarks against single mothers, against Muslim women and against working women. Will the PM apologise for these, and ensure his discriminatory policies are reversed?
Johnson says he is proud of the government’s record. The Tories have produced two female leaders. He says he will take no lessons in sexism from a party where women are bullied out just because they have the guts to stand up against antisemitism.
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Corbyn says it is not surprise that life expectancy is falling in this country. It is falling for the poorest people in society, he says, when some MPs challenge him.
He asks why, under the “rape clause, 200 women had to prove to the government they were raped to keep child tax credits”?
Johnson says Corbyn is wrong; mortality is at its lowest level since 2001, he says.
On the rape clause, he says he will do what he can to rectify this injustice.
Corbyn says 50 years ago Barbara Castle introduced the Equal Pay Act. But it is estimated that it will take another 60 years to close the gender pay gap. Why won’t the PM match Labour’s target of closing it by 2030?
Johnson says the gender pay gap is at a record low.
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Johnson signals sick pay to be extended to self-employed
Jeremy Corbyn starts by saying his thoughts are with the loved ones of those who have died from coronavirus, and with Nadine Dorries. He pays tribute to the work of NHS staff.
Referring to international women’s day, he says a quarter of social care women are on zero-hours contracts. They may be asked to self-isolate. But they won’t get sick pay. Will the PM ensure they do?
Johnson wishes Dorries a speedy recovery. He says the Commons will be guided by Public Health England in how it responds to this.
He says the budget will set out measures being taken to respond to coronavirus. He says people on “all types of contracts” will get the protection they need, and that no one who does the right thing, and stays at home, will be penalised.
- Johnson signals that sick pay will be extended to the self-employed during the coronavirus outbreak.
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Gary Sambrook, a Conservative, asks about housing. Does the PM agree improving homes will help level up the economy?
Boris Johnson says Sambrook is “spot on”.
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Another highlight from the Brexit committee ...
PMQs
PMQs will be starting soon.
Here is the list of MPs down to ask a question.
Gove says it may not be possible to conclude security deal with EU before end of 2020
Here are some more lines from Michael Gove’s evidence to the Commons Brexit committee.
- Gove said it might not be possible to conclude a security deal with the EU by the end of this year.
- He said that smaller British boats would get more fishing quota under the government’s plans for fisheries.
- He insisted that Boris Johnson would stick to his promise not to extend the post-Brexit transition.
From the Financial Times’s George Parker
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From the BBC’s Alex Partridge
Gove tells MPs next week's Brexit talks could be cancelled because of coronavirus
Michael Gove, the Cabinet Office minister, has just started giving evidence to the Commons Brexit committee, or the committee on the future relationship with the EU, to give it its proper name. There is a live feed here.
- Gove said that the next round of trade talks with the EU, which were due to start on 18 March (a week today) might have to be cancelled because of coronavirus.
- He refused to confirm that there would be extra checks on goods going from Great Britain to Northern Ireland under the Northern Ireland protocol agreed by the UK and the EU. The EU says the protocol does require extra checks. But Gove claimed that this would be a matter for the joint committee, the body that is being set up to oversee implementation of the protocol. Gove will represent the UK on the committee, which will meet for the first time on 30 March.
He also said that he wanted to develop the protocol.
- Gove claimed it would be possible to complete a trade deal with the EU and a trade deal with the US by the end of this year.
- He firmly ruled out extending the transition period. Asked about this, he said:
There won’t be any extension to the deadline.
- He said that, although the UK is drawing up a draft trade deal with the EU, he could not say when it would be published.
- He said the UK would not be publishing an economic impact assessment of a trade deal with the EU.
- He rejected claims that the UK was walking away from the commitments it made in the political declaration.
There is a live feed of the hearing here.
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Lib Dems denounce proposal to make 'lackey of PM' Chris Grayling chair of intelligence committee
Sir Ed Davey, the acting Lib Dem leader, has strongly criticised a reported plan to install Chris Grayling, the Tory former transport secretary, as chair of the intelligence and security committee. No 10 chooses members of the ISC. The committee itself then elects its chair but, according to Tom Newton Dunn in the Sun, Boris Johnson plans to appoint Tory members on condition that they will back Grayling for the chairmanship. Newton Dunn says Theresa Villiers, the former environment secretary, and Sir John Hayes are also being offered membership.
In a statement Davey said:
The intelligence and security committee does crucial work holding the government and security services to account. It scrutinises evidence deemed too sensitive for the rest of us to see. The public needs to have confidence that the committee is independent of government.
Installing a lackey of the prime minister – especially one with as little credibility as Chris Grayling – badly undermines that confidence.
Principled Conservative MPs should refuse to go along with this latest authoritarian move.
No 10 has refused to comment on the Sun report, although sources say that the final decision about the committee’s membership have not yet been taken.
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John McDonnell, the shadow chancellor, says the rolling three-month GDP figures released today (see 9.47am) show the underlying weakness of the economy under the Tories. In a statement he said:
On the day of the budget these figures expose the fundamental weaknesses in the economy after a decade of decline under the Tories.
News of zero growth and falling production, even before the outbreak of coronavirus, show the Tories do not have a grip on the economy.
For years the Tories have had no plan for the economy – and unfortunately today’s budget announcements look likely to spell more of the same, and more disappointment for the country as a whole.
Budget plans will help make UK one of best-placed economies in world to manage coronavirus, Sunak tells cabinet
Downing Street has just sent out this read-out from today’s cabinet meeting. A No 10 spokesperson said:
Cabinet received an update from the health secretary and the prime minister on the coronavirus outbreak. The PM wished Nadine Dorries a speedy recovery, noting that she was following official advice to self-isolate.
The chancellor set out the measures being taken to manage the impact of coronavirus, laying out details of his economic action plan that will be announced at budget.
He outlined how this plan – combined with the measures announced by the governor of the Bank of England this morning – will make the UK one of the best placed economies in the world to manage the potential impact of the virus. The chancellor added the budget will ensure businesses, the public and those in public services working on the front line against the virus get the support they need.
He said despite the impacts of the outbreak being uncertain, we have the economic tools to overcome the disruption caused by the virus and move the country forwards.
The chancellor also said that despite coronavirus being “front and centre in our minds”, the budget will implement the manifesto on which the government had been elected. He said it was vital that people know this is a budget that delivers on the promises made to the British people – investing in public services and cutting taxes for millions of hardworking people – and that there could be no delay in laying the foundations for a decade of growth where opportunity was spread equally across the UK.
The PM said that this budget starts to tackle head on the challenges facing our economy and country – addressing productivity and regional imbalances – and showing that the government is responding to the public’s desire for change. It will set the path for further action through the year.
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Rory Stewart calls for large gatherings to be banned and for budget to be delivered online, not in Commons chamber
Rory Stewart, the former Tory cabinet minister who is now running as an independent candidate for London mayor, has said that the government should ban large gatherings in the light of the seriousness of the coronavirus outbreak. That includes in parliament, where this afternoon’s budget should be delivered online, he says.
Earlier this week Stewart called for schools to be shut now because of coronavirus. Ministers argue that if they introduce these “social distancing” measures too early people will be starting to ignore them just at the moment when the outbreak is reaching its peak. At the moment there are relatively few high-profile political figures like Stewart criticising the government for being complacent, although this could change quite quickly.
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Rachael Maskell, the Labour MP who is self-isolating after a meeting with Nadine Dorries last week (see 9.20am), told the Press Association that only she, Dorries and members of the minister’s staff were present at the meeting on Thursday. Maskell went on:
I’m absolutely fine. Obviously it’s frustrating because there are things I want to get on with. I’m just planning on making more phone calls, more working online. I’m not going to be bored, put it that way.
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On a lighter note, Ben Ellery in the Times (paywall) reports that Dilyn, the jack russell rescue dog adopted by Boris Johnson and his partner Carrie Symonds, could be “quietly rehomed” before the summer. Ellery says:
It is understood that Dilyn has proved quite a “sickly animal”. One Whitehall source predicted: “I’m not sure that dog is going to make it through the next reshuffle.”
Despite the prime minister having declared Dilyn a “most excellent animal”, one source said that the couple had already grown weary of the dog before they discovered that Ms Symonds was pregnant. A particular bone of contention was the mess that he created in their apartment above No 11. “For a while there was dog shit everywhere in the flat,” the source added.
Unusually Symonds, who normally does not comment on media stories she features in, has posted a tweet describing the story as “total crap”.
Presumably the Times has been given false information, because it is very hard to imagine any circumstances in which Johnson might have been telling his aides (the sort of people who speak to journalists) about his annoyance with the dog without also owning up to his true feelings to his animal-loving partner.
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UK growth remained flat in the three months to January 2020, the Office for National Statistics has announced this morning. The ONS has released its rolling three-month growth figures, which are not the same as the quarterly growth figures.
Sky’s economics editor, Ed Conway, says this means that, in practice, the UK could already be in recession. (Officially, of course, a recession is not declared until the economy has had two consecutive quarters of negative growth. There was no growth in the final quarter of 2019, October to December, but it will be a while before we get the figures for Q1 2020 because it’s not over yet.)
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From Sky’s Tom Rayner
A Conservative MP has confirmed to the Press Association news agency that Nadine Dorries, the first MP to be diagnosed with coronavirus, has sent a message to the Tory WhatsApp group saying that a member of her staff is ill. The MP who confirmed that the message had been sent said the parliamentary party was “fairly relaxed and determined to carry on working”.
The second round of Brexit talks could yet be delayed because of coronavirus, it has emerged. The negotiations are due to start on 18 March and be held in a government building near Victoria station in London but there are concerns over the wisdom of moving 150 delegates from Brussels to London at a time of heightening risk.
The final decision on whether they will take place in London as scheduled next week will made in the coming days. One source familiar with the planning said: “One week in coronavirus is a long time. We shall have to wait and see”.
Parliament says it currently has no plans to close, despite the news about health minister Nadine Dorries having coronavirus, Sky’s Sam Coates reports.
The Labour MP Rachael Maskell has announced that she is self-isolating having had a meeting with the health minister Nadine Dorries last week. Last night Dorries announced that she had been diagnosed with coronavirus.
Boris Johnson chairs cabinet ahead of Rishi Sunak unveiling his first budget
It’s budget day, but never in living memory has a budget felt so cursed. Originally this budget was provisionally scheduled for the last week of October 2019, with Sajid Javid planning to deliver it if parliament passed a Brexit deal. Then Javid announced that there was going to be a budget on 6 November. That did not happen, because Brexit was delayed and MPs voted for a general election, but during the campaign the Tories promised that, if they won, during their first 100 days in office there would be a “post-Brexit budget in February which will cut taxes for hardworking families”. But the scale of the Tory election victory meant Boris Johnson started planning a more extensive budget than originally envisaged, and when Javid finally announced the date of the first post-election budget, he said it would not be in February, but on 11 March. Despite having twice announced dates for the budget, Javid never got to deliver it because he resigned in the February reshuffle, becoming the first chancellor since Iain Macleod, who died in office in 1970, never to deliver a budget.
Javid was replaced by the 39-year-old chief secretary to the Treasury. He is the most inexperienced minister to hold this office in modern times (which is not the same at all as the least able) and this afternoon he will deliver a budget in extraordinary circumstances. An announcement planned as being all about the end of austerity, and an infrastructure spending splurge, particularly aimed at towns and regions that voted Tory for the first time in 2019, will be judged predominantly by whether it is seen as a credible response to the coronavirus emergency.
Here are some of our preview articles.
To coincide with the budget, the Bank of England has this morning announced an emergency 0.5% interest rate cut. My colleague Graeme Wearden is covering this on his business live blog, which is currently focusing on the Bank of England press conference that has just started.
Here is the agenda for the day.
8.30am: Boris Johnson chairs cabinet.
11am: Michael Gove, the Cabinet Office committee, gives evidence to the Commons Brexit committee.
12pm: Boris Johnson faces Jeremy Corbyn at PMQs.
12.30pm: Rishi Sunak, the chancellor, delivers the budget.
3pm: Robert Chote, chair of the Office of Budget Responsibility, holds a post-budget press conference.
Mostly I will be focusing on the budget today, although I will be also be covering PMQs as usual, and Michael Gove at the Brexit committee. My colleague Graeme Wearden will be helping out with the budget coverage, and we plan to post a summary when I wrap up.
You can read all the latest Guardian politics articles here. Here is the Politico Europe roundup of this morning’s political news. And here is the PoliticsHome list of today’s top 10 must-reads.
If you want to follow me or contact me on Twitter, I’m on @AndrewSparrow.
I try to monitor the comments below the line (BTL) but it is impossible to read them all. If you have a direct question, do include “Andrew” in it somewhere and I’m more likely to find it. I do try to answer questions, and if they are of general interest, I will post the question and reply above the line (ATL), although I can’t promise to do this for everyone.
If you want to attract my attention quickly, it is probably better to use Twitter.
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