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The National (Scotland)
The National (Scotland)
National
Daniel Byron

Jeremy Hunt prioritises tackling inflation over tax cuts amid pressure from Tory MPs

JEREMY Hunt will say he is prioritising tackling inflation over tax cuts, in a blow to Tory MPs clamouring for a pre-election giveaway.

In his first Mansion House speech as Chancellor on Monday, he will say that bringing down soaring prices “puts more money into people’s pockets than any tax cut”.

The comments will further alarm Conservatives who have been pressing for reduced taxes to help drive economic growth and win over voters, as the party trails Labour in the polls.

Before setting out longer-term reforms to make UK capital markets more attractive, Hunt will say there can be no sustainable growth without abolishing inflation.

Rishi Sunak wants to halve inflation to about 5% by the end of the year, but the rate has stubbornly remained at 8.7%.

Hunt is expected to say: “In January, the Prime Minister made halving inflation this year the first of his five priorities. Delivering sound money is our number one focus.

“That means taking responsible decisions on public finances, including public sector pay, because more borrowing is itself inflationary.

“It means recognising that bringing down inflation puts more money into people’s pockets than any tax cut.

“And it means recognising that there can be no sustainable growth without eliminating the inflation that deters investment and erodes consumer confidence.

“Tackling inflation therefore unlocks the Prime Minister’s other two economic priorities – growing our economy and reducing debt – but because it is a prerequisite for both, it must come first.”

The Treasury chief has previously appeared to rule out major tax cuts this autumn, despite some Tories demanding them before the next election, due by January 2025.

In his set-piece address to the City of London, Hunt will promise a £1,000-a-year pensions boost to the average earner with reforms to get pension funds making riskier investments in high-growth firms.

He said there is a “perverse situation” in which UK institutional investors are not putting as much money into UK start-ups as their international counterparts, with defined contribution pension schemes investing 1% in unlisted equity, compared to around 6% in Australia.

He will hail an agreement with leading pensions firms to put 5% of their investments into early-stage businesses in the fintech, life sciences, biotech and clean technology sectors by 2030.

The changes, dubbed the Mansion House Reforms, could help increase the retirement savings of a typical earner who starts saving at 18 by 12% over their career, or over £1,000 more a year once they stop working, according to the Chancellor.

It could also unlock £50 billion of scale-up investment if the rest of the industry follows suit.

Aviva, Scottish Widows, Legal & General, Aegon, Phoenix, NEST, Mercer, M&G and Smart Pension are so far taking part.

Pensions firms welcomed that Hunt was not making the move mandatory, as the industry had warned against.

They will be expected to make investment decisions “on the basis of long-term returns and not simply cost”, while underperforming pension schemes will be wound up by the regulator as part of consolidation measures, Hunt will also say.

The Government will also incentivise investment vehicles to enable schemes to put money into unlisted companies.

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