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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
National
Luke O'Reilly

UK deficit 'could hit £300bn' as ministers urged to reject proposals for public sector spending cuts

Labour has urged the Government to reject public sector spending cuts as a way of paying off the cost of the coronavirus crisis.

It comes amid reports that measures including tax hikes and a pay freeze are being considered to help deal with the UK's deficit.

The Daily Telegraph said that a Treasury document estimated the UK’s deficit could reach £337 billion this year because of the pandemic, compared to the forecast £55 billion in March’s Budget.

The assessment, drawn up for the Chancellor and dated May 5, reportedly warned that to fill such a gap in the public finances through tax revenue rises would be “very challenging without breaking the tax lock”.

The paper said measures including income tax hikes, a two-year public sector pay freeze and the end of the triple lock on pensions may be required to fund the debt.

It suggests either raising taxes or reforming tax reliefs to fill the gap in public finances.

Shadow chancellor Anneliese Dodds said 10 years of underfunding public services had affected Covid-19 response (PA)

The document is said to state: “To fill a gap this size (in the public finances) through tax revenue risers would be very challenging without breaking the tax lock.

“To raise fiscally significant amounts, we would either have to increase rates/thresholds in one of the broad-based taxes (IT, NICS, VAT, CT) or reform one of the biggest tax reliefs (e.g. pensions tax).”

In the worst-case scenario, the assessment reportedly warns that the deficit could increase to £516 billion in the current financial year.

The Treasury declined to comment on the report, but it is understood that the document is one of many put together by different teams to discuss ideas about future policy.

In response, Labour urged Boris Johnson and Chancellor Rishi Sunak to reject the prospect of public sector spending cuts.

Shadow chancellor Anneliese Dodds said: “A lack of resilience in our public services, caused by 10 years of underfunding, has made it harder to deal with the challenge of coronavirus.

“After all our public services and key workers have done to save lives during this pandemic, there must be no return to a society where we lack that resilience.

“Both the Chancellor and the Prime Minister must urgently make a statement rejecting these plans.”

The Conservatives pledged in their manifesto at the general election last year that the party would not raise the rate of income tax, VAT or National Insurance, and would keep the pensions triple lock.

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