Hunt: Everyone will have to pay more tax

Chancellor Jeremy Hunt says everyone will have to pay more tax under plans set to be announced in this week’s Autumn Statement. He told the BBC’s Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg he has “been explicit that taxes are going to go up,” adding: “We have a plan to see us through choppy waters… we will make the recession we are in as short and shallow as possible.” The Chancellor acknowledged that the plans would “disappoint people” but promised to protect the “most vulnerable.” Separately, Mr Hunt told Sky News’ Sophy Ridge on Sunday his plan will “help bring down inflation, help control high energy prices and also get our way back to growing healthily, which is what we need so much.” Mr Hunt is expected to raise up to £60bn through a mixture of spending cuts and tax hikes as he tries to manage government borrowing, with it believed his plan will include further freezes to income tax thresholds. Shadow Chancellor Rachel Reeves said Mr Hunt was choosing to tax working people, while doing “little to close tax loopholes which mean some of the wealthiest don’t pay their fair share,” while Liberal Democrat Treasury spokesperson Sarah Olney said: “Hardworking families look set to be clobbered with yet more unfair tax hikes because the Conservative party crashed the economy.”

Acer Accounts can assist you with your taxation, year-end accounts, self assessment, bookkeeping, accounting and payroll services – we are your tax advisor near you

BBC News

Related Post

Reeves urged to abolish the £175,000 residence nil-rate band The Chancellor is facing pressure to eliminate the £175,000 residence nil-rate band in her upcoming Budget. Rachel Reeves previously argued that this allowance, which costs around £2bn annually, primarily benefits the wealthy and now the Resolution Foundation is pushing her to scrap it. In 2011, she stated: “Raising the inheritance tax limit to £1m for […] By Lisa Brownlow, 18 September 2024
Small firms responsible for 80% of tax evasion Analysis by the National Audit Office (NAO) shows that small firms are responsible for more than 80% of tax evasion. The report cites HMRC estimates that £5.5bn was lost to deliberate tax evasion in the 2022/23 financial year, with small businesses responsible for 81% of the total. Despite a reduction in the overall tax gap […] By Lisa Brownlow, 16 September 2024
Threshold freeze creates 4.4m more taxpayers The number of people paying income tax has increased by 4.4m in three years due to the freeze on thresholds, according to HMRC data. The figures also show that the decision to freeze the personal threshold at £12,570 has pulled an additional 1.77m pensioners into the income tax bracket. There are currently an estimated 37.4m […] By Lisa Brownlow, 3 July 2024