infrastructure key to uk’s first postbrexit budget
Last Updated : GMT 06:49:16
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Last Updated : GMT 06:49:16
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Infrastructure key to UK’s first post-Brexit budget

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Arab Today, arab today Infrastructure key to UK’s first post-Brexit budget

British Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond and Bank of England Gov. Mark Carney during a recent meeting at Lancaster House in central London
London - Arab Today

Britain’s first post-Brexit budget will focus on infrastructure and could spell an end to the previous government’s rigid fiscal targets, according to a treasury statement released Sunday.

The budget will be new finance minister Philip Hammond’s first set-piece since replacing George Osborne who resigned following the June vote.
Under previous prime minister David Cameron, Osborne oversaw an austerity program of spending cuts and tax rises at odds with new Premier Theresa May’s views on the economy which she has said no longer works for everyone.
Hammond will promise to place “investment in infrastructure... at the heart” of Wednesday’s autumn statement to lawmakers, exactly five months after the referendum backing Brexit, the statement said.
“He will set out how the government will fire up the nation’s economic infrastructure — all part of plans which form the backbone of ongoing work to close the UK’s productivity gap,” it added.
The treasury statement also hinted at a loosening of Britain’s fiscal straightjacket, introduced by Osborne.
Osborne’s austerity policies had intended to eliminate the budget deficit following the global financial crisis.
But he scrapped his objective of producing a budget surplus by 2020 in July after May — in a speech launching her bid to become prime minister — said the policy should be dropped.
“Hammond will set out a new fiscal framework, outlining the need for flexibility to allow government to respond to changing economic conditions,” the statement added.
The finance minister, however, told BBC’s Andrew Marr Show on Sunday that the government was committed to tackling the country’s “eye-watering” deficit.
The statement will be the first indication of how Britain plans to adjust its economy to account for Brexit.
“Many forecasts points to a slowing of economic growth next year and a sharp challenge for the public finances,” said Hammond.
“We need to be match fit for the opportunities and challenges.”
The Sunday Telegraph said Hammond planned to balance the books by taxing job perks given to middle-income earners, such as mobile-phone contracts and gym memberships.
John McDonnell, the opposition Labour party’s shadow finance minister, accused the government of “going back to giveaways and gimmicks,” saying the proposed infrastructure plans were “simply replacing some of its earlier cuts.”
The plans will include £1.3 billion ($1.6 billion/1.5 billion euros) of new investment in Britain’s roads to tackle congestion.
As well as tax-and-spend plans, the budget will include the Conservative government’s latest forecasts for economic growth.
The autumn statement is seen as a mini-budget before the main tax-and-spend announcements given usually in March.
While the risk of recession in Britain caused by Brexit fallout has largely disappeared following upbeat data releases since the June 23 vote, some economists fear the economy could still take a turn for the worse.
Also Sunday, Hammond told ITV television the economy could face a slowdown because of the uncertainty caused by the UK’s decision to leave the European Union.
Hammond said that “we’re going to have an unprecedented level of uncertainty, and that’s one of the factors causing many commentators to predict that there will be a slowing of economic growth.”
Hammond told ITV television that “we just have to plan to accommodate it.”
Theresa May’s government says it will trigger formal exit talks with the EU by March 31, but won’t give away its negotiating position beforehand.
That has led to economic jitters, as well as speculation and lobbying by those who want to keep close ties with the bloc, as well as those who favor a decisive break.
Last month, the Confederation of British Industry urged a boost in public investment to 2 percent of economic output, or an increase of around 6 billion pounds a year.
Britain’s first budget plan since the Brexit vote will seek to get the economy prepared for the challenges of leaving the European Union and help struggling families through tough times ahead, Hammond told BBC television.
“We’ve got to make sure that the prosperity that comes from seizing opportunities ahead is shared across the country and across the income distribution,” he said.

Source: Arab News

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