Liz Truss U-turns on mini budget plans to reverse corporation tax hike

By Jack Barnett

Liz Truss signed off another U-turn today, rolling back on plans to reverse corporation tax rising to 25 per cent from 19 per cent.

The move marks a second embarrassing climb down from the government’s tax cutting mini budget, which was characterised by Truss and former chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng as their blueprint for growth.

Financial markets have been rocked by Truss’s plans to slash taxes without cutting public spending.

Economists and analysts have been calling for the government to roll back some of their mini budget tax cuts to assure investors. Cuts included:

  • Ditching the 1.25 percentage point national insurance rise
  • Reversing six percentage point corporation tax hike
  • Bringing forward the 1p cut to the basic rate of income tax
  • Scrapping the top 45p rate of income rate
  • Raising the stamp duty threshold

Those moves created a £62bn hole in the public finances which would have to be filled by either huge public spending cuts or future tax rises.

The Institute for Fiscal Studies estimates the government will have to borrow £194bn this year to fund its fiscal plans. That figure will not be affected by the corporation tax hike reversal as it lands in the next financial year.

Truss’s U-turn will claw back around £18bn for the public coffers.

Markets did not respond kindly to the prime minister’s U-turn. The yield on 2-year UK gilt edged higher after falling in the morning.

The yield on the 30-year UK gilt also swung from a loss to a gain. Yields and prices move inversely.

The pound’s losses against the US dollar accelerated after Truss’s around 10 minute press conference in Number 10 in which she answered four questions from journalists.

Sterling fell 1.2 per cent against the greenback to buy $1.1163. London’s FTSE 100 climbed 1.4 per cent and the mid-cap FTSE 250 rose over two per cent.

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