Professor Richard Murphy writes that Jeremy Hunt’s Autumn Budget will fail to huge swathes of the UK whilst being yet another Tory gift to the wealthy
This was a terrible budget for most people in the UK. For sure, it protected pensioners and those on benefits and the minimum wage. It was also great for those with wealth – who will enjoy much higher interest rates on their savings. But for everyone else it was dire.
The failure to increase tax bands that say when tax must start to be paid in line with inflation will increase taxes for most people in work by around £250 a year, whilst national insurance might go up by over £150 for the same reason. And it has been announced that these limits won’t change again until 2028, meaning this pain is going to last for years.
On top of that was grim news on energy prices – which will probably increase by over £600 a year from next autumn.
That leaves people out of pocket by £1,000 a year, but things will get much worse than that for many people. Mortgage interest rates are now forecast to be around 5% for the next five or more years – costing a person with an average mortgage over £4,000 a year compared to 2020 rates. Rents will also rise for that reason as they are closely linked to mortgage costs.