Jeremy Hunt faces calls to reverse his decision – buried in the small print of his Autumn Statement – to cut the Bank Surcharge from 8% to 3% following calls from the banking sector
Tories have been blasted for an £18 billion “giveaway” to big banks buried in the small print of Jeremy Hunt’s Autumn Statement.
The government’s growth plan, published today, saw the Bank Surcharge drop from 8% to just 3% from April next year.
Today the Lib Dems called for the government to reverse the move, along with a cut to the Bank Levy, to fund a scheme to support mortgage-payers facing rising bills.
Next year the two bank taxes will raise a combined £2.5 billion – down from £4.7billion in 2016-17 â a cut of 56%.