- By Becky Morton & Laura Kuenssberg
- BBC Politics
Jeremy Hunt has hinted that he will introduce tax cuts when he delivers the Budget on Wednesday.
The chancellor has been under growing pressure from Tory MPs to lower taxes, which are currently at a historic high.
Speaking to the BBC, he said he wanted to “show a path” towards a lower-tax economy, though stressed that he would only do so in a “responsible” way.
Labour said people would be worse off whatever he does “thanks to 14 years of Tory failure”.
Among the measures Mr Hunt is believed to be considering is a further cut to national insurance, already reduced from 12% to 10% in last year’s Autumn Statement.
In an interview with the BBC’s Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg programme, Mr Hunt said the Budget, when the government sets out its plans for tax and spending, would be about “long-term growth”.
“When we look around the world, the economies that are growing fastest, whether it’s North America or Asia, tend to be the ones with lower taxes,” he said.
Mr Hunt suggested the government has always said it would only cut taxes in a way that was “responsible and prudent”.
He continued: “The most unconservative thing I could do would be to cut taxes by increasing borrowing.
“But I do want, where it’s possible to do so responsibly, to move towards a lower-tax economy, and I hope to show a path in that direction.”
Despite last year’s national insurance cuts, and with a general election due by the end of January, the overall amount of tax people pay is on course to reach record levels.
At the start of this year, the government’s independent economic forecaster, the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR), estimated the chancellor would have around £30bn of “headroom” for the Budget.
That estimate came after a sharp fall in borrowing costs, and would have provided more scope for tax cuts.
But since then, borrowing costs have begun to rise again and by the middle of last month, the BBC understands the figure was back to its November level of roughly £13bn.
With the government’s spending rules and the OBR breathing down his neck on one side, and the Tory backbenches who want the historically high taxes cut, it is not a comfortable position.
However, there is wide expectation at Westminster that he will reduce some taxes, even if the moves are not significant.
Labour’s shadow chief secretary to the Treasury Darren Jones said: “The chancellor says he wants to cut taxes, but it is the Tories who have raised taxes to their highest level in 70 years.
“No matter what the chancellor does in the Budget this week, working people will be worse off thanks to 14 years of Tory failure.”
Paul Johnson, director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) think tank, told the BBC that any tax cut in the Budget was “likely to be undone after the next election, whoever wins”.
The IFS has also warned that further reducing taxes is likely to mean spending cuts in the future.
Asked if the government should be spending more on public services, rather than tax cuts, Mr Hunt said: “I think what most people want is better public services and a lower tax burden.
“The only way that we have a chance of delivering something like that is by spending the money that we spend on public services much more efficiently.”
‘Stunting’ economic growth
Former chief economist at the Bank of England Andy Haldane told the programme he thought the government’s self-imposed spending limits – known as “fiscal rules” – were “stunting” economic growth and constraining the chancellor’s decisions.
These include getting debt as a proportion of the size of the economy falling in five years.
Mr Hunt said he did not agree the government should change its fiscal rules because “people would interpret that as Britain losing control of its finances”.
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