Rachel Reeves’s first budget offers a chance to break out of the doom loop. Here’s how she should do it | Jonathan Portes

Rachel Reeves’s first budget offers a chance to break out of the doom loop. Here’s how she should do it | Jonathan Portes

Autumn budget 2024, Budget, UK news, Rachel Reeves, Tax and spending, NHS, Poverty, Inequality, Social exclusion, Politics Business | The Guardian

​It’s a tall order but Labour has a chance to improve people’s lives in both the short and long termJonathan Portes is professor of economics and public policy at King’s College London and a former senior civil servantFour years of economic turmoil. High inflation, then high interest rates, then an (albeit mild) recession. A pre-election budget with some distinctly dodgy looking tax cuts. All leaving an election-winning, but nevertheless very unpopular, government with a big fiscal hole to fill. What does the chancellor do? Put up taxes, of course.And indeed that is precisely what Norman Lamont did in March 1993. By a lot – by most measures, it was the largest tax-raising budget in at least the previous half century. It was followed by a decade and a half of macroeconomic stability and mostly steady growth, averaging almost 3% per year, a level recent chancellors could only dream of. Continue reading… 

It’s a tall order but Labour has a chance to improve people’s lives in both the short and long term

Jonathan Portes is professor of economics and public policy at King’s College London and a former senior civil servant

Four years of economic turmoil. High inflation, then high interest rates, then an (albeit mild) recession. A pre-election budget with some distinctly dodgy looking tax cuts. All leaving an election-winning, but nevertheless very unpopular, government with a big fiscal hole to fill. What does the chancellor do? Put up taxes, of course.

And indeed that is precisely what Norman Lamont did in March 1993. By a lot – by most measures, it was the largest tax-raising budget in at least the previous half century. It was followed by a decade and a half of macroeconomic stability and mostly steady growth, averaging almost 3% per year, a level recent chancellors could only dream of.

Continue reading… 

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