Taxpayers’ Alliance Protest Outside Treasury For Tax Cuts in Budget

The Taxpayers’ Alliance have resorted to peaceful protesting outside of the HM Treasury building in a rallying cry against the highest tax burden since the War. They’re campaigning for bigger tax cuts in Hunt’s upcoming Spring Budget, calling for thresholds to be unfrozen and for the basic rate to be reduced from 20p to 19p. Sound suggestions…

If Rishi wants to deliver on ‘growing the economy’, which is now his biggest priority over immigration according to Number 10 insiders, then he would be wise to listen to the TPA. City analysts have said a drop in interest rates and tax cuts in the budget will lead to growth. Not rocket science, though whether our Chancellor will do that in Spring is another question…

Joanna Marchong, of the TaxPayers’ Alliance, said:

“Taxpayers across the UK are begging for relief to come soon. Since thresholds have been frozen millions more have been dragged into higher rates of income tax. The chancellor must take action at the budget and provide the income tax cut Brits deserve.”

The TPA are also running a petition as part of the campaign. Perhaps they should target the OBR’s HQ next…

mdi-timer 15 February 2024 @ 14:23 15 Feb 2024 @ 14:23 mdi-twitter mdi-facebook mdi-whatsapp mdi-telegram mdi-linkedin mdi-email mdi-comment View Comments
Treasury Needs Reforming To Curb Its Power, IfG Finds

The Institute for Government has pleasantly surprised Guido by releasing a report that advocates for a much-needed overhaul of the Treasury, aiming to dilute its power. The report blasts our technocratic overlords as a “strategic vacuum” at the core of government, allowing the Treasury to assert undue influence and essentially claim “ownership” of the entire government strategy “through its tightly gripped spending and budgetary processes.” Strong and wise words…

The think tank released the report over the weekend, named “Treasury ‘orthodoxy’ :What is it? And is it a problem for government?” – the short answer: yes. However, needless to say the centre-left think tank, Institute for (Big) Government, caveats the sound advice with recommendations to hand over more power to No.10 and dismissing Truss’ criticism that HMT is anti-growth. On top of that, it advocated for slowing down of decision-making for more “strategic” thinking. Still,  when the Treasury’s default is spending, bean counting, and hoarding taxes, it would be wise to take away some of its power…

mdi-timer 22 January 2024 @ 15:27 22 Jan 2024 @ 15:27 mdi-twitter mdi-facebook mdi-whatsapp mdi-telegram mdi-linkedin mdi-email mdi-comment View Comments
Treasury Asks Public to Help Write Autumn Statement

With the Autumn Statement around the corner, His Majesty’s Treasury has called for policy suggestions from… the public. The Treasury took to Twitter/X last night to fish for ideas, perhaps because they don’t yet have any themselves. Desperate times call for desperate measures…

Entries close on October 13thCo-conspirators might want to offer some actual conservative ideas… maybe cutting taxes?

mdi-timer 26 September 2023 @ 17:15 26 Sep 2023 @ 17:15 mdi-twitter mdi-facebook mdi-whatsapp mdi-telegram mdi-linkedin mdi-email mdi-comment View Comments
Reeves’ “Shoddy” Gilt Market Analysis Mocked by Treasury

We are at that stage of the political cycle where newspaper editors start to temper their usual criticisms of the opposition. A prime beneficiary of that has been Rachel Reeves, whom we now learn in fawning profiles is some kind of chess wunderkind as well as a fiscally conservative former Bank of England economist. All sagacious commentary now paints her as the safe pair of hands Britain needs from its first woman Chancellor of the Exchequer.

Which made her press release this week about “Rishi Sunak’s failure to heed warnings on debt issuance costing taxpayers £56 billion” extraordinarily embarrassing. It was a bit technical, and no doubt this was deliberate to demonstrate her mastery of arcane financial matters. The press release in her name claimed:

In October 2020, the Institute for Fiscal Studies warned Sunak that – given the large sums being borrowed during Covid-19 – the “costs of financing it just slightly wrong will be large.”

They said that the way to tackle that risk was to sell more long gilts, in other words: use a longer term, lower cost borrowing approach that would have protected public money more from sudden spikes in interest rates.

Instead, Sunak opted for a short term, high risk approach, which has left the UK exposed to inflation going up, building up substantial costs down the line.

Because of the then-Chancellor’s choice to ignore those warnings, it means that the UK now issues far more index-linked gilts than other G7 countries*, over twice as much as a share of the second-placed country which is Italy.

There are a number of problems with this argument. The first and most problematic of which is that the IFS actually recommended issuing longer dated index-linked gilts. The reason for this is that the gilt market would not be able to absorb issuance on the scale of the covid borrowing that was not index-linked. This would be obvious to anyone with a basic knowledge of government debt markets.

In any case the Debt Management Office, an arm’s-length branch of Treasury which is in constant touch with the gilt market, advises on what maturities the market can absorb. It’s not done by the Chancellor having a guess at what might work. The idea that £400 billion of gilts could have been issued at the prevailing low rates at the long end without the rate moving suggests a basic failure to understand how markets function and how prices move with supply and demand. Responding to her claims, Economic Secretary to the Treasury Andrew Griffith is blunt:

“Rachel Reeves and Labour have completely misunderstood the expert advice they are quoting. The only thing Labour understand about debt, is how to increase it.”

Another Treasury source was equally condescending, chortling that it was “hilariously shoddy analysis from the kids at Labour HQ”.

*The Tories have come up with seven specific questions for Rachel Reeves to answer on the Labour Party’s amateur debt analysis:

Read More

mdi-timer 4 August 2023 @ 15:34 4 Aug 2023 @ 15:34 mdi-twitter mdi-facebook mdi-whatsapp mdi-telegram mdi-linkedin mdi-email mdi-comment View Comments
Government Promotes Anti-Abuse Charity Under Investigation for Bullying

Yesterday, the Treasury promoted their new anti-economic abuse toolkit with a video of Victoria Atkins visiting domestic abuse charity, Advance. All well and good, so far.

The trouble is, someone in the Treasury’s comms team clearly didn’t do their due diligence. Advance, the anti-abuse charity, are themselves under investigation by the Charity Commission for… bullying. To make matters worse, the CEO Nicki Scordi, who is featured in the video, has herself been subject to complaints. According to one source for Civil Society, Scordi left staff “walking on eggshells from her frequent outbursts, reducing many employees to tears”, whilst another employee said she was manipulative and “demeaning”. You only need to look at the glassdoor reviews to see this isn’t an isolated experience. It seems Victoria Atkins could have done with an Advance warning…

mdi-timer 13 July 2023 @ 11:19 13 Jul 2023 @ 11:19 mdi-twitter mdi-facebook mdi-whatsapp mdi-telegram mdi-linkedin mdi-email mdi-comment View Comments
Treasury Still One-Third Empty As Hunt Insists Office Working Should Be “Default”

Today the Chancellor was in front business leaders at the British Chambers of Commerce conference extolling the virtues of in-person working, claiming working from home can lead to a chronic “loss of creativity“:

“The default will be you work in the office unless there’s a good reason not to be in the office… there is nothing like sitting around the table, seeing people face-to-face, developing team spirit – and I worry about the loss of creativity when people are permanently working from home and not having those water cooler moments where they bounce ideas off each other. Not every great business idea happens in a structured, formal meeting.”

Guido’s inclined to agree… the only problem is the latest data shows HM Treasury was only 63% occupied as of last month. Nearly a third of civil servants were away from their desks. They must all have good reasons…

Hat-tip: Elliot Keck

mdi-timer 17 May 2023 @ 17:30 17 May 2023 @ 17:30 mdi-twitter mdi-facebook mdi-whatsapp mdi-telegram mdi-linkedin mdi-email mdi-comment View Comments
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