In recent days economic policy in the UK has come under scrutiny due to the apparent disconnect between monetary and fiscal policy. On Thursday 22 September 2022 the Bank of England’s (BoE) Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) voted to increase interest rates by 50bps to 2.25%. This decision came as a response to the rise of inflation almost to 10%. The BoE expects inflation to peak at 11% in Q4-2022 and quarterly GDP growth to decline to 0.1% in Q3-2022. The interest rate increase was perceived by markets as dovish, in comparison with the 75bps rate hikes delivered by the US Federal Reserve and the Swiss National Bank during the same week.
On the following day, UK Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng announced a series of supply-side measures and tax cuts with the objective of supporting households with the rising cost of living and boosting UK GDP trend growth from 1.8% to 2.5% in the next five years. These measures, accounting to an estimated £45 billion per year, is one of the biggest taxes giveaways in the last 40 years.1 The measures announced include:
- Reversing the increase of 1.25% in National Insurance from November 2022.
- Cancelling the rise in Corporation tax from 19% to 25% that was scheduled for 2023.
- Bringing forward by 12 months until April 2023 the cut in the basic income tax rate from 20% to 19%.
- Abolition of the upper 45% income tax rate from April 2023. The highest income tax rate will be set at 40%.
- Increasing the initial threshold for stamp duty tax paid on property purchases.
- Removing the cap on bankers’ bonuses, introduced in 2008, to allow banks in the UK to compete with other institutions. This is the first announcement of a broader plan in deregulate the financial services industry in the UK.
- Introducing an Energy Price Guarantee that is expected to cap the average household electricity bill at £2,500 per year for a period of two years from October 2022. This will be in addition to the £400 support that eligible households in the UK will receive from the Energy Bills Support Scheme in the winter.
According to the Chancellor, these measures will be funded by an increase in borrowing and are critical to boost growth in the medium term. Kwarteng’s comments appear to contradict his commitment to fiscal discipline, outlined by the Chancellor to business leaders in London on 26 September. The UK Debt Management Office set out plans to borrow an additional £72bn before April 2023, raising the financing scope in 2022-2023 to £234bn, equivalent to approximately 9% of GDP. The additional borrowing required to fund these have challenged investor’s confidence in the UK government.