Chancellor Jeremy Hunt has said he wants to stop the “vicious circle of ever-rising taxes” by reforming public services and the benefits system. His comments come as some senior Tories are set to call for tax cuts ahead of the party’s conference this week. MPs including Liz Truss and Dame Priti Patel have ruled out voting for any further tax burden increase. But Mr Hunt told the Times “We’re not in a position to talk about tax cuts” in the short term.
Speaking to the newspaper ahead of the Conservative Party conference, which begins on Sunday in Manchester, he said: “We need a state that doesn’t just deliver the services it currently delivers, but actually improves the services it delivers and recognizes that there’s going to be more calls on those services with an aging population. “But we need to find a formula that doesn’t mean that we’re on a vicious circle of ever-rising taxes.” He pointed to the role of artificial intelligence and efforts to reduce the clerical workload of public sector staff as ways to increase efficiency in services.
Mr Hunt has already effectively ruled out tax cuts in the Autumn Statement, which is due in November, telling LBC radio earlier this month that it would be “virtually impossible”. More than 30 Tory MPs have signed a public pledge to their constituents that they will “never again vote for an increase in overall taxes”. As well as former Prime Minister Ms Truss and ex-Home Secretary Dame Priti Patel the signatories include former ministers Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg, Sir Jake Berry, and Sir Brandon Lewis. Dame Priti said: “State spending is now nearly £1.2tn, with over £1tn being raised in taxes. This level of spending, borrowing and taxation is unsustainable.
“The British people need a tax break – we need to trust people and businesses to keep more of what they earn and spend their money to support themselves and economic growth.” A report published this week by the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS), a leading think tank, said tax levels in the UK are higher now than at any point since records began 70 years ago. It calculated this Parliament is on course to have presided over the biggest set of rises since World War Two, with taxes forecast to be up by 37% by the time of the next general election.
The IFS said the increase amounts to around £3,500 more per household. Its director Paul Johnson said: “If you look into the future, we are going to be spending more on pensions and health and so on as the population ages. “In my view, this is almost certainly a permanent increase in taxes.