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Grant Thornton's chief economist responds to the chancellor's emergency budget statement

 

The 2010 Emergency Budget was the Chancellor's big debut and it was a serious but upbeat occasion with George Osborne highlighting how the economy has been managed irresponsibly by the previous administration and now needs unavoidable change around benefits, taxation, pensions and government spending, says leading business and financial advisers Grant Thornton.

With the Chancellor relinquishing his responsibility for economic forecasting, he set out the economic and fiscal projections from the Office of Budget Responsibility (OBR) and then focused on his plans for tax and spending over the coming years.

Stephen Gifford, Chief Economist at Grant Thornton says:

Addressing the deficit

"The Chancellor walked a tightrope today, balancing the need to reduce the substantial budget deficit with the equally important requirement not to harm consumer and business confidence and push the economy back into recession.

"The Chancellor will not be winning any prizes in the popularity stakes after today's budget. But the sweeping cuts and harsh tax rises will certainly instil much needed confidence in international financial markets and go a long way to averting a damaging sovereign debt crisis.

Tax rises and spending cuts

"The Chancellor announced the equivalent of £8 billion in annual tax rises by 2013/14 through increases in VAT, capital gains and the new banking levy. Current receipts are 37.2% of GDP this year and predicted to increase to 38.0% in 2011/12 and to 38.4% in 2012/13.

"But it will be around public expenditure where the challenges reside. Spending reductions of £32 billion per annum by 2013/14 are much worse than the drastic cuts of the early 1980s. Given commitments around health spending, unprotected departments are likely to have a mountain to climb over the course of this Parliament.

"The Comprehensive Spending Review will provide more meat on where exactly the cuts will fall. At that point, the civil servants running departmental budgets are likely to want to run for cover."

The economy

"It really was a case of pain today for profit tomorrow. The economy is still in a precarious position but this robust deficit reduction plan should keep interest rates low and help maintain the economic recovery.

"Economic growth of 1.2% is expected in 2010 and 2.3% in 2011. This is somewhat lower than the OBR's forecasts last week of 1.3% and 2.6% for 2010 and 2011. But they are some margin away from a new recession with growth actually predicted to be higher in 2013 and 2014".

ENDS

For more information please contact:

Suvra Datta, press office for Grant Thornton UK LLP, on 0207 728 2375 or

Stephen Gifford, Grant Thornton Chief Economist, on 07814 421 899

Notes to editors:

Live Webinar

We will be running a live interactive internet seminar (webinar) at 4.00pm on June 24, with a panel of experts who will be commenting on what the announcement means for the UK economy, taxes and the public sector. Viewers will be able to email questions in to the live discussion.

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