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Hunt cautioned over pre-election tax cuts

The head of Britain's fiscal watchdog criticised the government for providing no detail of how it will achieve the spending cuts outlined by Hunt in Novembe

Hunt cautioned over pre-election tax cuts

CHANCELLOR Jeremy Hunt should not announce further pre-election tax cuts in his budget next week unless he can explain the painful spending cuts needed to pay for them, a leading economic thinktank said on Tuesday (27).

Hunt and prime minister, Rishi Sunak, have said they want to lower Britain’s tax burden – which is on course to hit its highest since the second World War – and many Conservative Party MPs are demanding action in the March 6 budget with Labour running ahead in opinion polls.


The Institute for Fiscal Studies said Hunt might take advantage of extra wiggle room in the public finances created by higher population estimates that will boost headline economic growth and reduced expectations for future interest rate levels.

Hunt might also repeat what he did in a budget update in November when he announced a cut in social security contributions, which he funded by squeezing public spending in the future, at a time when many services, from health and education to social care and housing, are already under strain.

“The chancellor should resist this temptation. Until the government is willing to provide more detail on its spending plans in a spending review, it should refrain from providing detail on tax cuts,” Martin Miklos, an IFS economist, said.

The head of Britain’s fiscal watchdog criticised the government for providing no detail of how it will achieve the spending cuts outlined by Hunt in November.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) had already warned in January against further tax cuts.

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  • Anand Varadarajan appointed Starbucks CTO, effective 19 January, after 19 years at Amazon.
  • IIT graduate to oversee tech transformation in stores to improve labour efficiency.
  • Appointment comes as Starbucks reports first quarterly sales gains in nearly 18 months.

Starbucks has named Anand Varadarajan as its new chief technology officer, effective January (19), as CEO Brian Niccol drives a technology overhaul aimed at making store operations more efficient.

Varadarajan joins the global coffee chain after spending 19 years at Amazon, where he led technology and supply chain operations for the company's worldwide grocery business. He replaces Deb Hall Lefevre, who stepped down in September, with Ningyu Chen serving as interim CTO.

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