- The Chancellor is expected to deliver the government’s plan
to drive down inflation to tackle the cost of living, while
prioritising “stability, growth and public services”.
- He will promise to be “honest about the challenges, and fair
in our solutions.”
- While difficult decisions need to be taken, he will pledge to
“protect the vulnerable, because to be British is to be
compassionate.”
Chancellor of the Exchequer will today (17/11/22) deliver a
“plan for stability, growth and public services” in the
government’s Autumn Statement, while reiterating his commitment
to fairness as difficult decisions are made to help balance the
books, ensuring support for the most vulnerable and seeing that
those with the broadest shoulders bear the heaviest load.
Balancing the books is key to economic stability; it shows
the UK is a country which pays its way, and helps tackle
inflation, which eats into people's incomes. To support the Bank
of England's mission to drive down inflation the government needs
to play its part by taking responsible decisions with the public
finances, limiting the need for further rises in interest
rates. However, the Chancellor will warn that stability
“depends on taking difficult decisions now.”
Chancellor is expected to say:
“As countries all over the world grapple with inflation, our
plan reflects British values: we are both honest about the
challenges, and fair in our solutions.
“We are taking difficult decisions to deliver strong public
finances and help keep mortgage rates low, but our plan also
protects our long-term economic growth.
“At the same time, we protect the vulnerable, because to be
British is to be compassionate.
“There is a global energy crisis, a global inflation crisis
and a global economic crisis.
"But the British people are tough, inventive, and
resourceful. We have risen to bigger challenges before.
“We aren’t immune to these global headwinds, but with this
plan for stability, growth and public services - we will face
into the storm”.
In the last three years, the global economy has faced two
enormous shocks – the pandemic has crippled supply chains, slowed
growth and increased debt levels, and Putin’s war in Ukraine has
caused energy prices to spike at a rate not seen since the 1973
oil crisis which drove the global economy into a recession
This is all feeding into rising inflation, which is making people
poorer by increasing prices on everyday items such as food and
fuel, as well as diminishing savings. Through the Autumn
Statement, the Chancellor will outline the government’s plan to
tackle inflation, the driving force behind slowing economic
growth.
He is expected to say:
“High inflation is the enemy of stability. It means higher
mortgage rates, more expensive food and fuel bills, businesses
failing and unemployment rising. It erodes savings, causes
industrial unrest, and cuts funding for public services. It hurts
the poorest the most and eats away at the trust upon which a
strong society is built.
“The Bank of England has my wholehearted support in its
mission to defeat inflation... but we need fiscal and monetary
policy to work together. Families across Britain make sacrifices
every day to live within their means, and so too must governments
because the United Kingdom will always pay its way.
“We are taking a balanced path to stability:
tackling the inflation that eats away at a pensioner's savings
and increases the cost of mortgages to families, at the same time
supporting the economy to recover. But it depends on taking
difficult decisions now.”