Harriett Baldwin MP, Chair of the Treasury Select Committee, welcomes the Chancellor’s tax-cutting Budget and supports the Government’s plan to get inflation down; to increase the growth rate and the growth capacity of the UK economy, without sparking inflation again; and to get debt falling.

[Madam Deputy Speaker (Dame Eleanor Laing)] Chair of the Select Committee, Harriett Baldwin. [Harriett Baldwin (West Worcestershire) (Con)] I know it has not been long since the autumn   statement, but we have heard today that the  Leader of the Opposition has no plan. It has  

Not been very long since the last forecast  from the Office for Budget Responsibility,   so it is interesting to read today that, in  the just over 100 days since its last forecast,   there has been a lot of change for the  better in the UK economy. In particular,  

The OBR is expecting a better inflation outturn  than it had expected just over three months ago.   It is expecting and has noted the sharper fall  in the interest rates that we all pay on the   national mortgage, and it has said that it expects  the British people’s living standards to recover  

More quickly than it previously forecast.  That is information that we can all welcome. There will be a range of views across the  Chamber on the role of the Office for Budget   Responsibility. We all know, of course,  that all forecasts are likely to be wrong.  

The Treasury Committee will scrutinise the Office  for Budget Responsibility next Tuesday morning,   and we look forward to asking questions about  its assumptions. My view is that it is a bit   like that quote of Sir Winston Churchill about  democracy being the worst form of government  

Except for all the others that have been tried:  although all economic forecasts are likely to be   wrong in some way, and the Office for Budget  Responsibility’s forecasts are often not the   most accurate, they are a lot better than the  alternatives of either the Treasury marking its  

Own homework or having a Budget with no forecast  from the Office for Budget Responsibility. I think   the OBR’s forecasts reassure the markets on  which we are so dependent for our borrowing. There has obviously been good progress on  inflation since the peak of over 11% after  

Putin’s evil invasion of Ukraine, and it is  vital that all of today’s Budget measures are   seen through the lens of inflation, because  we do not want anything that could prevent   that progress towards the 2% that the Bank of  England expects by the middle of this year.

The Chancellor told us that he was looking  through that lens in announcing today’s   measures, which contain a range of things that  will really help, including continuing the 5p   off fuel duty at the pumps for another year,  which will be very helpful to drivers in West  

Worcestershire and elsewhere in the country.  The freeze on alcohol duty will be welcomed   in pubs in West Worcestershire and across  the country. The public sector productivity   plan is crucial to ensuring that we get  value for money from our public services.

On the second economic objective of growth,  we can all welcome the fact that employment   growth has been so strong. The economy has  created more than 800 jobs a day over the   past 14 years. We have seen steps taken  in previous fiscal events to grow the  

Size of the UK’s productive economy.  Now that we are at full employment,   productivity becomes incredibly important, because  it helps to sustain non-inflationary growth. To stimulate all-important investment in the  economy, last year’s big announcement of full   expensing was made permanent in the autumn  statement. Today, we have heard that full  

Expensing will be extended to leased assets. The  BBC fact check noted that when the measure was   first announced, it was expected that the  economy would benefit greatly. The Chancellor   said that its impact on the economy would be  huge, and the Office for Budget Responsibility  

Said that it would increase business investment by  3% a year. The policy came into force on 1 April,   and in fact business investment for the whole  of last year was 6.1% higher than in 2022. Today we heard about further welcome  steps to increase business investment  

And other investment in the UK economy—tax  reliefs for some creative industries,   British individual savings accounts to encourage  more long-term investment in our economy,   the back-to-work plan, the childcare plan, and  many other measures that will unlock growth. [Caroline Lucas (Brighton, Pavilion) (Green)] Is the Chancellor, and indeed the hon. Lady, being  

A little complacent about investment? Although  it is true that business investment is higher   than it was in 2010, our business investment  is still the lowest in the G7 and among the   lowest in the OECD. Why did we not see more  public investment from the Chancellor today?  

We know that public investment will crowd in  private investment, so why have we not seen much   bolder and more ambitious work on investment?  That is what the economy is crying out for. [Harriett Baldwin] We heard the Chancellor talk about   how strong the growth in UK investment has  been. We heard about additional investment  

In the productivity of our national health service  and, crucially, about measures that will increase   the attractiveness of investing in some of  the fastest growing sectors of the economy. [George Freeman (Mid Norfolk) (Con)] Does my hon. Friend agree that it is   extraordinary that the hon. Member for Brighton,  Pavilion (Caroline Lucas), representing the  

Green party, did not welcome the £270  million for advanced manufacturing in   clean aviation and clean vehicles,  and the £120 million for clean tech   manufacturing? That is the UK investing in  the technology of clean growth, is it not? [Harriett Baldwin] It is indeed, and I am glad that  

My hon. Friend welcomes that, even if it was not  welcomed by the representative of the Green party. [Vicky Ford (Chelmsford) (Con)] I want to take my hon. Friend back   to what she said about investment in childcare.  I remind her that this week brings International  

Women’s Day, and the cost of childcare is such  an important issue for so many mums in this   country. Of course, it was the Conservatives  who rolled out 30 hours of free childcare,   and who are rolling out free childcare for  two-year-olds and nine-month-olds. We absolutely  

Must welcome that additional investment  in childcare, and indeed the investment in   families through support for child benefit,  which will help mums get into well-paid jobs. [Harriett Baldwin] I wholeheartedly endorse   what my right hon. Friend said. She is right  to highlight the importance of investment in  

Childcare in helping female employment growth,  which has been remarkably strong in the past   14 years. I am confident that the measures  announced will allow us to make further progress   with the increasingly non-inflationary  growth capacity of the UK economy. Other measures announced today will help on  the growth front. Cutting national insurance  

Is also a smart way to help growth. It not only  puts more money in working people’s pockets—27   million people across this country will see an  extra £900 a year in their bank account—but will   make work more attractive. We have heard  from the Office for Budget Responsibility  

That cutting national insurance has the biggest  marginal impact on bringing people back into work;   the figure from the last cut was 94,000. It will  be interesting to see whether the OBR continues   to expect this to have a significant impact. It  is a really smart way to cut taxes for working  

People—and the measure is UK-wide, so the  effect will be felt in Scotland as well. I turn to the issue of debt falling. We can  see that the bond markets have stabilised,   and OBR numbers confirm progress on debt. I  draw the House’s attention to a report that  

Our Committee recently published on the Bank  of England and its quantitative tightening. It   is selling £100 billion of gilts into the  market this year, and it has acknowledged   that that increases the cost to the Exchequer  of borrowing by between a tenth and a quarter  

Of a percentage point. Our Committee wanted  to flag up the impact that that could have,   and to send a message to the independent  Bank of England about some of the ways in   which quantitative tightening has an impact on the  real economy. As a cross-party Committee, we were  

Obviously never going to agree on the level or  scope of taxes, but one thing we have unanimity— Does the right hon. Gentleman wish to intervene on   the fact that the rate of  tax is higher in Scotland? [Ian Blackford] I wish to raise a point   about quantitative easing, which  the hon. Lady mentioned. Obviously,  

There will be a very significant supply of gilts  in the coming period, which will have an impact   on yields. That will influence what the Bank  of England does on the interest rate cycle,   and crucially, it will make it difficult to  see any material growth in the money supply,  

Particularly in M4, in the coming period. That  will have an impact on growth, given where we are. [Harriett Baldwin]  I am sorry that the right hon. Gentleman did not  acknowledge that income tax is higher in Scotland,   but he makes a good point about quantitative  tightening and its impact on the real economy.  

It is potentially a factor that can have a real  impact, and our Committee will watch it closely. As I was saying, as a cross-party Committee, we  were never going to agree on the level and scope   of taxes, but we do agree that the tax system  is too complicated. We have a very complicated  

Tax system in this country, and well over 1,000  different tax reliefs. Despite the abolition of   the Office of Tax Simplification, there have  been some major tax simplifications under this   Chancellor. We have heard about the way in  which he eliminated, in the autumn statement,  

The national insurance class; about how he has  simplified the lifetime allowance for pensions;   and, today, about how he has started to  tackle some of the perverse cliff edges,   high marginal tax rates and disincentives to work  in the tax system. By raising the VAT threshold,  

He has helped small businesses, which  might otherwise have held back because   they did not want to go through  that threshold. On universal credit,   we have done so much over the years to reduce  high marginal tax rates and disincentives.

It was great to hear the Chancellor really focus  today on addressing the high-income child benefit   charge. When we introduced it—I voted for it at  the time—£50,000 a year was a high rate of income.   With the progress on higher incomes, the median  income has increased from about £22,000 in those  

Days to about £35,000 now. These days, £50,000 is  not more than about 40% over the median income.   It was right for the Chancellor to recognise  that today in his Budget statement. He has   made the taper that much less of a disincentive to  taking on work above that income level. Of course,  

I would have loved him to have done even more,  but I am very grateful for all that he has done. Let me come to a rapid close by saying that it  is clear that the Conservatives have a plan. It  

Is clear that there is a plan to get inflation  down; to increase the growth rate and the growth   capacity of the UK economy, without sparking  inflation again; and to get debt falling. I think  

We can all see that the plan is working. We should  stick to that plan and not go back to square one.

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