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Economic Development

March Budget 2023: 'º£½ÇÊÓÆµ recession can be shallow and inflation can fall but chancellor must create confidence' - CBI

Tony Danker, director general of the CBI, says it is 'urgent' the government creates the right environment for investment

CBI Director-General Tony Danker(Image: Jonathan Brady/PA Wire)

The boss of one of Britain’s biggest business bodies says it is “utterly urgent” the government creates confidence in the economy through its Budget next month. Tony Danker, director general of the Confederation of British Industry (CBI), believes the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ can return to growth in 2023 and inflation can fall - but only if the chancellor sets out a clear plan for growth.

Jeremy Hunt is due to make his Budget statement on Wednesday, March 15. It will be followed by a forecast on the economy and public finances from the Office for Budget Responsibility.

“A lot of businesses have come into this year with two scenarios - a central scenario for revenue which is modest growth and a recessionary scenario where all these headwinds - inflation, political uncertainty, the energy market and war in Ukraine - continue to grow,” Mr Danker told BusinessLive.

“The government [needs to] create momentum and confidence in the first part of the year. It will unlock planned investment and innovation, and it says to people ‘if you are thinking of waiting there is really no need to wait, go now.’ Any sense that we shouldn’t be thinking of growth now, that we should only be thinking of bringing down inflation, that is neither true not helpful.”

Speaking on a visit to the South West, Mr Danker said the Budget in March needed to be about returning to growth while rejecting suggestions that could be achieved through mass tax cuts. He did not specify details of what the CBI would like to see in the Spring Statement, but called on the government to use the tax system to incentivise investment.

He said the chancellor also needed to release further plans for how the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ would achieve its net zero targets as well as setting out policies to address labour shortages.

“[The government needs to] give people confidence that we are going to tackle economic inactivity. If those things are present in the Budget, it strengthens the elbow of [potential investors] who are are worried about the economic climate. It turns around and says to them ‘do invest’ as we know about the issues and we are tackling them and we have a plan.

“The louder that message comes out and the more meat on the bones there is against that in the Budget I think that is the difference between a year of growth and year of non-growth."