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Economic Development

South West firms slam Chancellor's 'short-term' cost of living response

Firms in the region have criticised Rishi Sunak’s £15bn support package as energy bills soar and inflation reaches a 40-year high

Chancellor Rishi Sunak leaves number 11, Downing Street(Image: Getty Images)

Businesses in the South West have criticised the Government’s response to the cost-of-living crisis as “knee-jerk”, “short-term” and a “sticking plaster on a gaping wound.”

Chancellor Rishi Sunak announced a package of measures on Thursday (May 26) aimed at helping firms and their customers struggling with rising utilities bills and operating costs, with inflation currently at a 40-year high.

Among the £15bn worth of support announced by Mr Sunak to MPs in the Commons, was a £400 energy bills discount for every household in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ from October.

It follows a warning from OfGem’s chief executive the energy regulator is on course to raise its cap on household energy bills to around £2,800 later this year, pushing average annual bills up by £800 a year.

The Chancellor also announced a £650 one-off payment to eight million of the lowest-income households, and a targeted £300 payment to help pensioners getting winter fuel payments and an extra £150 for disabled people.

The policies will be partly paid for by a 25% windfall tax on the profits of oil and gas firms, which have reached record levels as prices of the resources soar amid Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Nigel Pocklington, chief executive of Wiltshire-based renewable energy supplier Good Energy, described the measures as the “kind of support we and the rest of the energy industry have been calling for since last October".

He welcomed Mr Sunak’s decision to replace a previously announced £200 energy bill repayment scheme with a £400 grant for customers.