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Rachel Reeves considers raising 'stealth and sin' taxes to address £20bn fiscal shortfall

The Chancellor could be set to raise British consumers with extra taxes, including "sin taxes", which are widely seen as regressive taxes that could hit people on lower income

The Chancellor Rachel Reeves(Image: Christopher Furlong/Getty Images)

Rachel Reeves is predicted to impose additional "sin taxes" on British consumers, according to leading forecasters, a move widely viewed as regressive taxation that could impact those on lower incomes.

The Chancellor is faced with the task of raising £20bn in taxes in this year's Autumn Budget to replenish her "already paltry" margin of £9.9bn in headroom, as per Pantheon Macroenomics, as reported by .

º£½ÇÊÓÆµ economists Robert Wood and Elliott Jordan-Doak from the firm suggest that costs arising from welfare savings U-turns and lower than anticipated tax receipts could diminish her fiscal buffer.

They propose that Reeves might turn to sin taxes, potentially including levies on gambling and junk food, to rebuild her buffer, while a "stealth tax" through extending a freeze on income tax thresholds could assist in filling an estimated £13bn fiscal gap.

Scrapping the two-child benefit cap, which would cost approximately £3.2bn, and a surprise move at the Budget could result in increased government expenditure.

Backed by the progressive think tank Institute for Public Policy Research, former Prime Minister and Chancellor Gordon Brown suggested that increasing levies on online casinos and slot machines to 50 per cent could provide the Treasury with sufficient funds to cover the costs of abolishing the cap.

Regressive taxes

Other potential "sin" taxes beyond gambling could involve higher duties on tobacco, alcohol or sugar, as well as junk food.

The government has already taken steps to curb junk food sales by introducing additional regulatory requirements for supermarkets regarding healthy food standards.