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PRIVACY
Opinion

The recession can be a chance to do things differently

Although the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government is dealing with critical fiscal challenges, there is no reason why it cannot also focus on wider economic policies that could help grow the economy

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and Chancellor Jeremy Hunt face unenviable challenges over the coming months(Image: PA)

Since the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s first Indian-origin Prime Minister was asked to form a government by King Charles III last month, many are still trying to work out what Rishi Sunak and his Chancellor will do to close the massive hole in public finances and reduce the impact of increased energy prices.

The forthcoming Autumn Statement has not been made any easier by the Bank of England’s decision to raise interest rates to 3% last Thursday.

The rationale for this increase, as has always been the plan from Threadneedle Street, is to bring inflation under control when there are fears, if the issue of rising prices is not addressed, that it may become embedded into the economy with catastrophic results.

However, this decision will not help those many households and businesses that, in the short term, will face a rise in borrowing costs at a time when other financial pressures such as wage costs and energy bills are also increasing.

The Government will rightly argue that it is the job of an independent Bank of England to control inflation and like other economies around the world, rising inflation is something which is largely out of their control. Indeed, the decision by the Federal Reserve in the USA to raise interest rates again to 4% in the USA shows that even the World’s largest economy is not immune to the slowdown being experienced across the globe.

In the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, rising gas and oil prices have fed directly into the increase in inflation experienced here in the last few months and the intervention to support families and businesses through energy caps may help with reducing its impact on inflation over the next few months.

What is currently out of Mr Sunak’s control is the fact that it is not only the cost of fuel that has increased with food inflation also having risen at its fastest rate this century. This is not something that has just happened in the last 12 months and as The Economist recently pointed out, the cost of basic staples such as food, rice and meat had been going up well before the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

But in many respects, inflation is only a small part of the massive challenge facing the new Prime Minister at a time when the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ is facing a massive hangover from the Covid pandemic. This includes not only paying back the hundreds of billions of pounds spent on ensuring the country survived this once in a century global phenomenon but also in addressing the resultant backlogs in a stretched-to-the-limit NHS and ensuring the economy restarts at a time when there are labour shortages in many sectors.