Austerity is pushed back until after the next election amid evidence of higher energy bills and a protracted recession

Britain faces the biggest hit to living standards on record as Jeremy Hunt set out £30bn of delayed spending cuts and £25bn of backdated tax increases in an autumn statement that laid bare the country’s dire economic predicament.

Underlining the fragility of the economy, the chancellor pushed back the fresh austerity measures until after the next election amid evidence that dearer energy bills and the highest inflation in four decades will cause a protracted recession, a jump in unemployment of 500,000 and a lost decade for living standards.

Continue reading…

You May Also Like

Biden is America’s oldest president – but tripping over a sandbag tells us nothing | Jill Filipovic

Age, cognitive health and physical fitness are all fair concerns but the…

Restricting judicial review will undermine democracy, panel told

Law Society is among bodies giving evidence to experts asked to review…

The 50 best TV shows of 2021, No 4: Succession

The show’s dark third series gave us what might be its greatest…