Rishi Sunak warns the ‘economic shock’ of Covid bailouts will be ‘laid bare’

Rishi Sunak warns the ‘economic shock’ of Covid bailouts will be ‘laid bare’ as he quips about ‘taking away the Prime Minister’s credit card’ ahead of crucial spending review this week

  • Chancellor asked if the PM needed an elf on the shelf to keep him in check
  • Mr Sunak replied: ‘I like that idea. I should take his credit card away’
  • It comes as the Chancellor prepares to unveil spending review on Wednesday
  • Mr Sunak warned that ‘people will see the scale of the economic shock laid bare’ 

Rishi Sunak has warned of tax rises in the spring and joked about having to confiscate Boris Johnson’s credit card to kerb his spending. 

The Chancellor made the quip as he prepares to reveal his plan to balance the books and recover from the pandemic in his spending review on Wednesday.

He hinted that taxes could rise in the spring and warned that the current levels of spending were unsustainable, in an interview with the Sunday Times.

Asked if he should have an elf on the shelf to check if the Prime Minister is behaving, Mr Sunak joked: ‘I like that idea. I should take his credit card away.’ 

But jokes aside, the Chancellor stressed that ‘people will see the scale of the economic shock laid bare.’

‘We can see the data every month, and obviously the shock that our economy is facing at the moment is significant,’ Mr Sunak added.

The Chancellor made the quip as he prepares to reveal how he plans to start balancing the UK's books and recover from the pandemic.

The Chancellor made the quip as he prepares to reveal how he plans to start balancing the UK's books and recover from the pandemic.

The Chancellor made the quip as he prepares to reveal how he plans to start balancing the UK’s books and recover from the pandemic.

The two men are known to have clashed over the best way out of the coronavirus economic quagmire

The two men are known to have clashed over the best way out of the coronavirus economic quagmire

The two men are known to have clashed over the best way out of the coronavirus economic quagmire

He hinted that spending cuts and tax rises will have to follow but said it is a ‘question of timing’ while the economy is in difficulty.  

‘While that’s happening, absolutely the right thing to do is to support the economy, and jobs are my number one priority, but – obviously – you can’t sustain borrowing on this level indefinitely,’ he said. 

Mr Sunak and Mr Johnson have been known to clash on the best way out of the coronavirus quagmire.

But today in an interview with Times Radio, the Chancellor made clear: ‘The credit card thing was very much a joke. We have an incredibly close relationship’.  

The PM has moved to over-rule his chancellor in recent days to plough more money into green economic projects and the military. 

Mr Sunak has suggested he could impose a public sector pay freeze in his spending review, but insisted the nation will not see a return to austerity next week.

He is due to announce a multibillion pound plan to invest in long-term infrastructure projects and fund the fight against the coronavirus pandemic, on Wednesday.

Mr Sunak insisted it is not the time to impose tax hikes ‘in the fog of enormous economic uncertainty’, but he did not rule out capping the salaries of millions of public sector workers.

He has said some combination of spending cuts and tax rises are anticipated following the crisis but added it is a ‘question of timing’ while the economy is in difficulty. 

In an interview ahead of his spending review on Wednesday, he mentioned Rocky, an elf-on-the-shelf toy who comes out every December to make sure his two children are behaving

In an interview ahead of his spending review on Wednesday, he mentioned Rocky, an elf-on-the-shelf toy who comes out every December to make sure his two children are behaving

In an interview ahead of his spending review on Wednesday, he mentioned Rocky, an elf-on-the-shelf toy who comes out every December to make sure his two children are behaving

It comes as Downing Street soared to a record borrowing high of £22.3billion last month, with the UK expected to hit £350billion for the year amid the pandemic.

The Institute for Fiscal Studies previously warned £40billion would need to be raised through taxes and spending cuts in order to pay back the cash.

Paul Johnson, director at the Institute for Fiscal Studies, said the amount borrowed during the pandemic was ‘the most ever outside of the first and second world wars’, but said more may still be needed in the coming years.

He told the Andrew Marr Show that the UK’s position would eventually become ‘unsustainable’ and that taxes would need to be raised, but that this would likely not happen in the short-term. 

‘We’re probably looking into the middle years of the 2020s but we need a clear route to doing that,’ he said.

‘We don’t know at what point this becomes unsustainable but as and when it does, and if it does, the consequences really can become dreadful.

‘The big judgment, and it’s a terribly tough one, is when to start taking that action.’

Asked if the public should accept tax increases, Mr Johnson said: ‘I think that’s right.

‘I don’t think it’s right to scare people with the idea that this is going to happen immediately and I think it’s absolutely right the Government is clear it will do what it needs to do in the short run to support jobs and the economy.

‘Getting the message right is really important.’

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