Tax cuts likely with Jeremy Hunt's £14bn budget headroom

Treasury number crunchers said it means the Chancellor has more money to play with than the £13 billion he had his Autumn Statement in November. But the figure is lower than the £20 billion “fiscal headroom” forecast by independent analysts. The estimates

Jeremy Hunt has had a tax epiphany – Matthew Lesh

“I believe fundamentally that low-tax economies are more dynamic, more competitive and generate more money for public services like the NHS,” Hunt said. The Chancellor is entirely correct – high taxes discourage investment, undermine innovation, and stifle economic growth. The Chancellor’s comments

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