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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
Politics
Dan Bloom

National Insurance cut will take effect on November 6, government announces

The National Insurance cut for millions of Brits will take effect on November 6, the Government has confirmed.

The date of Liz Truss ’ key pledge was published for the first time as the Health and Social Care Levy (Repeal) Bill was unveiled in the House of Commons.

Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng confirmed that the NI hike imposed by his predecessor Rishi Sunak in April was being reversed within weeks.

The Government will lower National Insurance from 13.25% back down to 12%, where it was before a Tory hike in April. The change had been expected next Spring but was brought forward.

The government said 28million people across the UK will keep an extra £330 a year each, on average, in 2023-24.

Despite scrapping the Levy - a key policy of Rishi Sunak - Liz Truss has pledged to keep spending the £12billion it would have raised, leading to questions of where she’ll get the cash from.

She has also vowed to funnel the £12bn-a-year - most of which was due to go to the NHS - entirely into stricken social care, leading to warnings of a health funding black hole.

The National Insurance cut is one of a string of announcements due in tomorrow’s mini-Budget, which could also slash Stamp Duty, corporation tax and limits on bankers’ bonuses.

At the same time the new Prime Minister will launch a crackdown on benefit claimants, threatening them with sanctions if they don’t keep seeking work until they are employed for 15 hours a week.

The new Prime Minister will launch a crackdown on benefit claimants (REUTERS)

Ms Truss has said she is “unashamed” about pumping growth into the economy despite her policies helping the rich more than the poor - and fears they will fuel inflation.

The November 6 date depends on the Bill being passed by Parliament. MPs will debate all its stages on October 11 before it goes to the Lords.

The Bank of England today announced it will hike interest rates to their highest in more than 13 years - and indicated it believes the economy is already in recession.

The Bank's Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) raised rates to 2.25% - their highest since November 2008 - from 1.75%, in an effort to grapple big increases in the cost of living.

Analysis has already found the National Insurance cut will give the rich 235 times more than the poor, once employer contributions are included.

The respected Institute for Fiscal Studies said the change will give the poorest tenth just £7.66 a year. By comparison the richest tenth gain £1,801.89.

The massive gulf is because National Insurance is now only charged on earnings above £12,570 a year.

That means cutting it does little to nothing for families on minimum wage or who are out of work due to sickness or disability.

Liz Truss sitting in front of a graph showing how her National Insurance cut will mainly help richer people (BBC)

IFS data suggests the poorest tenth of people will gain £7.66 a year, followed by £37.36 for the second-poorest tenth, then £73.33, £143.52, £247.59, £375.89, £510.59, £695.92, £918.50 and finally £1,801.89 for the richest tenth.

However, this includes the benefit the cut gives to people’s employers, which means workers will gain less.

Meanwhile the IFS today warned most people will be left worse off this year despite the massive package of cost-of-living support.

It said soaring prices meant a median earner will be £500 worse off in real terms than they were last year - a cut of around 3% in their income.

Higher earners would be £1,000 worse - an even bigger percentage drop in their income - while those on low incomes or who are out of work will be "more shielded”, the IFS said.

IFS director Paul Johnson said even though tomorrow’s mini-Budget will not be a full budget, it looked set to be the biggest tax giveaway for more than 30 years.

"This will actually, we think, be the biggest tax-cutting fiscal event since Nigel Lawson's budget of 1988," he said.

Chancellor of the Exchequer Kwasi Kwarteng will give his first 'fiscal event' on Friday (REUTERS/Hannah McKay/File Photo)

Liz Truss has raised fears by vowing to slap the cost of her £2,500-a-year cap on average energy bills on the national debt, instead of imposing a windfall tax on oil giants.

The IFS warned the Government was putting public finances on an "unsustainable path" - with borrowing set to hit £100billion a year even after the energy support package has ended.

With debt potentially set on an "ever-rising path", it said the Government's claim that reducing tax rates would lead to sustained economic growth was "a gamble at best".

Levelling up secretary Simon Clarke acknowledged there were dangers attached to the Government's approach but insisted there were "no risk-free options" in the current global crisis.

"Having come straight out of the global pandemic and into the teeth of Russia invading western Europe, these are extraordinary times," he told ITV's Peston programme.

"But the real risk I think here lies in us being too passive in the face of those challenges, of accepting that we are in this economic low-growth trap."

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