What tumbling inflation means for Hunt’s hopes of tax cuts
Hunt Inflation Tax Cuts
The Resolution Foundation believes Hunt has around £13bn of headroom to play with, double what he had in the spring

Falling inflation has handed Jeremy Hunt a boost less than a week before he delivers his second Autumn Statement.

The Chancellor’s latest assessment of the economy will be delivered against a different economic backdrop to a year ago. Growth may still be elusive, but inflation is now falling sharply, not rising.

Prices, as measured by the consumer prices index, rose by 4.6pc in the year to October, down from 6.7pc in September.

With signs that the worst of the cost of living squeeze is over, inflation at a two-year low and interest rates expected to fall next year, there is now speculation that Hunt will announce tax cuts next week.

Can Hunt cut taxes?

In theory, the Chancellor can tax and spend as he pleases.

In practice, Hunt, who was brought in by former prime minister Liz Truss on a platform of fiscal rectitude, will stick to self-imposed tax and spending rules requiring him to get debt falling in five years time.

The Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) is the tax and spending watchdog that determines whether he meets this pledge, limiting his room for manoeuvre on tax cuts.

The good news is that tax revenues are booming thanks to stealth levies on British workers.

The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) estimates that a six-year freeze in income tax thresholds is the equivalent of a 6p increase in income tax.

This will see the Treasury rake in an extra £52bn a year in so-called fiscal drag by 2027, according to the think tank, which will see the number of people paying the higher or top rate of tax double to 8.9 million in a decade.

With inflation finally falling, this will help the Government deal with a debt interest bill that is expected to climb to £94bn this tax year alone. It also puts less pressure on Whitehall budgets, which are set in cash terms.

Taking all this into account, the Resolution Foundation believes this has left Hunt with around £13bn of headroom to play with, double what he had in the spring.

It’s also worth noting that while the bigger-than-expected drop in inflation is welcome, it comes too late for it to influence the OBR’s baseline assessment of the economy.

The ink has already dried on its assumptions on interest rates and other borrowing costs, which were taken over the ten working days to October 11 and sent to the Chancellor on October 31.

This assumed benchmark 10-year borrowing costs of around 4.5pc.

This was before Bank of England chief economist Huw Pill sparked a downward lurch in borrowing costs and a mortgage price war by suggesting interest rates could fall next summer.

Ten-year gilt yields are currently closer to 4.1pc as a result, which will reduce the debt interest bill and put government budgets under less strain. With debt currently running at £2 trillion, small movements in interest rates make a big difference.