UK’s Truss Fires Finance Minister, Scraps Tax Plan for Her Survival
LAHORE MIRROR (Monitoring Desk)– British Prime Minister Liz Truss fired her finance minister Kwasi Kwarteng and scrapped parts of their unpopular economic package on Friday in a desperate bid for political survival less than 40 days into her premiership.
With financial markets in turmoil, a chastened Truss said she accepted her government’s plans for unfunded tax cuts had gone “further and faster” than investors were expecting.
“I have acted decisively today because my priority is ensuring our country’s economic stability,” she told a brief news conference in Downing Street. “I want to be honest, this is difficult. But we will get through this storm.”
The pound and British government bond prices tumbled after she spoke, with economists and investors saying her reversal of 20 billion pounds ($22 billion) of tax cuts was not yet enough to restore calm.
Britain is engulfed in a political crisis akin to the industrial battles of the 1970s, the sterling crash of the early 1990s and the chaos that followed Brexit. Since it voted to leave the European Union in 2016 it has lost three prime ministers and its reputation as a predictable member of the global economic order.
“This marks the first time in decades – since at least the 90s – that the financial markets have forced the government of a big developed economy with its own central bank to capitulate on core fiscal ambitions,” analysts at consultancy Evercore said.
Earlier Truss fired her finance minister and close friend, Kwarteng, after he rushed back to London overnight from IMF meetings in Washington where Britain’s chaotic recent management of its economy was a focal point.
To replace him, she appointed Jeremy Hunt, a former foreign and health secretary who had backed her rival Rishi Sunak in this summer’s race to become Conservative Party leader. He is the fourth finance minister in as many months in Britain, where millions are facing a cost of living crisis.
Kwarteng becomes Britain’s shortest serving finance minister except for a predecessor who died suddenly in office in 1970. “You have asked me to stand aside as your Chancellor. I have accepted,” he wrote in his resignation letter to Truss.
Truss’s own position is now in jeopardy.
She won the Conservative Party leadership last month by promising vast tax cuts and deregulation that she said would shock the economy out of years of stagnant growth. Kwarteng’s Sept. 23 fiscal announcement aimed to deliver that vision.
But the backlash from markets was so ferocious that the Bank of England had to intervene to prevent pension funds being caught up in the chaos, as borrowing and mortgage costs surged.
Yields on the long-dated bonds which bore the brunt of the market turmoil are now within less than half a percentage point of the 20-year highs they struck on Wednesday.
Compounding the market pressures, polls show support for the Conservative Party has collapsed, fuelling panic in Britain’s dominant political party and a hunt to find a way to force Truss out of office.
“She’s toast,” one party lawmaker said.
SOURCE: REUTERS