Cost of Living

Treasury – in the House of Commons at on 7 May 2024.

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Photo of Flick Drummond Flick Drummond Conservative, Meon Valley

What fiscal steps he is taking to support households with the cost of living.

Photo of Nadia Whittome Nadia Whittome Labour, Nottingham East

What fiscal steps he is taking to support households with increases in the cost of living.

Photo of Jeremy Hunt Jeremy Hunt The Chancellor of the Exchequer

Over the last two years, cost of living support has totalled £96 billion, or an average of £3,400 per household. As a result, living standards, which were predicted to fall 2% last year, rose by nearly 1%, and we are on track to reach pre-pandemic living standards two years early.

Photo of Flick Drummond Flick Drummond Conservative, Meon Valley

I welcome the support that the Government have provided throughout covid and the recent energy crisis for my constituents in Meon Valley—I thank the Government. It has made a huge difference to people’s domestic budgets, but now inflation is falling and the economy is improving, can we look forward to the Government’s continued support with a range of fiscal steps, including cutting taxes?

Photo of Jeremy Hunt Jeremy Hunt The Chancellor of the Exchequer

We can absolutely do that. I thank my hon. Friend for pointing out that the biggest single thing we can do to help people with cost of living pressures is to bring down inflation. That seems to be something that escaped the shadow Chancellor this morning, when she said it was not a big deal to get inflation down to its target. It is a very big deal for families facing a cost of living crisis, and she needs to know that inflation falls by design, not by accident.

Photo of Nadia Whittome Nadia Whittome Labour, Nottingham East

The Chancellor can talk all he wants about inflation falling, but this is little comfort to my constituents who are still struggling to make ends meet. Even with the national insurance cut, annual post-tax earnings for the average family remain on course to be £380 lower at the start of 2025 than they were in 2021—a gap not predicted to close until 2029. This means yet more years of lost wage growth, so when will the Government get serious about tackling the low-wage, insecure work that they have allowed to become the norm in this country?

Photo of Jeremy Hunt Jeremy Hunt The Chancellor of the Exchequer

Could I suggest, if the hon. Member really thinks that inflation falling from 11% to 3.2% is little comfort to her constituents, that she might want to talk to a few more of them, because actually it is the biggest single thing that we can do to deal with cost of living pressures. If she says, “What are we doing to tackle the scourge of low pay?” we have abolished it by raising the national living wage to £11.44 this year alone. For someone working full-time, that will mean an increase in their pay of £1,800.