Kwarteng: No U-turn on National Insurance tax riseon January 27, 2022 at 6:07 pm

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Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng says a National Insurance rise to fund the NHS will go ahead.

Kwasi Kwarteng

Image source, Getty Images

There will be “no U-turn” on a planned National Insurance hike intended to fund health and social care, Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng has said.

The planned rise has faced criticism from MPs, including calls from Conservatives for it to be scrapped.

Critics have said that the increase will have a higher impact on the lower-paid and contribute to inflation.

But the government has said it is needed to help the NHS recover after the pandemic.

Mr Kwarteng told the BBC on Thursday that there would be “No U-turn” on the rise.

“We’re totally committed to funding the NHS, clearing the backlog of the NHS, and also funding social care and the way to do that is through this tax rise.

“That’s how we’re going to get the revenue to pay for the backlog and to pay for a sustainable social care system,” he said.

Inflation pressures

It comes after a Treasury Select Committee report warned that the planned rise would contribute to a rise in inflation.

Mel Stride, a Conservative MP and the committee chairman, told the BBC on Thursday that there was an “opportunity now to not go ahead with the National Insurance rise in April”, and that he would prefer to see it delayed for a year.

On Monday Conservative MP David Davis told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme that the policy was based on the “wrong data”, adding that policy makers did not know that by April the UK would have the highest inflation for 30 years, or that interest rates, council tax, and fuel prices would be rising when formulating the policy.

“They didn’t know what pressure there would be on ordinary people,” he said.

Under the plans, employees, employers and the self-employed will all pay 1.25p more in the pound for National Insurance (NI) from April 2022 for a year, when the extra tax will be collected as a new Health and Social Care Levy.

The increase will see an employee on £20,000 a year pay an extra £130. Someone on £50,000 will pay £505 more.

People earning less than £9,564 a year, or £797 a month, don’t have to pay National Insurance and won’t have to pay the new levy.

The government says the changes are expected to raise £12bn a year, which will go initially towards easing pressure on the NHS .

A proportion will then be moved into social care system over the next three years.

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