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Truss plans ‘skew support’ to richest households, warns Resolution Foundation

There is a case for a ‘solidarity tax’ to recoup some of the cost from those who can pay more, said the think tank.

David Hughes
Tuesday 13 September 2022 09:31 EDT
The energy price guarantee will restrict average domestic bills in England, Scotland and Wales (Dominic Lipinski/PA)
The energy price guarantee will restrict average domestic bills in England, Scotland and Wales (Dominic Lipinski/PA) (PA Wire)

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Richer households will benefit more than poorer ones from Liz Truss’s energy bills freeze and “winter will still be tough for many” despite the policy, experts have warned.

Analysis by the Resolution Foundation think tank, which focuses on raising living standards, said that because higher-income households typically use more energy, the richest fifth may gain an average of about £1,300 this winter compared with £1,100 for the poorest 20%.

The report concluded that the first major policy intervention by the new Prime Minister was “all-but-inevitable” given the colossal increases in energy prices.

Next year, twice as much support goes to the richest households as the poorest households, whereas this year everybody gets a lot

Resolution Foundation chief Torsten Bell

The energy price guarantee (EPG) will restrict average domestic bills in England, Scotland and Wales to no more than £2,500 for two years from October – around £500 higher than they are now, but £1,000 lower than they would have been from next month under Ofgem’s price cap.

Around 11% of households with the highest electricity and gas use will gain more than £2,000 from the policy while 13% will gain less than £500.

The Resolution Foundation said the lack of targeting across both the EPG and previous interventions means that support is not necessarily going where it is most needed.

Together with the universal £400 energy bill discount and the £150 council tax rebate to homes in bands A-D, support is being felt “broadly equally across the income distribution”, with an average gain of around £2,200.

The report said Ms Truss’s plans to provide further cost-of-living support by scrapping the rise in national insurance “will skew support towards the very highest-income households”.

The combination of the EPG and the national insurance cut could leave the 10% with the highest incomes benefiting by £4,700 on average while the poorest tenth receive £2,200 in 2023/24.

Resolution Foundation chief executive Torsten Bell told BBC Radio 4’s World At One programme: “Next year, twice as much support goes to the richest households as the poorest households, whereas this year everybody gets a lot”.

Seven out of 10 pubs won’t make the winter if this help doesn’t come

Sacha Lord, Night Time Industries Association

Meanwhile, business groups have been pleading for clarity as they wait for the Government to set out funding for a set of major interventions in the cost-of-living crisis.

No date has yet been set for the “fiscal event”, which is not expected until after the Queen’s funeral.

Seven out of 10 pubs could close this winter unless they get Government support with soaring bills soon, according to the chairman of the Night Time Industries Association trade body.

“I think we are now entering probably the most critical week for my industry in my lifetime,” Sacha Lord told the World At One.

“My phone is red hot and people are just at the end of their tether. And we already know that probably seven out of 10 pubs won’t make the winter if this help doesn’t come.”

Mr Lord, who is also the night time economy adviser for Greater Manchester, said businesses are already going under “on a daily basis” and are “sat in limbo” ahead of the fiscal event.

The Resolution Foundation report said the cost of the EPG, which will be funded by borrowing, “could eclipse the £137 billion worth of bailouts for banks during the financial crisis”.

It noted “the Government is now bearing all the financial risk related to future movements in gas prices”.

The think tank said there is a “strong case” for extending windfall taxes on oil and gas producers but also an argument for implementing a “solidarity tax” of some form on the rich to help cover the cost.

A 1% increase in income tax would raise £9.5 billion, with 60% paid by the top fifth of households “who may benefit by over £13 billion a year from the EPG”.

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