Ed Balls Joins Calls For Emergency Tax Cuts

Ed Balls Joins Calls For Emergency Tax Cuts

Shadow chancellor Ed Balls has joined calls for emergency tax cuts in next week's Budget.

Chancellor George Osborne is under pressure to make bold tax moves on Wednesday to kick-start the UK's flagging economy.

The looming prospect of a triple-dip recession and the recent loss of the UK's once-cherished AAA credit rating have heightened demands for a change of course.

But the Chancellor is expected to keep faith with his tough austerity programme, with Prime Minister David Cameron declaring the Budget would be about "sticking to the course".

In an interview with The Daily Telegraph, Mr Balls said temporary borrowing to fund a cut in the basic rate of income tax would pay for itself.

Labour has proposed a temporary VAT reduction as the best way to stimulate recovery, but Mr Balls said he would "applaud" any any type of tax cut.

"Something must be done now ... you need some fiscal action," he said.

"If George Osborne announced a temporary cut in the basic rate we would applaud him because we would say: 'At last he is finally doing something to get some spending power back into the economy.'"

Former cabinet minister Liam Fox is leading Tory calls for a change of course - calling for Corporation Tax to be reduced to zero and more cuts to public spending.

A successful Budget - after last year's embarrassing U-turns - is seen as one key to calming restive Tory MPs amid poor poll ratings and the Eastleigh by-election failure.

Other prominent backbench demands include cancelling a fuel duty rise due in the autumn and scrapping the beer duty escalator that automatically ups the price of a pint.

Mr Osborne is tipped to announce extra investment in housebuilding and road projects - called for by leading business groups - and help for people to buy homes.

But he will not abandon "Plan A" by increasing borrowing to fund it - a move being floated by Liberal Democrat Business Secretary Vince Cable.