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Jeremy Hunt warns Reeves: soaring taxes will kill UK’s ‘animal spirits’

by September 24, 2025
September 24, 2025
Middle-class families will be up to £40,000 worse off over the next decade as a result of Jeremy Hunt’s stealth taxes to reduce government borrowing.

Jeremy Hunt has accused Rachel Reeves of dragging Britain into “stagnation and decline” by raising taxes, warning that the Chancellor’s policies risk smothering the entrepreneurial drive the country needs.

Writing for Conservative Home, the former Chancellor said it was now “all but nailed on” that Reeves will raise taxes by £30bn in November’s Budget — pushing the overall increase in Britain’s tax burden to £70bn in just 13 months. He argued that while ministers focus on who the losers will be — pensioners, homeowners, savers — the greater danger lies in the long-term drag on economic growth.

Hunt pointed to OECD data showing that between 2010 and 2019, countries with lower public spending such as the US, South Korea and Australia grew on average 2% faster than high-spending nations such as Finland and Denmark. He argued that high taxation discourages investment, crowds out private capital and ultimately stifles “animal spirits” — the entrepreneurial energy John Maynard Keynes once said was essential for capitalism.

“Simply put, people work harder in countries with lower taxes,” Hunt said, citing data showing workers in lower-tax OECD economies put in 260 more hours a year than those in high-tax countries. He warned that Britain’s welfare system undermines incentives to work, with some claimants projected to earn more from benefits than full-time employees on the national living wage.

The Tory MP drew comparisons with the US, where Mississippi has pursued a decade of phased tax cuts. He claimed the policy had transformed the state into the fastest-growing in America, lifting wages and investment while reducing poverty. “The poorest state in America now has a higher output per head than we do,” he wrote.

Hunt, who raised taxes himself as Chancellor to steady markets after the Liz Truss crisis, said those hikes were only meant as a temporary necessity. He contrasted his approach — cutting national insurance and introducing “full expensing” for business investment — with Reeves’s decision to permanently increase borrowing and taxation.

“Countries with lower taxes tend to grow faster,” Hunt concluded. “I know which I’d prefer for the UK.”

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Jeremy Hunt warns Reeves: soaring taxes will kill UK’s ‘animal spirits’

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