Trump's travel ban won't have much impact on spread of coronavirus, says Rishi Sunak
No 10 set to announce feasibility study into bridge
linking Scotland to Northern Ireland, says minister
Alistair Jack, the Scottish secretary, told BBC
Radio Scotland this morning that Boris Johnson will soon announce a feasiblity
study into plans for bridge linking Scotland to Northern Ireland. In an
interview this morning, asked why there was no money for the plan in the
budget, he replied: “Watch this space.” He went on:
The prime minister I expect will announce a
feasibility study into the link to Northern Ireland, I hope the Scottish
government will back it.
Johnson has a fondness for extravagant
infrastructure schemes and he has repeatedly expressed interest in a bridge
linking Scotland and Northern Ireland, despite experts dismissing the idea as
impractical. Jack has suggested that the scheme could involve a combination of
tunnel and bridge.
The Resolution Foundation thinktank has this morning
published a 60-page analysis of the budget (pdf). And it has been posting some
highlights on a Twitter thread starting here.
Here are the main points from Rishi Sunak’s morning
interview round.
Sunak, the chancellor, criticised President Trump’s
flight ban announcement, saying that the UK government’s view was that measures
like this would not have much impact on the spread of coronavirus. (See
8.55am.)
He accepted that the flight ban would have an impact
on the UK economy. Asked on the Today programme if it would have a negative
impact on the economy, he accepted that it would, although in his answer he
focused on making a general point about the negative economic impact of
coronavirus. He said:
The US is still deciding the details of what exactly
that means, but you are right. As I talked about yesterday, there will be an
impact on the demand side of our economy as people are unable to spend in the
way they normally would and travel, but it also affects the supply chains for
businesses and that impacts the supply side of our economy.
As those supply chains are disrupted, the productive
capacity of our economy will shrink for a period of time.
He dismissed claims that his spending plans were
irresponsible. He said:
I make absolutely no apology for responding in the
short term in scale to the immediate threat that we face from coronavirus.
I think that’s the right thing to do for the
economy, we need to help businesses have a bridge to get to the other side.
In the medium term, as you will see from the
figures, there is actually responsible economic management and it’s because
we’ve had responsible economic management for several years that I’m able to
stand here in a strong position to say that we will do whatever it takes to get
through this.
He said that his measures were compatible with the
fiscal rules set out in the Conservative manifesto.
He laughed off suggestions that he had delivered a
Gordon Brown budget, or a Labour budget. When LBC’s Nick Ferrari put this to
him, Sunak laughed, and said he would let others make that judgment.
He suggested that Jeremy Corbyn’s resignation as
Labour leader was holding up the announcement of plans for reform of social
care. When asked about the absence of social care from the budget, he said that
Matt Hancock, the health secretary, wrote to MPs last week proposing
cross-party talks starting in May. When it was put to him that the government
was taking a long time, particularly since Boris Johnson claimed to have a plan
for social care last summer, Sunak replied:
There is no permanent leader of the opposition at
the moment. They’re having a leadership contest, so we can’ formally start that
process until they have one.
Sunak defended his decision not to extend sick pay
to cover the low-paid and the self-employed. In the budget he said that people
in these categories would instead find it easier to claim benefits as a result
of rules being relaxed during the coronavirus outbreak. This morning he said:
For those that don’t [have access to statutory sick
pay] we’ve strengthened the working of our welfare system so that it works
quicker, more responsibly and more generously for those people.
He also claimed that around half of workers who
needed to take time off would get more than statutory sick pay because of their
employers offered more generous arrangements.
He sidestepped a question about whether he and his
family would be able to live on £90 per week themselves. Statutory sick pay is
worth £94.25 per week. Asked if that was enough to live on, he replied:
We have strengthened our safety net to make sure we
have access to benefits easier, quicker, more generously, and also provided an
extra £500m to local authorities to distribute to vulnerable people and their
local communities if they need extra support.
When pressed on whether he could live on this
himself, he said:
This is a safety net. That is what it’s there for,
to provide people to fall back on. It’s obviously not the same as your day to
day life
He defended his decision not to include nurseries in
the list of companies that will qualify for a one-year exemption from business
rates. The nursery sector has been horrified by the decision. Asked why they
were not included, Sunak said:
Because what we’ve done on business rates is target
the sectors of the economy which are in the consumption side of the economy,
which will see a very significant hit because of people’s inability to spend.
And what we wanted to do is make sure that they don’t go out of business during
that period of time.
He accepted that his plans involved making an
assumption about the cost of borrowing remaining low, but it was a judgement he
defended. He said:
You have to make a judgment about the persistence of
low interest rates, that’s a judgment I have to make as chancellor.
The reality is these interest rates have stayed
lower for longer than anyone expected and keep falling, and it’s right that I
as someone in charge of managing our public finances has a view on that.