Reform UK’s income tax plans ‘to cost up to £80bn’ warns IFS – UK politics live | Politics




IFS: Reform UK's plans on income tax will cost between £50bn and £80bn

The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) has said Reform UK’s plans to raise the threshold for paying income tax to £20,000 would cost between £50bn and £80bn.

PA Media reports Stuart Adam, a senior economist at the research institute, said the announcements on winter fuel and the two-child benefit cap were “dwarfed” by the tax policy.

He told BBC Radio 4’s World At One programme: “Those are all significant things, and they are high-profile new public announcements, but actually they are all still dwarfed by some of the big policies that were in the manifesto last year, and today Nigel Farage recommitted to increasing the income tax allowance to £20,000, which depending on details might cost £50bn, £60bn, £70bn, £80bn.”

Where Farage did give some detail in the speech, his rationale for being able to afford it boiled down to “we will do things differently”. He said:

You will all be lined up in your droves to say to me, how on earth can you afford all of this? How on earth can you afford £5bn here or £5bn there, almost forgetting that the national debt is now £2.8tn, and that not just the last government, but this one too, are hopelessly adrift when it comes to government borrowing.

We are going to make big savings. We will stand here before you in one year’s time and show you the excessive costs that we’ve taken out of local government and at a national level.

If we win the next election, we will scrap net zero, something that is costing the exchequer an extraordinary £40bn plus pounds every year.

There will be no more asylum hotels or houses of multiple occupancy. People who come here illegally across the channel or on the back of lorries will not be allowed to stay.

We will scrap the DEI agenda, which is costing the taxpayer up to £7bn pounds a year throughout the public sector. And yes, we see considerable savings to be made amongst the quangos.

So yes, I do accept that these proposals, especially the one of lifting to £20,000 the level at which people start paying tax. I accept that it’s expensive.

But I genuinely believe that we can pay for it because we’re not ideologically tied to the same ideas upon which we believe the Conservative and Labour governments have gone so wrong over the course of the last few years.

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Walthamstow’s Labour MP Stella Creasy has posted to social media about Nigel Farage’s earlier comments on legal abortion access in the UK, saying “It’s inevitable a man who wants to repeat the Trump playbook would begin attacking abortion access at some point – that’s why we have to protect it for the 250,000 who have one every year by making it a human right.”

Creasy wrote for the Guardian a fortnight ago about the battle to decriminalise abortion and future-proof the law against anti-abortion extremists.

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Posted: 2025-05-27 14:52:38

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