A senior Treasury official has refused to quash reports the government is planning a £20 billion tax hike in the autumn to deal with the cost of the coronavirus crisis.
Speaking to Times Radio, Stephen Barclay insisted any such move was for chancellor Rishi Sunak to announce in the November Budget.
He said: “Treasury ministers don’t get into what a Budget will or will not do and particularly on tax measures ahead of that, that’s for the chancellor, the Budget.
“There is always four moving parts to this. The key objective within the Treasury is to get growth.
“There is then a balance between the other three moving parts of debt, of spending, spending feeding into that, and tax.
“And what’s your trade-off then between your spending measures and your tax measures. The real objective is to reduce the economic scarring from Covid.”
According to a report in The Sunday Times, the Treasury is looking at raising corporation tax and capital gains tax, and cutting pension tax relief, among a raft of other revenue-raising measures.
The money could be clawed back from pensions, businesses, the wealthy and foreign aid and chancellor Rishi Sunak is considering hiking corporation tax from 19% to 24% in order to boost revenue by £12 billion next year, the report indicated.
Capital gains tax might also be paid at the same rate as income tax, under the ideas reportedly being looked at.
Pension tax relief could be “slashed” under measures being considered by the Treasury to help pay for the Covid-19 crisis, The Sunday Telegraph reported.
The newspaper also said that raising fuel and other duties was being looked at.
A revamp of the inheritance tax system and the introduction of an online sales tax were also reportedly being considered, PA Media reports.
The international development budget could also be caught up in Treasury reappraisals due to the cost of the pandemic, it was claimed.
The aid budget has already been cut by £2.9 billion from £15.8 billion this year, due to the contraction in the economy caused by the Covid-19 outbreak.
However, the Government insists it still meets its obligation to provide 0.7% of gross national income (GNI) to international development.
Treasury sources told the PA news agency that they do not comment on what may, or may not be, in the upcoming Budget.
Former Cabinet minister Damian Green, who served as then prime minister Theresa May’s de facto deputy, said he was wary about any changes to the so-called pensions “triple lock”.
The lock means the state pension increases each year in line with either wages, inflation or 2.5%, depending on which of the three figures is highest.
Green told Times Radio: “I would be very wary of the Government going down that route.
“It was a manifesto commitment to keep it. I think this raft of things… feels like a standard pre-Budget, Treasury kite-flying to see what people will make of this.
“Clearly the chancellor faces some unpalatable options because he’s rightly spent many, many billions of pounds supporting the economy and individual workers over the past few months.
“The other one on that list that I particularly wince at is the thought of breaking the commitment on foreign aid.
“I’m proud of the fact that Britain is one of the few countries that meets its commitment to have a small part, 0.7% of our GDP, spent on foreign aid and I would certainly want to see that continued.”