Cutting taxes for the low-paid is the most useful thing Osborne can do in what will, I
suspect, be a distinctly unmemorable budget. The Mail and The Sun both have competing figures — £205 and £320 — for the annual rebate. Given that the average Brit is paying
£310 more due to Osborne’s VAT rise in January, one might forgive taxpayers for not
punching the air. And anyone on more than £25k a year is still face a higher tax burden than they did three months ago. But the beauty of Budget day (as Osborne knows) is that you have can
just present one side of the ledger. You can show the ‘give’, not mention the ‘take’ and end up with front pages similar to those which Pete mentioned earlier. (Few newspapers mention the effect of January’s VAT rise, apart from Ed Balls in the Mirror).
The way Budgets work is that only the IFS assemble the full picture, but by then interest in the Budget will have waned.
So what’s Osborne up to? Fighting a good fight — albeit not as hard as I’d like him to.

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