While Sunak has ruled out a return to the austerity that his predecessor George Osborne pursued in the aftermath of that crash, he insists government finances will need to be restored to health.
“Today’s figures are a stark reminder that we must return our public finances to a sustainable footing over time, which will require taking difficult decisions,” the chancellor said on Friday.
Members of the Conservative Party largely accept the ramp up in debt as a necessity to deal with the pandemic, but there are some rumblings of disquiet. Steve Baker, a Conservative former minister who sits on the House of Commons Treasury Committee, described the data as exposing the “road to ruin” of the coronavirus.“Ministers must change course boldly, fast to maximize growth by liberalizing taxes, liberalizing regulations and liberalizing trade policy,” he said by text message on Friday.
“Or they must describe how grinding miserably on with money creation outpacing borrowing can possibly lead to prosperity.”