Labour will reportedly promise not to raise income tax, national insurance or VAT for five years if the party wins the general election.
Shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves already said this week they will not put up the taxes, ahead of Labour’s manifesto launch expected on Thursday.
But a report in The Sunday Times claims Labour will take their pledge further and vow to cast a “triple lock” on the “big three” taxes over the course of the first term in power.
It means Labour would need to make cuts or find other tax rises, if they win the election on 4 July.
The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) warned both the Tories and Labour their plans lock them into “sharp” spending cuts, with neither “serious about the underlying principle of getting debt falling”.
In its assessment of campaigning, the IFS said forecasts suggest whoever is the chancellor in the autumn will be “fortunate” to meet the fiscal rule of getting debt on a downward path between 2028/29 and 2029/30.
That’s an aim Labour and the Conservatives have both committed to.
Click here to follow…

