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We’re about to put some more of your pay back in your pocket, say Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak

ACROSS Britain, The Sun on ­Sunday’s readers are feeling the squeeze. 

The extra demand caused by global industry roaring back into life post-Covid, together with Vladimir Putin’s abhorrent invasion of Ukraine, are pushing up prices all around the world.

Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak write for The Sun On Sunday to explain how they will be putting more money in your pocket
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Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak write for The Sun On Sunday to explain how they will be putting more money in your pocketCredit: Andrew Parsons / 10 Downing Street
Global industry roaring back into life post-Covid, together with Vladimir Putin’s abhorrent invasion of Ukraine, are pushing up prices all around the world
2
Global industry roaring back into life post-Covid, together with Vladimir Putin’s abhorrent invasion of Ukraine, are pushing up prices all around the worldCredit: Eyevine

And every day you can see exactly what all that means for you and ­millions of others . . . 

When you get to the till in the supermarket, when you see the ­digits spinning ever faster at the petrol pump, and when your ­latest energy bill lands on the doormat. 

We know it’s tough but we want you to know that this ­government is on your side. 

And while it will be tough, we will get through this. 

READ MORE ON COST OF LIVING

That’s why we are helping households across the country with £37billion of financial support.

It includes a council tax rebate, a cut in fuel duty, at least £400 for every household to help with energy bills and at least £1,200 for the eight million most vulnerable ­households.

We’re delivering the biggest ever increase in the National Living Wage, worth an extra £1,000 a year for those working full-time.

And we’re helping another ­million ­families keep around £1,000 extra a year by cutting the Universal Credit taper rate

Conservatives in government cut taxes for working families.

Over the last decade we have increased the personal allowance people have before they pay any income tax from £6,475 in 2010 to £12,570 today.

This has lifted millions of the poorest out of paying any income tax at all, and meant a real terms tax cut of £750 for 27million ­people.

And this Wednesday, the National Insurance threshold will rise overnight from £9,880 to £12,570 — saving 30million British workers up to £330 a year. 

It will also lift 2.2million ­people out of paying any ­National Insurance or income tax on their earnings at all. 

As a result, Sun on Sunday readers will be better off. It’s the single biggest tax cut in a decade, worth £6billion. 

It means around 70 per cent of British workers will pay less National Insurance.

And that’s even after accounting for the Health and Social Care Levy that is funding the biggest catch-up programme in NHS ­history — and putting an end to ­spiralling social care costs.

So, whether you work in a ­factory, or are a care worker, a hairdresser or a graphic designer, this week’s tax cut is likely to make you and your family better off.

You can find out exactly what it will mean for you by visiting the on gov.uk and using .

And then check your next payslip to see more of your pay going directly into your pocket. 

We’re able to do this because of the extraordinary success of the vaccine roll-out. Together with the furlough scheme that protected millions of jobs, it allowed us to emerge from the pandemic earlier than other nations. 

That gave us the fastest growth in the G7 last year and close to the lowest unemployment since 1974 — building up the reserves of fiscal firepower that we are now deploying on your behalf. 

But we also need to be ­sensible and responsible with the national finances. 

The support we provided ­during Covid reached almost £400billion — the equivalent of roughly £5,500 worth of debt for every person in the UK. 

It is a price worth paying to save countless lives and livelihoods, but not a bill any of us would want to simply leave to our children and grandchildren.

That is why we have always asked those with the broadest shoulders — and the biggest businesses — to play their part in our ­collective effort to pay off the nation’s debt. 

And there’s another fundamental truth on fighting rising prices — we can’t just spend our way out of the problem. 

If we are going to bring down the cost of living, then we need to rebuild and grow the economy and focus our efforts on the underlying problems that hold us back. 

MASSIVE AGENDA

So we’re taking forward a massive agenda of reform and improvement to fix the problems in our energy and housing ­markets, and to get government spending less of your money.

Also, to back private sector-led growth using the benefits of Brexit to bust the bureaucratic burdens on business. 

We are making our country more productive by investing in infrastructure, skills and ­technology. And in levelling up by ­making it easier for you to get a ­well-paid job whether you live in central London, the North of Scotland or anywhere in between.

And in the Autumn, we will bring forward ­business tax cuts and further reforms to encourage them to invest more, train more and innovate more — all of which will lead to higher growth. 

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The coming months will not be easy, and we should not pretend otherwise.

But, together, we will steer our way through these global economic headwinds, rebuilding and growing the economy — with ­better jobs, higher wages and a brighter future for you and your family.

UNITED & FULLY FOCUSED 

By David Wooding

TWO heads are better than one, especially during the biggest economic crisis in decades.

It is a relief to see Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak on the same page — literally — helping families survive the soaring cost of living.

For months, they are said to have been at loggerheads over what to do. Today they show they are both focused on guiding us back to more prosperous times.

In a joint article, they use the word “we” no fewer than 20 times. But they also agree there is no easy way out of the crisis.

The pair admit they cannot help everyone, nor do they wish to saddle future generations with a massive debt mountain.

They do, however, outline the billions spent to cushion the blow of inflation, including a rise in the National Living Wage, relief for council tax bills, fuel duty, energy costs — and a cut in National Insurance kicking in this week.

“Check your next payslip,” they implore. Whether that will comfort those suffering most is open to question. But there is hope they will tackle the root case of the problems with a revamp of the energy and housing markets.

It may be the start of a renewed partnership. Watch this space.

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