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At last, a government willing to spend – but this budget will expose it to two great dangers | Aditya Chakrabortty

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The good news: more money is on the table. The problems lie around how it will be raised – and who doesn’t stand to benefit

Change. That’s what Keir Starmer promised, isn’t it? In white letters against a bright red background, on the cover of his election manifesto, and in speech after speech. Yesterday’s budget was his once-in-a-government chance to show voters what he means by that, a heavy load borne by Rachel Reeves. Not only will she set the government’s direction for the next five years; she has to refresh an administration not even four months old but already flagging under petty scandal, office politics and dwindling popularity.

Her budget does deliver some welcome change, but it is no gamechanger. It stops our hospitals and schools from collapsing, but the sums for local councils and other less-loved public services will not be enough to help them rebuild. It taxes wealth a little more, but not enough to upset big asset owners. It certainly does not reset the relationship between how wealth and work is taxed, as Starmer and Reeves were promising until quite recently.

Aditya Chakrabortty is a Guardian columnist

Continue reading…The good news: more money is on the table. The problems lie around how it will be raised – and who doesn’t stand to benefitChange. That’s what Keir Starmer promised, isn’t it? In white letters against a bright red background, on the cover of his election manifesto, and in speech after speech. Yesterday’s budget was his once-in-a-government chance to show voters what he means by that, a heavy load borne by Rachel Reeves. Not only will she set the government’s direction for the next five years; she has to refresh an administration not even four months old but already flagging under petty scandal, office politics and dwindling popularity.Her budget does deliver some welcome change, but it is no gamechanger. It stops our hospitals and schools from collapsing, but the sums for local councils and other less-loved public services will not be enough to help them rebuild. It taxes wealth a little more, but not enough to upset big asset owners. It certainly does not reset the relationship between how wealth and work is taxed, as Starmer and Reeves were promising until quite recently.Aditya Chakrabortty is a Guardian columnist Continue reading…