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UK's Hammond, saved from purge, set to renew Brexit push


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UK's Hammond, saved from purge, set to renew Brexit push

By William Schomberg

 

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Philip Hammond, Britain's Chancellor of the Exchequer, arrives in Downing Street, in central London, Britain June 14, 2017. REUTERS/Stefan Wermuth

 

LONDON (Reuters) - British finance minister Philip Hammond has the chance on Thursday to assert his vision for a more business-friendly exit from the EU in a debate blown wide open again by an election that has undermined Prime Minister Theresa May's authority.

 

Hammond will address an annual gathering of London's financial elite, who fear that May's line that "no deal is better than a bad deal" will cost them business in the European Union.

 

Britain's giant banking industry sees Hammond as its most powerful ally and bankers were worried when, in the run-up to the election, it appeared he might lose his job.

 

"It is in everyone's interests that UK financial services remain strong and competitive," City of London Lord Mayor Andrew Parmley is due to say at the Mansion House dinner where Hammond and Bank of England Governor Mark Carney will speak.

"This sector should help shape our negotiations with the EU," Parmley says, in speech excerpts released to media.

 

Until a few days ago, it had seemed likely that Hammond would not be giving the Mansion House speech. Newspapers said he had fallen out with May's powerful aides and speculation was rife about who might replace him.

 

But with May reeling from the loss of her Conservative Party's parliamentary majority in last week's election, she reappointed Hammond to his job, and it was her aides who lost theirs.

 

"Hammond is in a much more powerful position than he used to be," said a bank executive who regularly meets government officials. "Hammond is a pragmatist, he is business-friendly, and the Treasury have done all the serious work on Brexit."

 

In contrast to May's uncompromising rhetoric, Hammond has stressed the importance of ensuring that British employers can continue to find the skilled workers they need from the EU.

 

On Friday, the day after the election, he tweeted: "Pleased to be re-appointed so we can now get on and negotiate a Brexit deal that supports British jobs, business and prosperity."

 

The Times newspaper reported on Wednesday that Hammond wanted May to keep Britain in the EU's customs union, a move that would allow tariff-free trade within the bloc but prevent trade deals with outside countries.

 

May's Brexit strategy has become the subject of public debate inside her own party, with two former Conservative prime ministers urging her to soften her approach.

 

AUSTERITY FATIGUE

 

Hammond may also use his speech to signal how the government will respond to the message from many voters last week that they are weary of the spending cuts needed to turn Britain's budget deficit into a surplus, something the government says will take until the mid-2020s.

 

The opposition Labour Party won many more votes than expected with its promises of measures such as the end to a 1-percent cap on public sector pay increases, and a higher minimum wage.

 

Inflation is at its highest since 2013, at 2.9 percent, while growth in pay excluding bonuses lags at 1.7 percent, tightening the squeeze on households. Figures due to released at 0830 GMT on Thursday are expected to show retail sales fell in May.

 

However, Hammond's options for a significant loosening of the purse strings appear limited, not only by his fiscally hawkish instincts and Britain's still weak public finances, but also by the Conservative Party's diminished clout.

 

"Although many in parliament would agree with some change in the fiscal stance, it could be hard to reach agreement on a fully comprehensive package of fiscal measures and in particular how to fund them," JP Morgan economist Allan Monks said.

 

Also on Thursday, the Bank of England is set to signal once again that, with Britain's economy struggling to regain momentum, it is in no hurry to raise interest rates from their all-time low.

 

Its policymakers are likely to focus more on the loss of spending power for many households than the acceleration in inflation, which they expect will prove a short-lived consequence of the fall in the pound after last year's Brexit vote.

 

Growth slowed sharply in early 2017 and the BoE may see the uncertainty caused by May's election flop as another reason to keep borrowing costs low, or even consider providing further stimulus to help growth if needed.

 

The BoE is due to publish its latest monetary policy statement at 1100 GMT.

 

(Additional reporting by Andrew MacAskill and David Milliken; Writing by William Schomberg; Editing by Kevin Liffey)

 
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-- © Copyright Reuters 2017-06-15
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What a total farce this has become. I mean really, does this broken govt have any legitimacy.

May is clinging to power with the support of a bunch of radical loonies.

Does that make this government legitimate? Where is the Westminster Governing  principles hiding?

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5 hours ago, spiderorchid said:

What a total farce this has become. I mean really, does this broken govt have any legitimacy.

May is clinging to power with the support of a bunch of radical loonies.

Does that make this government legitimate? Where is the Westminster Governing  principles hiding?

Of course it has legitimacy. It has the majority seats of any party. Maybe not collectively. I hope you are not insinuating that there should be another election?

 

as for Hammond I don't trust him to get on with Brexit. still people are trying to say what people who voted for Brexit didn't want out of the EU. Utter tosh, that is exactly what people wanted and you can sugar coat it as much as you want. Brexit  for all the people I know meant leaving the EU. As friends if possible. If not so be it.

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