Around 2.6 million working families will be an average of £1,600 a year worse off because of Spending Review cuts, the IFS says.
Despite George Osborne's big announcement that he has
scrapped the tax credit cuts, working age benefit payments will be
reduced to their lowest level as a share of national income for 30
years, the respected economic organisation has said.The Chancellor's spending review was widely welcomed as an "end to austerity" and a u-turn on the tax credit cuts that would have left 3.3m families £1,100 a year worse off.
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However, while IFS director Paul Johnson said the cuts were "less severe" than expected it was "not the end of austerity" and was "one of the tightest" spending review's in post-war history.
Tax credits are due to be replaced by Universal Credit and Mr Osborne had already taken the axe to those benefits in his July Budget.
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The IFS said it means that while those on tax credits will not take an "immediate cash hit", the Universal Credit changes "will now involve 2.6 million working families being an average of £1,600 worse off than they would have been under the current system, while 1.9 million will be £1,400 a year better off."
Mr Osborne's perceived Spending Review largesse was made possible by a £27bn windfall from a combination of better-than-forecast tax receipts and lower-than-expected debt interest rates.
Mr Johnson said: "He's got a bit lucky with some of the changes to tax receipt forecasts.
"The OBR has improved its forecast just a smidgeon on tax receipts going forward.
"If they reverse that - and at some point over the next four or five years there has got to be pretty high probability that will happen - I'd say a 50-50 chance things will get worse rather than better - then, because he’s got this absolutely fixed target for 2019, the Chancellor will have to come back to the drawing board."
Speaking on Sky News Mr Osborne denied that he was gambling with the future of Britain's economy and said: "The fundamental thing I am trying to do is save money rather than ... spending the money or gambling the money.
The shadow chancellor said the IFS announcement showed "the Tory spin is unravelling".
John McDonnell said: "We said this was a smoke and mirror spending review and we were right.
"IFS research today shows that George Osborne has not reversed his welfare cuts, he has just delayed them, and 2.6 million families will still be on average £1,600 worse off by 2020."
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