London:The UK's ruling Conservative Party is widely expected to say goodbye to the austerity era as the Boris Johnson government pledges to spend more to level up across the country, according to a think-tank.
The London-based Resolution Foundation said in the report on Monday that the most eye-catching announcement in the country's upcoming budget in March will reveal more details on the Conservatives' election manifesto promise of up to a 100-billion-pounds increase in capital spending over the next five years.
The budget to be delivered by the new Indian-origin Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak who took the post after Sajid Javid's surprise resignation in a government reshuffle earlier this month.
The budget will also be the first since Johnson became Prime Minister last year and the first since the UK exited the European Union on January 31.
"The Johnson government has an ambitious policy agenda to deliver visible improvements to public services and to level up regions lagging behind the South of England and London, all while refusing to raise any of the main taxes," the report said.
"For the Conservative party in the 2010s, spending and tax cuts were the order of the day," the report said, but now the Conservatives are no longer the party of spending cuts with spending set to increase in the years ahead.
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