Rishi Sunak has said cost of living support delivering hundreds of pounds to every household will have a “minimal impact” on inflation – and suggested those who do not need it could give the money to charity.

The chancellor told Sky News that the announcement of new measures worth £15bn to ease the burden on squeezed households was “targeted at those most in need”.

Under the plans, every home will see £400 knocked off their energy bills – an upgrade from a previous policy of loaning them £200 to be repaid over five years – while eight million of the most vulnerable will also receive £650.

It comes at a time when inflation of 9%, a 40-year high, is squeezing households’ spending power, largely thanks to soaring bills for gas and electricity – which are expected to rise by another £800 on average in the autumn.

The universal nature of the energy rebate will have the effect of helping many who do not need any assistance – and Mr Sunak suggested to Sky’s Niall Paterson that “you, like me… can give that money to charity if you don’t need it”.

He added: “Our estimate in my view is that it will have a minimal impact on inflation.”

Asked if it would lift inflation by one percentage point he said “much, much less than that”.

More from Politics

“What we’re doing is very targeted at those most in need. We’re also raising money to help pay for it,” Mr Sunak said.

“The combination of those two things is the responsible approach.

“Even though we are supporting the economy we want to make sure that we don’t make the inflation situation worse.”

You May Also Like

Labour and Lib Dems hit campaign trail hours after Dorries’ resignation

Labour and the Liberal Democrats hit the campaign trail in Mid Bedfordshire…

First Conservative hopefuls announce leadership bids – with more expected this weekend

The first candidates have entered the contest to replace Boris Johnson with…

Labour leader demands two to three week ‘circuit breaker’ lockdown over half-term

Sir Keir Starmer has called for a two to three week “circuit…

Ministers can keep some documents on Rwanda policy secret, High Court rules

The government has been allowed to keep parts of internal documents about…