Britain is "on the road to ruin" unless action is taken in the Budget on Tuesday to cut the deficit, Chancellor George Osborne has told the BBC.
Mr Osborne said the coalition had inherited "a truly awful financial situation" and he would set out a four-year plan to deal with it.
Tough action was "unavoidable" but he aimed to provide "prosperity for all".
He also announced ex-Labour minister John Hutton would head a commission into public sector pensions.
Mr Osborne told the BBC's Andrew Marr Show that Mr Hutton's involvement would mean the commission into future pensions would be independent and have cross-party input.
'Decisive action'
The chancellor refused to give more details of the coming Budget, although the BBC understands it will include Conservative election proposals to ease National Insurance for new businesses.
It is expected the employers' threshold for NI will rise slightly - by £21 and there will be a three-year scheme to exempt start-up firms outside the South East from paying NI for the first 10 people employed.
Mr Osborne did not comment on that but did confirm there would be a levy on banks and an increase in non-business capital gains tax.
Asked about the "badness" of the Budget, he said: "I don't see it as badness, I see it as decisive action to deal with Britain's record budget deficit.
Mr Osborne said the coalition had inherited "a truly awful financial situation" and he would set out a four-year plan to deal with it.
Tough action was "unavoidable" but he aimed to provide "prosperity for all".
He also announced ex-Labour minister John Hutton would head a commission into public sector pensions.
Mr Osborne told the BBC's Andrew Marr Show that Mr Hutton's involvement would mean the commission into future pensions would be independent and have cross-party input.
'Decisive action'
The chancellor refused to give more details of the coming Budget, although the BBC understands it will include Conservative election proposals to ease National Insurance for new businesses.
It is expected the employers' threshold for NI will rise slightly - by £21 and there will be a three-year scheme to exempt start-up firms outside the South East from paying NI for the first 10 people employed.
Mr Osborne did not comment on that but did confirm there would be a levy on banks and an increase in non-business capital gains tax.
Asked about the "badness" of the Budget, he said: "I don't see it as badness, I see it as decisive action to deal with Britain's record budget deficit.
Sourced from: The BBC
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