Kwasi Kwarteng admits his mortgage repayments have gone up 'significantly' since his mini-budget

Former chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng has admitted he has been "affected" by his personal mini-budget which was blamed for creating financial turmoil whereas Liz Truss was prime minister.

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Mr Kwarteng, who was sacked by Ms Truss after just 38 days in the job, mentioned his personal mortgage repayments had "gone up considerably".

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However, he denied he was responsible for the broader financial state of affairs and rising rates of interest, which he mentioned falls below the duty of the Bank of England.

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Speaking to GB News's Camilla Tominey, Mr Kwarteng was requested whether or not he had any sympathy with these going through increased mortgage prices.

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"Of course I do", he replied.

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"I'm probably revealing too much: I'm on a tracker, so I'm affected as well. They've gone up considerably."

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0:35

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Asked whether or not he had been "screwed by your personal mini-budget?", he replied: "No, not at all because Camilla we are mixing two things."

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He added: "The Bank of England was in charge of inflation and my tracker rate and other people's tracker rates will be linked to the Bank rate, and whatever margin you have to pay.

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"And the explanation why rates of interest have gone up very excessive is as a result of we have completely missed the purpose on inflation, we have completely misjudged inflation."

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Asked how a lot his mortgage invoice had gone up by, Mr Kwarteng mentioned: "A lot. We bought the house in 2021 so it's gone up quite a bit since then.

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"I'm simply as uncovered to rates of interest as anybody else."

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In his mini-budget on 23 September, Mr Kwarteng unveiled Β£45bn in unfunded tax cuts and the promise to abolish the 45p top rate of tax.

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The mini-budget, otherwise known as the "fiscal occasion", triggered turbulence within the monetary markets, despatched the pound tumbling and led to an unprecedented intervention by the Bank of England cease pension funds collapsing and pushing mortgage charges up.

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0:46

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Mortgage prices increased significantly following the turmoil of the mini-budget, whereas lenders pulled a file variety of mortgages in a single day the next week.

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Last month, mounted mortgage charges rose once more after a quick fall, based on monetary data firm Moneyfacts.

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Meanwhile, the Bank of England raised interest rates for the 14th successive time on Thursday, lifting its official price to five.25%.

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The quarter proportion level improve was smaller than some economists had anticipated, following the discharge of lower-than-anticipated inflation data final month.

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Inflation presently stands at 7.9%.

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Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey defended the rate of interest hike on the grounds it was essential to carry inflation all the way down to its 2% goal.

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"We know that inflation hits the least well off hardest and we need to make absolutely sure that it falls all the way back to the 2% target. That's why we've raised rates to 5.25% today," he mentioned.

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