Rachel Reeves will unveil her second Budget at the House of Commons today where she is expected to outline a slew of tax hikes to fill a £35billion black hole.
The Government has already laid out two relatively small revenue-raisers - extending the sugar tax and introducing a per night tourist tax on hotel and bed & breakfast stays.
But that is expected to be just the start of the pain, with homeowners, businesses and pensioners all set to impacted in a series of money grabbing levies.
Follow the Daily Mails live coverage of Budget day below and join in the conversation in our comments section
06:10
Budget preparations have been 'chaotic', economists warn
If you do lots of small things, often our smaller taxes are particularly badly designed and therefore you can end up increasing taxes that are bad for growth.
Investors will be nervous if they see a list of tax increases, but don't quite trust how much revenue it will bring in.
There are a number of data points that suggest the prolonged speculation has flatlined growth. You see this in the latest retail sales figures, which were the first decline since May. You see this in the decline of business confidence.
The economy has paid a price for a process that has been delayed, has been full of speculation and that has seen the Government send conflicting signals. A Budget has a journey and a destination. If you make the journey complex, if it seems chaotic, then your destination becomes harder to reach...it has made hard choices even harder.
We need a decisive action that puts to bed any notion of further tax rises.
You have seen thousands of people take money out of their pensions because they were worried about potential changes. You have had an effect on the housing market. There has been an effect on business investment. This is real-world damage.

























































