The UK government announced looser fiscal conditions over the medium-term. The Autumn Statement forecasts greater deficit over the next five years, with additional borrowing of GBP 122 bn. The commitment for a balanced budget is postponed after the current parliament, and the debt-to-GDP ratio will start decreasing later than expected. The main announcements were a higher minimum wage, an infrastructure spending plan and a stronger and faster cutin the corporate tax rate. Doubts over the plan are numerous. First, economic assumptions are quite optimistic, even though both growth forecasts and potential growth rate estimates have been revised down. Second, even if the plan is for more borrowing than previously planned, austerity is not reversed, just softened. The cyclically adjusted deficit is still planned to be reduced, each year a bit more. Over the next five years, it would be reduced from3.8% of GDP (FY 2015-16) to 0.7%. This remains a huge drag, especially at a time of turbulences. The question is about the credibility and/or the opportunity of such apolicy. The hardest the Brexit will be, the hardest the economy will be hit. As the Bank of England might end up constrained by the value of the pound (too easy a policy would strengthen downward pressures and upward pressures on consumer prices) as its tolerance for inflation overshooting target is not infinite, fiscal policy would prove the only game in town. The choice will be whether to support a weakened economy (and abandon austerity) or to obey the sound-finances dogma and let the economy fall...

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