Rishi Sunak will take personal responsibility if inflation in the UK has not halved by the end of the year.
The prime minister was speaking to Sky News political editor Beth Rigby during a visit to Washington DC where he will meet President Biden.
Mr Sunak has made a significant amount of noise about his five priorities, which he says are also the “people’s priorities”.
Politics latest:
‘Where is missing £21bn’, asks Labour
They include: Halve inflation, grow the economy, reduce debt, cut waiting lists, and stop the boats.
He promised in January – when inflation was 10.1% – to tackle price growth to help with the cost of living crisis.
The most recent figures from the Office for National Statistics had inflation easing to 8.7% – but food inflation remained at nearly 20% and core price inflation is at a 30-year-high.
“First, we will halve inflation this year to ease the cost of living and give people financial security,” Mr Sunak said in his January speech.
Speaking today, Beth Rigby asked him: “Two of your five pledges – inflation down by the end of the year, the UK out of recession by the end of the year.
“If you fail on either of them, do you take personal responsibility, you don’t blame the Bank of England, you don’t blame consumers, you don’t blame business. It’s on you personally because it’s your personal pledges?”
Be the first to get Breaking News
Install the Sky News app for free
The prime minister said: “Of course it’s on me personally. I’m the prime minister. I’m the person who set out those five pledges to halve inflation, grow the economy, reduce debt, cut waiting lists, and to stop the boats, and I intend to deliver on those.”
Mr Sunak added: “When it comes to growing the economy, as you mentioned, we’ve already avoided the recession that many predicted. People are upgrading our growth forecasts as we speak.
Read more:
Chancellor comfortable with recession if it brings down inflation
Sunak has staked his premiership on five pledges but there are no easy answers
“I’m announcing £14bn of investment into the UK, which is going to support thousands of jobs. And just this week I managed to explain to the country how we’re progressing our boats plan, which means that this year, crossings into the UK down by almost a fifth over the first five months of this year.
“So look, the plans are working, but I’m not complacent. There’s work to do and I intend to deliver.”