Aimed at fueling economic growth, it proposed broader tax and regulation cuts in a 45 billion pounds ($50 billion) package that was unfunded, leaving Britons wondering which already strained public services might be cut to save money.The plan to borrow more to fund the tax cuts was roundly rejected as unsound by economists, with the value of the pound plummeting and the cost for the U.K. to borrow on international markets soaring.The move earned a rare rebuke from the International Monetary Fund, which urged the government to “re-evaluate” a plan that may fuel already-soaring inflation and increase economic inequality.Despite Monday's reversal, Kwarteng said the government was sticking to its other tax policies, including a cut next year in the basic rate of income tax.A BBC Nottingham presenter described the top rate income tax cut as a "reverse Robin Hood" policy and asked Truss: “Why don’t you just hold your hands up and say, ‘This is a mess, we got it wrong and we’re going to do something different'?""