The middle classes are unaware of the scale of government spending cuts that will hit them this year, Justice Secretary Ken Clarke has said.
Mr Clarke said the coalition should be prepared for political difficulty when Middle England feels the full impact.
He told the Daily Telegraph he did not envisage a "quick rebound" for an economy in a "calamitous" state.
Shadow Treasury Chief Secretary Angela Eagle said the government's plan for the economy "isn't working".
'Very difficult'"Start Quote
End Quote Ken Clarke Justice SecretaryIf someone says it's not as bad as all that, I say [they] just don't realise the calamitous position we're in"
Mr Clarke told the Telegraph: "One reason we're going to get some political difficulty is that [while] the public knows we've got to do something about it, I don't think Middle England has quite taken on board the scale of the problem.
"That will emerge as the cuts start coming home this year. We've got to get on with it [but] it's going to be very difficult.
"If someone says it's not as bad as all that, I say [they] just don't realise the calamitous position we're in."
BBC political correspondent Carole Walker says that while Mr Clarke supports the chancellor's deficit reduction plan, his tone is downbeat in contrast to the Treasury's recent efforts to point to some more encouraging economic figures.
'Economy stalled'Ms Eagle said Mr Clarke should be worried about "economic difficulty", not just political difficulty.
"The Tory-led government may have boasted before Christmas that Britain was recovering and out of the danger zone, but their decisions have meant the economy has now stalled and both unemployment and inflation are rising." she said.
"And this is before the full impact of the VAT hike and deep spending cuts have been felt."
She added: "Ken Clarke should come clean that his government made a political choice to reduce the deficit in this way. No other major economy is cutting this far and this fast."
In the interview, the justice secretary also questions Downing Street's hopes of limiting an extension of the vote in elections to prisoners serving up to one year, saying four years would be a more realistic figure.
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