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Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.
Rachel Reeves was adamant. After announcing ยฃ40bn of higher taxes and a near-ยฃ70bn in extra public spending in her first Budget last October, the chancellor told a business audience she had drawn a line in the sand.ย
โIโm really clear, Iโm not coming back with more borrowing or more taxes,โ she told the CBI employers organisation last November, insisting the public finances were now on โa firm footingโ.
Those words have not aged well, as Reeves confronts a summer of speculation that she will be forced to increase taxes or borrowing โ or both โ to stay within the claustrophobic confines of her fiscal rules.
Reeves won some comfort from the IMF on Tuesday, which said the chancellorโs fiscal strategy was โcredible and growth-friendlyโ. But it also warned there were โsignificant risksโ associated with delivering it, making extra tax rises or spending cuts necessary โif shocks ariseโ.
The IMF, which spends weeks talking to the Treasury before producing its annual โArticle IVโ health check on the British economy, suggested tweaking the UKโs fiscal framework to promote โpolicy stabilityโ between Budgets.
Problems are piling up: borrowing costs are rising and the chancellorโs attempts to save money by cutting benefits have run into fierce opposition from the public and Labour MPs, whose tolerance for cuts appears to be exhausted.
Last week Sir Keir Starmer retreated on the governmentโs ยฃ1.5bn plan to restrict how many pensioners receive winter fuel payments. Now he is looking to cut the Conservative-era two-child benefit cap, at a cost of up to a further ยฃ3.5bn.
Add to that forecasts of sluggish medium-term growth, Donald Trumpโs trade wars and a possible downgrade in the productivity forecasts by the Office for Budget Responsibility and Reevesโ difficulties become clear.
Some economists reckon Reevesโ flimsy ยฃ9.9bn headroom against her fiscal rules will be eviscerated, leaving her having to find billions of pounds to keep balancing the books.
โThe [fiscal] rules are almost certainly going to be broken,โ said Stephen Millard, interim director of the National Institute of Economic and Social Research. He added that getting the public finances back on track was a problem for the chancellor given her commitment not to raise any of the โbig threeโ taxes โ income tax, employee national insurance and value added tax.
โIf the chancellor wants to match the spending that she has currently plannedโ.โ.โ. then Iโd be inclined to increase at least the higher rate of income tax, if not the basic rate,โ he added.ย
โItโs pretty inevitable that she will have to raise taxes, because what I canโt see is cuts in spending.โ
Isabel Stockton, senior research economist at the Institute for Fiscal Studies, said the government could still get โluckyโ but that it โcertainly seems likely that something else would have to giveโ to accommodate permanent increases to public spending, such as scrapping the two-child benefit cap.
โThere are lots of options, but itโs always difficult to raise substantive amounts in a way thatโs predictable without touching the big three taxes,โ they added.
Reevesโ allies insist that the chancellor will not use her next Autumn Budget to break free from her fiscal straitjacket by junking her fiscal rules. โThey are non-negotiable,โ said one. Reeves has called them โiron cladโ.
But the IMF has suggested that the OBR in future only conduct a single annual assessment of the fiscal rules โ at the time of the Budget โ rather than twice a year.
The fund wants to stop the constant public speculation on fiscal โheadroomโ and likely tax increases that it thinks is responsible for poor decisions taken in government. IMF officials note that no other country is so obsessed with small movements in its public finances.
The Treasury would love to see this happen, according to government officials, to avoid the kind of chaos that accompanied Reevesโ spring statement in March, when she was forced to make ยฃ14bn of last minute savings to stay within her fiscal rules after the OBRโs forecasts worsened.
James Smith, research director at the Resolution Foundation, said the problem was not just having a particular target, but also the โvery historically low levelโ of headroom, which meant any shock required the government to tighten policy.
The assessment of whether the government is meeting its fiscal rules is currently a mandatory duty of the OBR every time it produces a forecast under a 2011 Act of Parliament. This would need to change, although the government tweaked the OBRโs duties in 2024 with supplementary legislation.ย
While that might help the chancellor avoid yet more tax rises in her spring statement of 2026, it does nothing to help her off the hook when it comes to this yearโs Budget, which is looking more problematic by the day.


