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		UK government plugs hole in finances as 2025 growth forecast is halved 
		to 1%
		[March 27, 2025]  By 
		PAN PYLAS 
		LONDON (AP) — The British economy will only grow by 1% this year, half 
		the rate previously anticipated, Treasury chief Rachel Reeves conceded 
		Wednesday in a statement to lawmakers about the state of the public 
		finances that saw her trim spending so she could meet her self-imposed 
		borrowing rules.
 Against that sluggish economic backdrop that she blamed on “global 
		uncertainty,” but which critics say she is largely responsible for, 
		Reeves insisted that it was imperative that the government lived within 
		its means.
 
 Doing so, she said, was “an embodiment of this government’s unwavering 
		commitment to bring stability to our economy.”
 
 Reeves' statement came after the government's independent forecaster, 
		the Office for Budget Responsibility, or OBR, found a 14 billion-pound 
		($18 billion) shortfall in light of the growth shortfall and higher debt 
		interest payments.
 
 Reeves, whose official title is Chancellor of the Exchequer, has partly 
		sought to fill that hole with measures to rein in tax avoidance and tax 
		evasion, and by lowering the day-to-day costs of running government.
 
 Far more controversial are planned welfare cuts that have caused 
		widespread unease within the governing left-of-center Labour Party. 
		While a government-backed assessment found that the changes to 
		disability benefits could push 250,000 people, including 50,000 
		children, into poverty, Reeves said that didn't account for how the 
		changes will move people into work and away from welfare.
 
 “That’s the best way to lift families out of poverty,” she said.
 
 
		
		 
		Longer-term, the OBR forecasts were a bit more positive for the 
		government with housing starts on course to meet a four-decade high 
		following widespread planning reforms. Reeves was able to point to 
		higher growth forecasts for the years ahead which, if they prove 
		accurate, should ease the pressure on her to lower spending or increase 
		taxes in the remaining years of this Parliament, which can run until the 
		middle of 2029.
 However, the agency said the outlook looks “risky,” particularly on the 
		international front. It highlighted risks posed by the prospect of a 
		global trade war in light of the tariff policies being enacted by the 
		Trump administration.
 
 Paul Johnson, director of the well-respected Institute for Fiscal 
		Studies, said another growth downgrade in the fall ahead of the annual 
		budget is “entirely possible” and that Reeves has left herself at the 
		“mercy of events” given her iron-clad adherence to her fiscal rules.
 
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            Protesters demonstrate as Britain's Chancellor Rachel Reeves is 
			about to leave 11 Downing Street to deliver the spring statement in 
			London, Wednesday, March 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth) 
            
			
			
			 
		“What the Chancellor has all but guaranteed is another six months of 
		damaging speculation and uncertainty over tax policy,” he said.
 Reflecting geopolitical turbulence caused by the return of U.S. 
		President Donald Trump, Reeves told lawmakers that a “more insecure 
		world” requires a greater focus on national security.
 
 As a result, she confirmed a 2.2 billion-pound ($2.9 billion) increase 
		in defense spending, which Prime Minister Keir Starmer has said is the 
		biggest increase since the end of the Cold War.
 
 “This additional investment is not just about increasing our national 
		security but increasing our economic security, too,” Reeves said. “As 
		defense spending rises, I want the whole country to feel the benefits.”
 
 The British economy, the sixth-largest in the world, has underperformed 
		its long-run average since the global financial crisis of 2008-9, and 
		the new Labour government has made boosting growth its number one 
		economic policy.
 
 Critics say Reeves is partly responsible for gloomy economic news since 
		Labour returned to power in July after 14 years, because she was overly 
		downbeat when taking on her role and has since increased taxes, 
		particularly on businesses.
 
 “She is the architect of her own misfortune,” said Mel Stride, the 
		economy spokesperson for the main opposition Conservative Party.
 
 Reeves received some welcome news Wednesday, with official figures 
		showing that consumer price inflation fell to 2.8% from 3% the previous 
		month. Though still above the Bank of England's 2% target, Reeves will 
		hope that easing price pressures will lead to further interest rate 
		reductions that would lower the government's debt interest
 
			
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