The Los Angeles Post
U.S. World Business Lifestyle
Today: April 02, 2025
Today: April 02, 2025

New UK government cuts billions of pounds of spending to fix 'unsustainable' finances

FILE PHOTO: British opposition Labour Party leader Starmer visits Airbus Defence and Space, in Stevenage
July 28, 2024

By David Milliken and Kylie MacLellan

LONDON (Reuters) -Britain's new finance minister, Rachel Reeves, told parliament her Conservative predecessor had left public spending on track to go over budget by 21.9 billion pounds ($28 billion) this year and announced an immediate 5.5 billion pounds of cuts.

Reeves pencilled in a further 8.1 billion pounds of cuts for the next financial year and promised more measures at a full budget on Oct. 30, when the newly-elected Labour government would need to make "difficult decisions", including on tax.

New UK government cuts billions of pounds of spending to fix 'unsustainable' finances
FILE PHOTO: Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves gives a speech at the Treasury in London

Part of the cost comes from Reeves' decision to give public-sector workers pay rises costing in total 9.1 billion pounds, following recommendations from independent pay-setting bodies which she said the Conservatives had ignored for too long.

Reeves said the state of the public finances was not sustainable, and posed a risk to economic stability if left unchecked.

"It therefore falls to us to take the difficult decisions now to make further in-year savings," she told parliament.

Elected to run the world's sixth-largest economy in a landslide victory on July 4, Labour has spent much of its first three weeks in power telling voters that things are worse than expected in almost every area of public policy.

Reeves inherited an economy with sluggish growth, public sector net debt at the highest since the early 1960s and a tax burden that is on track to hit a near-80 year high.

The last government had also faced industrial action across the public sector, and Reeves said she would accept the recommendations on increasing pay at above-inflation rates for workers such as teachers and healthcare staff.

In a statement seen by critics as an attempt to pave the way for future tax rises, Reeves accused the former Conservative government of covering up the true state of government spending and said she needed to make difficult decisions to prevent the budget deficit ballooning by 25% this year.

She made cuts to a range of projects such as roadbuilding and restoring railways, said she would review a scheme to rebuild hospitals and set an ambitious target for government departments to squeeze more than 3 billion pounds from their budgets.

She also said she would save around 1.5 billion pounds per year by stopping higher-income pensioners from receiving an annual payment for heating costs.

FALSE HOPE

Reeves commissioned the review of the public finances upon taking office, and used her announcement in parliament to attack the last government, led at different stages by Rishi Sunak, Liz Truss and Boris Johnson.

"They promised solutions that they knew could never be paid for: roads that would never be built, public transport that would never arrive, hospitals that would never treat a single patient."

The Conservatives dismissed her accusations as a pretext for Labour to raise taxes.

"Today's exercise is not economic, it's political. She wants to blame the last Conservative government for tax rises and project cancellations she has been planning all along," said Jeremy Hunt, who was finance minister in the Conservative government.

Paul Johnson, director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS), said some of the funding pressures did appear to be greater than expected.

"Some of the specifics are indeed shocking, and raise some difficult questions for the last government," he said.

Britain's non-partisan Office for Budget Responsibility, which scrutinises governments' tax and spend plans, said it would review how Hunt's budget in March was prepared, saying it was a serious issue.

Reeves stressed that she intends to stick to her party's election campaign commitments not to raise the rates of income tax, value-added tax and other main taxes.

Any other tax changes would come in October's formal budget statement, which Reeves said would contain a new set of non-negotiable fiscal rules.

($1 = 0.7795 pounds)

(Reporting by David Milliken; editing by David Evans, Christina Fincher and Toby Chopra)

Related Articles

What is a tariff and how does it work? Clorox names insider CFO as company veteran Jacobsen to retire Beacon seeks to fend off QXO's hostile takeover with poison pill Trump to address joint session of Congress on March 4
Share This

Popular

Business|Economy|Political|US

Expert predicts what will happen if Trump imposes sweeping tariffs

Expert predicts what will happen if Trump imposes sweeping tariffs
Asia|Business|Economy|Entertainment|Technology

Nintendo to reveal Switch 2 details with pricing, launch date in focus

Nintendo to reveal Switch 2 details with pricing, launch date in focus
Asia|Business|Economy|Political|US

Vietnam to send deputy PM on US trip as tariffs loom, Bloomberg News reports

Vietnam to send deputy PM on US trip as tariffs loom, Bloomberg News reports
Business|Economy|Europe

Volvo Cars sales fall 10% in March as fully electric sales dive

Volvo Cars sales fall 10% in March as fully electric sales dive

Economy

Business|Economy|Europe|Political|US

Trump tariffs will have massive effect on Italian companies, business lobby warns

Trump tariffs will have massive effect on Italian companies, business lobby warns
Business|Economy|Europe

Tyre maker Bridgestone to cut 546 jobs in Spain on uncertainty, competition

Tyre maker Bridgestone to cut 546 jobs in Spain on uncertainty, competition
Asia|Business|Economy|Finance|Political|Stock Markets|US

Stock market today: Asian shares are mixed ahead of Trump's latest tariffs

Stock market today: Asian shares are mixed ahead of Trump's latest tariffs
Asia|Economy|Health|Political|World

Myanmar junta should widen access for earthquake rescuers, aid and rights groups say

Myanmar junta should widen access for earthquake rescuers, aid and rights groups say

Access this article for free.

Already have an account? Sign In