The date of the next Budget has been announced, accompanied by the new Chancellor’s warning about government finances.
Chancellor Rachel Reeves’ first announcement on entering 11 Downing Street was the commissioning of a ‘spending inheritance’ review from the Treasury. Her decision to do so was questioned by the opposition (Conservatives), among others, who argued that the state of public finances had been made clear in the report from the Office of Budget Responsibility (OBR) in March. However, the OBR’s grim outlook was studiously ignored during the election campaign by both main parties, prompting the Institute for Fiscal Studies to complain of “a conspiracy of silence”. Post-election, the new ministers were told to ‘bring out your dead’ – pull together their departments’ financial problems. The result was a steady flow of dire warnings on prisons, the NHS, universities, and more. This was followed by a welter of gloomy reports from the National Audit Office on 23 July, the publication of which had been delayed by the election. Finally, on 29 July, Rachel Reeves bundled the bad news inside her Treasury-commissioned review and broke the IFS’s conspiracy of silence. In her words, “There were things that I did not know”, which in total represented a projected overspend of £22 billion in the current financial year. Two immediate actions she announced in response were to:
If you are considering any financial planning in the near term – perhaps pension contributions of gifts to grandchildren – talk to us about the wisdom (or otherwise) of acting before 30 October. Full details of the Chancellor’s statement can be found here. Comments are closed.
|
Archives
November 2024
|