IMF Advises UK Chancellor Rachel Reeves to Refine Fiscal Rules
- Reporter 12
- 27 May, 2025
Rachel Reeves should refine her fiscal rules to prevent the need for emergency spending cuts, the International Monetary Fund has suggested in its annual review of the UK economy, as it upgraded its forecasts for UK growth this year.
Adding to the clamour from backbench Labour MPs incensed by the government’s proposed welfare cuts, the Washington-based organisation said the chancellor should examine ways to avoid having to make short-term savings when there is a downturn in economic forecasts.
Reeves came under renewed pressure on Tuesday from the Reform UK leader, Nigel Farage, who said his party would fully reinstate the winter fuel allowance that Reeves controversially scrapped for most pensioners when Labour came to power last year. Keir Starmer last week signalled a partial U-turn on winter fuel, with payments to be reinstated for some previous claimants.
On Tuesday the education secretary, Bridget Phillipson, gave the strongest hint yet that ministers intend to end the two-child benefit cap, something Farage also pledged.
An easing of the framework around the fiscal rules could give Reeves more breathing space on spending cuts. The IMF said the current system, inherited from the previous Conservative government, of twice-yearly assessments of the public finances by the Office for Budget Responsibility was ripe for an overhaul.
Instead, limiting the OBR’s assessment of the fiscal rules to once a year – at the time of the autumn budget – could “promote further policy stability”, the IMF said.
It said that currently, “there is still significant pressure for frequent fiscal policy changes, given that small revisions to the economic outlook can erode the headroom within the rules, which is the subject of intense market and media scrutiny”.
It was the need to marry up the fiscal rules, which demand that the chancellor balance the books without borrowing to cover day-to-day spending, with the OBR’s forecasts in March that forced Reeves to announce savings at the spring statement, including cutting more than £5bn from the welfare budget.
Many Labour backbenchers have also called for a rethink on the fiscal rules, but Reeves and senior Treasury officials have repeatedly argued that they are “non-negotiable”.
As well as reducing OBR forecasts to once a year, the IMF suggested introducing a process to avoid small fiscal rule breaches from requiring corrective measures outside of the autumn budget. However, it said extra tax rises or spending cuts could still be necessary “if shocks arise”, adding that failure to keep spending within the rules risked a backlash from markets.
The IMF upgraded the UK’s expected growth rate this year to 1.2% from 1.1%, reversing a small portion of a large downgrade in April from October’s expected growth rate for 2025 of 1.6%.
The slightly higher forecast follows the UK economy’s stronger than expected start to 2025, with growth of 0.7% recorded in the January-March quarter.
However, the IMF warned that trade tensions linked to US tariff plans will reduce UK economic growth next year. It expects global trade tensions will wipe 0.3 percentage points off growth for the year, but is still predicting the economy will expand by 1.4% in 2026.
IMF officials, who have spent the past three weeks in the UK assessing the economy and public finances, praised Reeves for taking a tough line on government day-to-day spending in last October’s budget and for directing spare funds to public investment.
Leave a Reply
Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *
AlexZolotov
Плотная застройка — испытание для любой техники. Почему телескопическая автовышка здесь играет в свою лигу? Рассказываем, и ещё много интересного вы найдёте на канале. https://t.me/s/kupit_gruzoviki/63






