Under the OBR’s October forecast, Reeves was on track to meet the target by a margin of only £9.9bn, or 0.3 per cent of GDP.
Well, the government said they were prepared to be unpopular, but is coverage like today’s really what they meant?
Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves said she believes the UK can strike an agreement with the US to avoid tariffs on ...
RACHEL Reeves should work closer with business to fund infrastructure projects rather than stretch public finances, a ...
He said the forecasts for 2025 and 2026 are "driven primarily by an increase in government expenditure, but it's also ...
Rachel Reeves is on track to break her fiscal rules after an economic downturn in the wake of Labour’s record tax-raising ...
Think tank says GDP growth is likely to be 0.2 percentage points lower in the first year of tariffs if implemented by the US ...
The National Institute of Economic and Social Research (NIESR) has revealed that Reeves’s £9.9 billion fiscal headroom has ...
With weak growth forecast, the Chancellor is walking a tightrope to avoid tax rises and spending cuts ...
The National Institute of Economy & Social Research now believes the UK will grow at twice the speed expected by the Bank of ...
New research has suggested that concerns over payment defaults remain a "critical risk" for six in 10 of 1,417 UK businesses ...
The UK economy may have shrunk in the fourth quarter, putting Britain back on the brink of recession and piling more pressure ...