Rachel Reeves has confirmed that she will deliver an early spring statement on 3 March, as the Treasury moves to restore confidence after a year in which prolonged tax speculation was blamed by businesses for weakening the UK economy.
In announcing the date, the Treasury said the chancellor had formally asked the Office for Budget Responsibility to prepare updated forecasts for the economy and the public finances. The move is intended to provide “stability and certainty” following widespread criticism of the extended build-up to November’s budget, which many business leaders said had stalled investment and hiring decisions.
Reeves has faced sustained criticism over the months of leaks, briefings and policy kite-flying that preceded the autumn budget, with economists and industry groups arguing that the uncertainty contributed to a downturn in consumer spending and a freeze in private sector activity. Official data later showed the economy unexpectedly contracted in October, while the Bank of England has warned that growth is close to flatlining at the end of the year.
Business surveys have also pointed to a sharp slowdown in activity around the turn of the year, with firms delaying spending decisions until greater clarity emerged on tax and regulatory changes. Economists said the uncertainty was exacerbated by the limited headroom Reeves initially left against her self-imposed fiscal rules, increasing the risk that even a modest deterioration in the public finance outlook could force further tax rises or spending cuts.
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