Britain has “no choice at all” but to engage with China, Rachel Reeves has argued, as she seeks to shore up economic growth against a backdrop of soaring borrowing costs and uneasy financial markets.
The chancellor arrived in Beijing to finalise new trade and investment commitments worth £600 million over five years, the first trip by a UK chancellor to China in over half a decade.
Her visit comes as the UK grapples with stubbornly high inflation and renewed doubts over how quickly the Bank of England can cut interest rates. The yield on 30-year government debt remains at a 27-year high, while the pound has lost ground against the dollar — both unwelcome echoes of last year’s market turmoil.
Reeves reaffirmed her “non-negotiable” fiscal rules, emphasising that economic stability is vital to restoring confidence. The Treasury’s upcoming spending review is already expected to demand efficiency savings of at least 5 per cent across Whitehall, and the spike in debt-servicing costs could see that figure rise further. Reeves has vowed not to repeat the tax hikes of last autumn, though her options have narrowed as inflationary pressures remain persistent.
Paul Johnson, director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies, warned that any breach of the chancellor’s self-imposed borrowing limits would rattle the markets and send yields higher still. That scenario looms larger with the cost of servicing the government’s debt surging and subdued economic growth undermining tax receipts.
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