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Home UK Politics

Chancellor set to cut welfare spending by billions

March 5, 2025
in Politics
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Getty Images Chancellor Rachel Reeves leaves Downing Street after the weekly cabinet meeting on January 21, 2025 in London, EnglandGetty Images

The chancellor has earmarked several billion pounds in draft spending cuts to welfare and other government departments ahead of the Spring Statement.

The Treasury will put the proposed cuts to the government’s official forecaster, the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR), on Wednesday amid expectations the chancellor’s financial buffer has been wiped out.

Sources said “the world has changed” since Rachel Reeves’s Budget last October, when the OBR indicated she had £9.9bn available to spend against her self-imposed borrowing rules.

The OBR’s forecast is likely to see that disappear because of global factors such as trade tariffs, as well as higher inflation and borrowing costs in the UK.

The Treasury will on Wednesday inform the OBR of its “major measures” -essentially changes to tax and spending in order to meet the chancellor’s self-imposed rules on borrowing money.

The government has committed to get debt falling as a share of the economy during the course of this Parliament, and to only borrow to fund investment, not to cover day-to-day spending.

Such rules are put in place by most governments in wealthy nations and are designed to maintain credibility with financial markets. Reeves has repeatedly said her rules are “non-negotiable”.

The spending cuts drafted by the Treasury will help plug the gap that has emerged in recent months, ahead of the OBR publishing its forecast and Reeves giving a statement on 26 March.

Insiders expect “politically painful” new welfare cuts that are designed to reduce the huge growth in health-related benefits, which will be outlined in a forthcoming speech from Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall.

The Treasury has blamed global economic policy and geopolitical uncertainty for hiking up government borrowing costs.

Asked on Wednesday if welfare cuts were the right approach, Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood told the BBC’s Today programme there had been a “huge rise in the welfare budget” and there were “too many” young people not in work, education or training.

“There’s a moral case here for making sure that people who can work are able to work and there’s a practical point here as well, because our current situation is unsustainable,” he added.

Mahmood declined to comment on whether the justice department would face cuts, saying she was “not going to get ahead” of Treasury announcements.

This week, US President Donald Trump imposed tariffs on its three biggest trading partners: Canada, Mexico and China. Trump indicated that the UK could avoid border taxes, but Reeves told the BBC on Tuesday that even if the UK is not hit by tariffs, a global trade war would lower growth and raise inflation.

Uncertainty over the war in Ukraine also remains, with the UK deciding to boost defence spending by cutting international aid.

One government insider told the BBC: “Clearly the world has changed a lot since the autumn Budget. People are watching that change happen before their eyes.

“The Office for Budget Responsibility will reflect that changing world in its forecasts later this month and a changing world will be a core feature of the chancellor’s response later this month.”

It is understood that the euro area economy stagnating and lower UK productivity numbers have affected the OBR’s forecast.

But there have also been concerns raised about the impact of Reeves’s previously announced tax rises on businesses, which are set to take effect in April, on the UK economy.

Firms have warned the higher tax will likely be passed on through increased prices for customers. Inflation, which is a measure used to give a general picture of how living costs have changed over a year, is expect to rise in the coming months as households are hit with increases to energy, water and council tax bills, among others.

In the run-up to the Spring Statement, Cabinet Office minister Pat McFadden and Health Secretary Wes Streeting will also outline a significant efficiency drive within the civil service, which they hope will lead to significant headcount and cost savings.

The chancellor will argue that the government was always going to “fix welfare to get people back to work” and “make the NHS more productive”.

An insider told the BBC: “Headroom or no headroom, the chancellor is determined to push through the change we need to make Britain more secure and prosperous, with the whole government making that argument in the coming weeks.”

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Tags: billionsChancellorcutsetspendingwelfare

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