IMF warns UK to keep budget in check or risk market revolt
[BRUSSELS] UK Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves must stick to her fiscal rules and keep spending under control or risk a market backlash that undermines the government's economic plans, the International Monetary Fund warned.
In its Article IV annual health check of the economy, the world's economic supervisor told Reeves that any additional spending, such as proposals to reverse cuts to winter-fuel subsidies for pensioners or ending the two-child benefit limit, will need to be covered by other savings or tax rises.
The government needs 'to stay the course and deliver the planned deficit reduction over the next five years to stabilise net debt and reduce vulnerability to gilt market pressures,' the fund said.
Global trade uncertainty and market shocks could yet derail the outlook, it added. 'Materialisation of these risks could result in market pressures, put debt on an upward path, and make it harder to meet the fiscal rules, given limited headroom.' The IMF proposed 'additional revenue or expenditure measures as needed if shocks arise.'
Its recommendations come ahead of the June 11 Spending Review, when Reeves will set budget limits for government departments for the next three years. She fixed the envelope in March but left just £9.9 billion (S$17.2 billion) of headroom against her main fiscal rule that taxes must cover day-to-day spending by the end of the parliament, one of the smallest margins on record.
Reeves has already experienced the reaction of gilt markets to any hint of fiscal laxity at a time when the national debt is close to 100 per cent of gross domestic product. Her big-borrowing budget in October drove up debt costs, more than wiping out her fiscal buffer as yields on long-end debt soared to a 27-year high. Reeves was forced to slash spending in the March Spring Statement to repair the damage.
Pressure on the public purse has mounted in recent days. The government has promised to unwind the cut to winter fuel payments, which would cost up to £1.8 billion, and is considering raising the two-child cap on benefits, potentially costing another £2.5 billion amid growing calls from within the ruling Labour Party to relax its self-imposed budget limits. Prime Minister Keir Starmer is not ruling out any policy to ease child poverty, his spokesman Dave Pares told reporters on Tuesday, but insisted the government views the fiscal rules as vital and non-negotiable.
'One of the elements why there is intense focus on headroom is because headroom is not very high,' said Luc Eyraud, the IMF's UK mission chief. 'To reduce the reactivity of short-term policy to the concept of headroom, the first solution should be to have higher headroom.' BLOOMBERG
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Straits Times
2 days ago
- Straits Times
US dollar remains dominant despite tariff turmoil, says top IMF official
SINGAPORE - The weakness in the United States' currency and moves in its sovereign bond yields is not a sign of a major structural shift in the global economic order, says a top International Monetary Fund (IMF) official . The movements represent the high level of uncertainty about US trade policy, which is weighing down on US and global economic growth, the IMF's first deputy managing director Gita Gopinath said in an interview with The Straits Times. Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.


CNA
3 days ago
- CNA
IMF first deputy managing director Gita Gopinath on US tariffs, China headwinds
Heightened uncertainty has weighed down on the global economic outlook, with US President Donald Trump's tariffs and headwinds facing China, the world's second-largest economy. CNA's Roland Lim spoke with Ms Gita Gopinath, the International Monetary Fund's first deputy managing director, in a wide-ranging discussion.


CNA
5 days ago
- CNA
Pakistan's central bank holds key rate at 11%, as expected
ISLAMABAD :Pakistan's central bank kept its key interest rate unchanged at 11 per cent on Monday, in line with expectations, as the conflict between Israel and Iran and volatile global oil prices added upside risks to inflation. The State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) briefly paused its easing cycle in March after cutting rates by 10 per centage points from a record high of 22 per cent in June 2024. The central bank announced another 100 basis-point cut in May bringing the key rate to 11 per cent. Eleven out of 14 analysts in a Reuters poll had forecast the SBP would hold the rate steady, citing inflationary risks from Israel's recent military strikes on Iran and their impact on global commodity markets. Headline inflation rose to 3.5 per cent in May, exceeding the finance ministry's projection of up to 2 per cent. The central bank expects average inflation to range between 5.5 per cent and 7.5 per cent for the current fiscal year, which ends this month. The decision also comes on the heels of Pakistan's contractionary budget, where it cut total spending by 7 per cent and set a GDP target of 4.2 per cent for fiscal year 2025-26. The government said the $350 billion economy is stabilising under a $7 billion IMF programme, though analysts remain wary of external and fiscal pressures.