Ross Clark Ross Clark

Rachel Reeves’ tinkering won’t rescue Britain’s economy

Rachel Reeves is presiding over a dismal economic outlook (Getty)

The news just seems to get worse for Rachel Reeves. After the slight relief of last week’s inflation and GDP figures, this morning brings headlines that are even grimmer than economists expected. The government was forced to borrow £17.8 billion in December, more than twice the £6.7 billion which Rishi Sunak’s government borrowed in December 2023. In just one month, taxpayers had to spend £8.3 billion to service the government’s debt. Interest payments are now consuming over 8 per cent of government expenditure – more than is spent on education or defence – and very nearly as much as the welfare bill, which is itself ballooning.

The Chancellor's immediate problem is that most of her tax rises – in particular the rise in employers’ National Insurance Contributions (NICs) – don’t take effect until April.

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