A defiant Rachel Reeves has urged Labour MPs to unite behind this week’s budget – but appeared to admit they might not like all of her policies.
Addressing the Parliamentary Labour Party last night, the chancellor described politics as a “team sport” and insisted that tomorrow’s announcements will be “fair”.
Backbenchers are said to have become increasingly frustrated at the prospect of further tax hikes, which come against a backdrop of falling opinion poll ratings.
Ms Reeves argued the budget should be regarded as a package – and not a “pick ‘n’ mix” where MPs “like the cola bottles but not the fruit salad”.
She added that her three top priorities were to cut the cost of living, reduce NHS waiting lists and slash the cost of servicing debt – with £1 in every £10 now spent on interest.
Newspaper reports suggest there were cheers in the room when Ms Reeves vowed to stay in Number 11 and withstand criticism about her handling of the economy.
She was quoted as saying: “I’ll show the media, I’ll show the Tories, I will not let them beat me, I’ll be there on Wednesday, I’ll be there next year, and I’ll be back the year after that.”
The chancellor suggested Labour MPs will be happy with 95% of the budget’s contents, but hinted there are difficult political decisions yet to be announced.
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2:33
Is growth downgrade a problem for Reeves?
Setback for Reeves as growth forecasts cut
Yesterday, Sky News revealed that the Office for Budget Responsibility’s growth forecasts are going to be downgraded every year until the current parliament ends in 2029.
But he added: “However you cut it, whatever the reasoning, once again, last year, growth will be lower after this budget than before, which is not a great position for a government that had claimed growth as their top priority.”
In some better news for the government, Ms Reeves is expected to announce that she has more headroom than first thought – meaning ministers will be able to claim that the country is no longer in an “economic doom loop”.
“That might well be one of the positive surprises when we actually get to Wednesday’s budget,” Coates added on the Politics At Sam and Anne’s podcast.
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1:18
Employment Rights Bill is ‘anti-growth blueprint’
‘I think she’s doing a terrible job’
Meanwhile, Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch has accused the government of stymying growth and pursuing “job-killing measures”.
She told Sky News that she thinks Ms Reeves is “doing a terrible job” as chancellor – and warned Labour should pay close attention to public perception of the budget.
“A lot of people out there in the country, men and women, thinks that she needs to cut tax, and if she raises it, then she should go,” Ms Badenoch added.
At the CBI conference in London yesterday, the Opposition leader urged the government to scrap the Employment Rights Bill – describing it as an “assault on flexible working” that would empower trade unions and drag the UK back to the 1970s.
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1:02
How do business leaders feel before budget?
Ms Badenoch said: “Killing it would be a signal to the world that Britain still understands what makes an economy grow.
“If the chancellor had any sense, and any regard for business, she would use the budget to say ‘we got this one wrong’ and drop it.”
This Employment Rights Bill includes measures that would ban zero hours contracts, but Ms Badenoch has argued that this would amount to a “de facto ban” on seasonal and flexible work.
The CBI conference marks a difficult anniversary for the government – with attention turning to the speech Ms Reeves gave there a year ago.
Having already delivered her first budget, she had told businesses that she was “not coming back with more borrowing or more taxes” – a statement that flies in the face of what the chancellor is expected to unveil tomorrow.
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2:34
Can the budget fix economic woes?
Greens call for wealth tax
In other developments, the Green Party has called on the government to introduce a 1% tax on wealth over £10m – rising to 2% over £1bn. Its estimates suggest this measure could help potentially raise £15bn a year in revenues.
Zack Polanski also wants the rates of capital gains tax, which is currently one of the lowest among G7 nations, to be raised in line with income tax.
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3:35
Sky News goes inside the room where the budget happens
Announcements have been gradually trickling through ahead of the budget tomorrow, with the chancellor widely expected to freeze income tax thresholds once again.
Over the weekend, it was confirmed that rail fares in England will be frozen for the first time since the 1990s – meaning some commuters will save hundreds of pounds on season tickets.
Rachel Reeves needs to “make the case” to voters that extending the freeze on personal income thresholds was the “fairest” way to increase taxes, Baroness Harriet Harman has said.
Speaking to Sky News political editor Beth Rigby on the Electoral Dysfunction podcast, the Labour peer said the chancellor needed to explain that her decision would “protect people’s cost of living if they’re on low incomes”.
In her budget on Wednesday, Ms Reeves extended the freeze on income tax thresholds – introduced by the Conservatives in 2021 and due to expire in 2028 – by three years.
The move – described by critics as a “stealth tax” – is estimated to raise £8bn for the exchequer in 2029-2030 by dragging some 1.7 million people into a higher tax band as their pay goes up.
Image: Rachel Reeves, pictured the day after delivering the budget. Pic: PA
The chancellor previously said she would not freeze thresholds as it would “hurt working people” – prompting accusations she has broken the trust of voters.
During the general election campaign, Labour promised not to increase VAT, national insurance or income tax rates.
He has also launched a staunch defence of the government’s decision to scrap the two-child benefit cap, with its estimated cost of around £3bn by the end of this parliament.
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4:30
Prime minister defends budget
‘A moral failure’
The prime minister condemned the Conservative policy as a “failed social experiment” and said those who defend it stand for “a moral failure and an economic disaster”.
“The record highs of child poverty in this country aren’t just numbers on a spreadsheet – they mean millions of children are going to bed hungry, falling behind at school, and growing up believing that a better future is out of reach despite their parents doing everything right,” he said.
The two-child limit restricts child tax credit and universal credit to the first two children in most households.
The government believes lifting the limit will pull 450,000 children out of poverty, which it argues will ultimately help reduce costs by preventing knock-on issues like dependency on welfare – and help people find jobs.
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8:46
Budget winners and losers
Speaking to Rigby, Baroness Harman said Ms Reeves now needed to convince “the woman on the doorstep” of why she’s raised taxes in the way that she has.
“I think Rachel really answered it very, very clearly when she said, ‘well, actually, we haven’t broken the manifesto because the manifesto was about rates’.
“And you remember there was a big kerfuffle before the budget about whether they would increase the rate of income tax or the rate of national insurance, and they backed off that because that would have been a breach of the manifesto.
“But she has had to increase the tax take, and she’s done it by increasing by freezing the thresholds, which she says she didn’t want to do. But she’s tried to do it with the fairest possible way, with counterbalancing support for people on low incomes.”
She added: “And that is the argument that’s now got to be had with the public. The Labour members of parliament are happy about it. The markets essentially are happy about it. But she needs to make the case, and everybody in the government is going to need to make the case about it.
“This was a difficult thing to do, but it’s been done in the fairest possible way, and it’s for the good, because it will protect people’s cost of living if they’re on low incomes.”
With all the speculation, it was always going to be a big one, but Rachel Reeves’s second budget turned into a political earthquake before she even stood up at the despatch box.
In this bumper budget special, Beth, Ruth, and Harriet unpick what happened on one of the most dramatic days in the fiscal calendar.
With the unprecedented leak of the Office for Budget Responsibility’s assessment giving the opposition a sneak preview, Kemi Badenoch delivered a fiery attack. Listeners weigh in on their thoughts of her comebacks.
Send us your messages and Christmas-themed questions on WhatsApp at 07934 200 444 or email electoraldysfunction@sky.uk.
And if you didn’t know, you can also watch Beth, Harriet, and Ruth on YouTube.
St. James’s Place sponsors Electoral Dysfunction on Sky News, learn more here.
The South African Reserve Bank says it doesn’t see a need for a central bank digital currency in the near term, instead saying the country should modernize its payments system.
The South African central bank said in a paper released on Thursday that there was no “strong immediate need” for a retail CBDC, though deploying one was technically feasible.
It said that existing initiatives, such as a program to modernize the payments system and expand non-bank participation in the national payment system, should remain the priority for now.
“While the SARB does not currently advocate for the implementation of a retail CBDC, it will continue to monitor developments and will remain prepared to act should the need arise.”
The central bank will shift its focus toward exploring wholesale CBDC applications and cross-border payment efficiency, while continuing to monitor retail CBDC developments, it stated.
Central bank issues crypto and stablecoin warning
The research examined whether a retail CBDC would address gaps in South Africa’s payment system, revealing that challenges persist as roughly 16% of adults remain unbanked.
For a CBDC to succeed, it would need to match or exceed the benefits of cash, including offline functionality, universal acceptance, low costs, ease of use, and privacy features, it stated.
South Africa has turned against crypto recently, with a warning from its central bank about crypto and stablecoins.
In a report released earlier this week, the SARB flagged “crypto assets and stablecoins” as a new risk for technology-enabled financial innovation.
The bank also cautioned that crypto can be used to circumvent Exchange Control Regulations, which control the inflows and outflows of funds to South Africa.
CBDC race continues across the globe
Only three countries have officially launched a CBDC: Nigeria, Jamaica and The Bahamas, according to the Atlantic Council CBDC Tracker.
There are 49 countries that have CBDCs in a pilot testing phase, 20 countries actively developing one, and 36 countries are researching a CBDC. Meanwhile, the United States shelved its CBDC plans under the Trump administration.
CBDC race continues globally. Source: Atlantic Council