Further
benefits cuts planned as Rachel Reeves forced to find extra £1.6bn
Chancellor
risks wrath of Labour backbenchers with spring statement set to confirm deeper
cuts
Heather
Stewart, Kiran Stacey and Richard Partington
Tue 25 Mar
2025 23.23 GMT
Rachel
Reeves will make additional welfare cuts in her spring statement on Wednesday
after the Office for Budget Responsibility rejected her estimate of savings
from the changes announced last week.
The
chancellor hoped to shift the focus from the benefits cuts, which appalled some
Labour backbenchers, to promising to “secure Britain’s future” with a £2.2bn
increase to defence spending.
But it is
understood final estimates from the OBR suggested the changes announced by Liz
Kendall, the work and pensions secretary, which included tightening the
criteria for the personal independence payment (Pip), would not save the £5bn
needed to meet Reeves’s self-imposed fiscal rules.
The
chancellor is expected to announce an additional £500m in benefits cuts to make
up part of the £1.6bn shortfall, first reported by the Times – with the rest of
the gap filled by spending cuts elsewhere.
Reeves and
her team were already braced for a renewed backlash over welfare as they
prepared to publish impact assessments alongside Wednesday’s statement, which
will show the full impact of the cuts.
The
additional measures are expected to include freezing the extra universal credit
payment made to those people least able to work until 2030, after an initial
cut.
Some
frontbenchers had previously suggested they could quit over a proposed freeze
to Pip, which was not included in Kendall’s package.
Despite the
last-minute scramble to find savings, the chancellor is nevertheless expected
to strike a robust note when she addresses MPs, facing down growing speculation
she will be forced to raise taxes – perhaps as soon as the autumn.
The
additional £2.2bn defence spending for next year is a down payment against the
government’s target of spending 2.5% of GDP on defence – paid for by cutting
aid spending and dipping into the Treasury reserve.
The
chancellor will reiterate the government’s “ambition” to spend 3% of GDP on
defence in the next parliament, “as economic and fiscal conditions allow”. She
is also expected to squeeze future Whitehall spending plans to ensure she is on
target to meet her self-imposed fiscal rules, despite weaker OBR projections –
with full details to be set out in June’s spending review.
Since the
OBR last gave its assessment in October, government borrowing costs have risen
and economic growth has been weaker than hoped. Reeves will underscore her
determination to go “further and faster,” to kickstart the economy.
Some in
Labour had urged Reeves to flex her fiscal rules instead of outlining future
spending cuts – but the Treasury fears that any sign of indiscipline would risk
spooking bond markets and driving borrowing costs up further.
One Labour
source said ministers have become frustrated with the way the OBR process
works, with last-minute forecast changes significantly affecting policy. “They
think the process needs to change, but they can’t go around, for market
reasons, shaking it up too much,” they said.
With Donald
Trump’s administration withdrawing from transatlantic defence cooperation and
threatening to impose sweeping tariffs next month, Reeves will repeatedly
stress how much the global context has changed.
“Our task is
to secure Britain’s future in a world that is changing before our eyes. The job
of a responsible government is not simply to watch this change,” she will say.
But analysts
warn that these historic shifts mean that even after promising spending cuts,
Reeves may still have to increase taxes to meet rapidly growing pressure for
higher defence spending.
Paul
Johnson, director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies, said: “Even a small
change to the spending plans is going to make this an even more difficult
spending review in June, and I think the bigger risk is that we get speculation
starting on Thursday about which taxes are going to rise in the autumn – and I
think that is really quite politically risky, and economically damaging.”
Paul Dales,
chief UK economist at consultancy Capital Economics, said: “We just don’t know
how they intend to increase spending above 2.5% – that’s the really big one.
That’s what’s changed.” He added: “The thing that’s really going to have to
shift is her pledges on tax.”
Prof
Jonathan Portes, of King’s College London, said: “I don’t think they should be
making big policy changes now, but I do think over time they will have to
reform and increase taxes.”
Reeves will
tell MPs the move to increase defence spending, which saw the development
minister Anneliese Dodds resign in protest at the aid cuts, was “the right
decision in a more insecure world”.
“This
government was elected to change our country. To provide security for working
people. And deliver a decade of national renewal. That work of change began in
July – and I am proud of what we have delivered in just nine months,” she will
say.
The
chancellor and her Treasury team have been trying to limit the likely fallout
from Wednesday’s announcement, aware that both the cuts to Whitehall
departments and the welfare impact assessments are likely to cause anger on the
Labour benches.
One Labour
MP said: “Wednesday will be just as important for those impact assessments as
for the spring statement itself – that’s when people will start to make their
mind up about whether they will vote for these cuts or not.”
Officials
say they are planning to hold a vote on the changes to personal independence
payments in May, with about 30 Labour MPs currently thinking of rebelling.
Darren
Jones, the Treasury chief secretary, held a meeting with about 100
frontbenchers on Tuesday to lay the ground for the spending cuts to come.
People who attended that meeting told the Guardian he had spent much of it
insisting that the spending reductions did not amount to austerity, given they
are around half the scale of those made by George Osborne as chancellor from
2010 to 2015.
Wes
Streeting, the health secretary, told the Guardian on Tuesday: “We can’t do
everything for everyone, everywhere, all at once. There are lots of things we
would like to do now, but we’re having to bide our time so that we can fix the
economy, because having those firm economic foundations is the essential
prerequisite for everything else we need.”
Reeves will
announce details of a government transformation fund that Whitehall departments
will be able to bid into, to pay for productivity-boosting projects such as
overhauling out-of-date IT. Treasury ministers claim this will allow them to do
more with less in future years, easing the impact of tighter budgets on public
services.
She will
confirm on Wednesday she will start moving money from the aid budget to defence
immediately, dashing the hopes of some Labour MPs who hoped the cuts to the
development budget would be delayed until 2027.
Sarah
Champion, the Labour chair of the international development committee, said:
“The government’s statement on cutting aid has had a chilling effect on
development projects and staff morale, but it has also had very real
consequences. Contract renewals are paused and new projects on hold. Whichever
way to pack it, cuts are happening now.”
The £2.2bn
increase in defence spending from April will bring the country’s military
spending up from 2.3% in 2024-25 to 2.36% in 2025-26. Ministers have promised
to hit the 2.5% target in two years’ time.
The shadow
chancellor, Mel Stride, said Reeves, not global events, was to blame for the
slowdown in the economy. “Our national security demands a strong economy. Yet
since Rachel Reeves’s first budget, growth is down, borrowing is up and
business confidence has been destroyed,” he said.
A government
spokesperson said: “We have set out a sweeping package of reforms to health and
disability benefits that genuinely support people back into work, while putting
the welfare system on a more sustainable footing so that the safety net is
always there to protect those who need it most.”
Additional
reporting Aletha Adu
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