| Wednesday 26 March, 2025 |
Chancellor delivers security and national renewal in a new era of global change, Westminster government claims |
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By Bill HeaneyPeople will be on average £500 better off from 2029, helping to deliver the Plan for Change which Labour Chancellor Rachel Reeves today announced in a Spring Statement “to grasp the opportunities in a changing world ” . The OBR – Office of Budget Responsibility – has also today concluded that the government’s landmark planning reforms will result in UK housebuilding reaching its highest level in over 40 years, bringing the UK one step closer to its Plan for Change mission to build 1.5 million homes. The economy will be 0.2% larger in 2029-30 because of the reforms – worth around £6.8 billion in today’s money – growing to 0.4% over the next ten years. This represents the biggest positive growth effect it has ever forecasted for a policy that comes at zero-cost to taxpayers. The reforms will secure over 170,000 new homes for hard working families and leave borrowing £3.4 billion lower in 2029-30. The Chancellor also set out how the government is protecting national security and maximising the growth potential of the UK defence sector by confirming a £2.2 billion increase in the defence budget in 2025-26 while ensuring UK defence is on the cutting-edge of technology and innovation.
“The Government had the chance today to kickstart growth by scrapping their jobs tax. Instead the government has chosen to inflict more pain on our small businesses – leaving communities facing the prospect of yet more boarded up high streets. And they’ll be a hammer blow for GPs, pharmacies and care homes who will see their taxes hiked. That is why we have repeatedly raised the alarm about the damage from the Employer’s National Insurance rise and fought to exempt health and care providers. “The government could have raised money instead by asking the big banks, social media giants and online gambling companies to pay their fair share. “The Spring Statement also shows that this government does not understand our rural communities at all. They’ve refused to cancel the cruel family farm tax. “One of the few bright lights was the Government’s commitment to higher defence spending, with Liberal Democrats having urged them to commit to 2.5% of GDP and called for cross-party talks so we can get to 3% as soon as possible. I am optimistic that this can support jobs in Scotland and ensure both our security and that of Ukraine. However there is more to do in terms of rebuilding economic and defence ties to our European allies and neighbours.” “Thanks to their incompetence and pre-election lies, the growth forecast has been humiliatingly cut in half and inflation is rising. “As a result, there will be swingeing cuts, as well as untold pain and job losses when National Insurance tax rises kick in. Rachel Reeves has painted herself into a corner, borrowed more, and stalled the economy. “Things will be even worse in Scotland. The SNP’s higher taxes, bloated public sector pay deals, extended benefits and failure to tackle waste will mean bigger bills and poorer services for Scottish taxpayers. “Scots are having to cope with the reckless economic policies of two left-wing anti-growth governments, who have given us higher taxes, more borrowing and vicious cuts. “We desperately need policies like those the Scottish Conservatives have advanced, that would deliver growth, cut taxes and improve services.” Earlier the Chancellor added that growth is still not where it should be, so at this Spring Statement, this government has gone further and faster to kickstart growth by training up to 60,000 young people to get Britain building again; increasing capital investment by £13 billion over this parliament; and fixing public services by tearing out waste from its roots. Growth Kickstarting economic growth is the number one mission of this government, putting more money in people’s pockets. The government has already made considerable progress; supporting a third runway at Heathrow; revitalising the Oxford Cambridge Growth Corridor, launching the National Wealth Fund and making the right choices on public investment to drive growth across the UK. The actions of this government across the Autumn Budget and Spring Statement, if sustained, lead to a 0.6% rise in the level of real GDP by 2034-35, signalling the government’s growth plan is working. The OBR concluded that the stability rule is met by £9.9 billion and the investment rule is met by £15.1 billion. Both rules are met two years early, meaning from 2027-28 the government is only borrowing for investment and net financial debt is falling. The government is not satisfied with short-term growth figures, and is going further and fast today to improve this.
Defence The world is changing before our eyes, reshaped by global instability, including Russian aggression in Ukraine. Europe is facing a once-in-a-generation moment for its collective security, with conflicts overseas undermining security and prosperity at home. A month ago, the PM announced the biggest sustained increase in defence spending since the Cold War as a result of the changing global picture, now reaching 2.5% of GDP by April 2027, and with an ambition to reach 3% in the next Parliament subject to economic and fiscal conditions. We are going further and faster to protect our national security and maximise the economic growth potential of the UK defence sector.
Reform The government is determined to make the public sector more productive and to improve services for working people. But the changing world means we need to go further and faster to ensure we can deliver the public services that working people care most about. The government has shown its commitment to taking the difficult decisions required to drive efficiencies and reform the state – including announcing that the world’s largest quango, NHS England, will be brought back into the Department for Health and Social Care, reducing bureaucratic inefficiencies and duplication; and driving out wasteful government spend through cancelling thousands of government credit cards. Getting more people into jobs is also central to the government’s growth mission. This broken welfare system that is letting people down by asking them to prove what they can’t do, rather than focusing on what they could do with the right support – trapping people due to fear of trying work, lack of support and poor financial incentives. The social security system will always protect those who can never work, that is why this government is proposing an additional premium that will safeguard their incomes. And will end reassessments for people with the most severe, life-long conditions to give them dignity and security. Helping more people into work is a central aim of these reforms and which is why the government is tackling incentives to be inactive by abolishing the WCA, rebalancing Universal Credit, and investing more into employment support. We will always support those with long term health conditions through the Personal Independence Payment, which will remain an important non-means tested benefit for disabled people and people with long term health conditions. But these reforms will make the system more targeted and sustainable to ensure the safety net is there for those who need it most. The OBR have now set out their final assessment of costings and confirmed this welfare package will reduce welfare spending by £4.8 billion in 2029-/30. The government will modernise the Civil Service into a more productive and agile organisation that can effectively deliver the Plan for Change, underpinned by a digital revolution, while cancelling thousands of government procurement cards. Today, the Chancellor has gone further.
Looking Forward This Spring Statement builds on the Autumn Budget and the decisions taken since required to deliver stability to the British economy and kickstart economic growth. The government will set out its plans for spending and key public sector reforms at the Spending Review which will conclude on 11 June 2025. This will not be a business-as-usual Spending Review. The government has fundamentally reformed the process to make it zero-based, collaborative, and data-led, in order to ensure a laser-like focus on the biggest opportunities to rewire the state and deliver the Plan for Change. At the Spending Review, the Budget in the autumn and across the Parliament, the government will continue to prioritise growing the economy to deliver change. Top of page picture: Prime Minister Keir Starmer and Chancellor Rachel Reeves. |
Labour claims to deliver security and renewal in a new era of global change


