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Investing

Silver linings in the Spring Statement?

26 March 2025
5 minutes

UK economic growth prospects may look anaemic but there were glimmers of positivity in the government’s Spring Statement. Although the Office for Business Responsibility (OBR) downgraded expected growth from 2% to 1% for this year, it had glimmers of positive news elsewhere. For one, OBR scored the government’s planning reforms positively. It also estimates disposable income may grow at almost twice the rate than expected in the autumn.

But with inflation still above the 2% Bank of England (BoE) target, what does it mean for interest rate expectations?

Hetal Mehta, Head of Economic Research at SJP, says: “Seeing as the overall tax and spend (fiscal) package was relatively small in size and government borrowing was only nudged up slightly, there should be little direct impact on the BoE’s decision-making. Weak growth will likely allow for modest rate cuts this year, but elevated inflation will temper the pace.”

As anticipated, the Chancellor favoured spending cuts over tax changes. Constrained by the UK’s fiscal rules, Hetal says: “we expected the Chancellor to keep the purse strings relatively tight and not provide much fiscal boost to growth. She is somewhat boxed in with few levers that can be pulled without policy u-turns or breaking previous pledges.” As a consequence, the “tax burden” is set to remain at historically high levels, she notes.

Colloquially known as the “tax burden” chart, Hetal notes there has been little change.

SJP Approved 26/03/2025