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Planning Reforms Have Boosted Growth Forecasts, Says Rachel Reeves

Chancellor Rachel Reeves announced the Spring Statement to Parliament on Wednesday (Alamy)

5 min read

Chancellor Rachel Reeves has said that the Labour government’s planning reforms are expected to permanently increase the level of growth in the UK economy.

Delivering her Spring Statement to the House of Commons on Wednesday, Reeves set out the Office for Budget Responsibility's forecast on how the government’s planning reforms – including changing the National Planning Policy Framework, reintroducing mandatory housing targets and bringing “grey belt” land into scope for development – will impact the economy.

According to the OBR, these reforms will permanently increase the level of real GDP by 0.2 per cent by 2029-30 and by 0.4 per cent of GDP within the next 10 years – an additional £15.1bn in the economy. 

“That is the biggest positive growth impact that the OBR have ever reflected in their forecast, for a policy with no fiscal cost,” Reeves told MPs.

“Taken together with our plans to increase capital spending, this government’s policies will increase the level of real GDP by 0.6 per cent in the next 10 years. Policies to grow our economy. Promised by this Labour government. Delivered by this Labour government. Opposed by the parties opposite.”

The Chancellor confirmed there would be no further tax increases beyond what was announced in the Autumn Budget.

She said that “the responsible choice is to reduce our levels of debt and borrowing in the years ahead so we can spend more on the priorities of working people”.

The OBR forecasts published today presented a mixed picture for the UK. 

The independent body downgraded this year’s growth forecast for the UK and every other G7 economy, with the forecast for 2025 down to one per cent from two per cent in the autumn.

However, Reeves said that the OBR has upgraded its growth forecast for next year and the years following, with GDP growth forecasts of 1.9 per cent for 2026, 1.8 per cent in 2027, 1.7 per cent in 2028, and 1.8 per cent in 2029. 

Reeves told MPs that inflation is expected to average 3.2 per cent this year before falling to 2.1 per cent next year and meet the 2 per cent target from 2027 onwards – with inflation having peaked at 11 per cent under the previous Conservative government.

Reeves also confirmed that day-to-day spending will increase in real terms, above inflation, in every single year of the forecast.

The Chancellor told MPs that she would have broken her own fiscal rules had she not announced further reductions in public spending in areas like welfare.

“I can confirm that I have restored in full our headroom against the ‘stability rule’,” she said.

“That means that we are continuing to meet the Stability Rule two years early, building resilience to shocks in this more insecure world.”

However, with Reeves herself acknowledging the instability of the global economy and its impact on British public finances, the government's fiscal headroom will likely come under more pressure between now and the Autumn Budget.

The government had already made several key announcements around increasing defence spending to 2.5 per cent of GDP from April 2027, with an ambition to spend 3 per cent of GDP on defence in the next parliament.

Reeves announced on Wednesday that she will use the Treasury reserve to fund an extra £2.2bn of defence spending this year, in addition to the £2.9bn agreed last October.

“We have to move quickly in a changing world, and that starts with investment,” she said.

The government had also already announced welfare reforms which included narrowing the eligibility criteria for disability benefits, carrying out a consultation on abolishing the health top-up on universal credit for those under 22 years old and reviewing the PIP assessment. 

The welfare reforms upset many Labour MPs, who warned about the negative impact they would have on disabled people.

Veteran left-wing Labour MP Diane Abbott recently wrote in The House Magazine: "You wonder whether it occurs to the Labour leadership that voters will begin to notice that whenever they want money, they take it from the most vulnerable – old people, poor children and now the disabled."

In “final adjustments” to these reforms, Reeves announced on Wednesday that the universal credit standard allowance will increase from £92 per week in 2025/26 to £106 per week by 2029/30, while universal credit health payments will be cut to the new claimants by around 50 per cent before being frozen.

Reeves announced that the OBR predicts £4.8bn in savings through both these reforms and further changes announced in the Spring Statement.

“There is nothing progressive, there is nothing Labour, about working people paying the price of economic irresponsibility,” the Chancellor said.

“The British people put their trust in this government because they knew that we would never take risks with the public finances, that we would never do anything to put their household finances in danger. But we must earn that trust every single day.”

Responding to the statement, shadow chancellor Mel Stride said the Chancellor had made “all the wrong choices”.

“How can we believe this Chancellor? How can we trust this Chancellor?” he said.

“She is the Chancellor who said she would not increase borrowing, but she did. She said she wouldn't change her fiscal rules, but she did. She said she wouldn't put up national insurance, but she did. She said she wouldn't cut winter fuel payment, but she did. 

“She said she wouldn't tax farmers, but she did, and she said she would not move for more than one fiscal event a year, and she just has, and now we are all paying the price of her broken promises.

“Today's numbers confirm it. We are poorer and we are weaker to govern. To govern, Mr Speaker, is to choose, and this chancellor has made all the wrong choices.”

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