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PRIVACY
Economic Development

OBR chief hits out at ‘misconceptions’ in Treasury briefings

David Miles has given evidence to the Treasury Select Committee

A top economist at the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) has defended a decision to release a letter that contradicted anonymous Treasury briefings in media reports, adding that details in reports were "damaging" to the fiscal watchdog.

David Miles, a member of the Budget Responsibility Committee (BRC), told MPs on the Treasury Select Committee that a letter showing that fiscal forecasts did not dramatically change after 31 October despite media reports suggesting otherwise was released to "set the record straight on the process".

His comments appear to take aim at a report in Bloomberg on 13 November.

Government sources told the news outlet that plans to breach the Labour Party manifesto had been ditched due to an "improved fiscal forecast" swinging the headroom available by some £10bn.

The briefing appeared to be issued after bond markets reacted violently to a Financial Times report suggesting that the government had abandoned a plan to hike income tax rates.

Swansea-born Miles, who was taking the lead on questions following Richard Hughes' resignation as chair last night due to a damning report on the watchdog's Budget leak, said it published a letter with a clear timeline of changes in its fiscal forecasts to keep transparency levels high.

"It was more that there were misconceptions out there that were wrong and actually damaging to the OBR, that we had acceded to pressure at certain points, [or] that we had helpfully found some money at the last minute," Miles said.

"We were particularly keen to make it clear that the specific window to the interest rates were not under pressure to somehow pick a particular period that was advantageous."