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PRIVACY
Economic Development

Rachel Reeves prepares for fiscal squeeze amid fears of OBR productivity downgrade

The Office for Budget Responsibility is expected to downgrade the output per hour worked by 0.3 per cent, which could add nearly £21bn to the Budget black hole

Rachel Reeves' expanding fiscal deficit is poised to worsen as the fiscal watchdog delivers its final productivity assessment to the Chancellor on Friday.

The Treasury is already struggling to manage public finances following a U-turn on welfare reforms that destroyed hopes of £5bn in savings, whilst a £190bn spending spree on government departments has helped erode the Chancellor's razor-thin £9.9bn fiscal headroom.

Reeves has repeatedly reinforced her "iron clad" fiscal rules to finance day-to-day public expenditure through tax receipts.

However, the commitment to these fiscal constraints has sparked speculation that the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ will face another fresh wave of taxes come November 26th (Budget) when she takes the dispatch box.

Concerns have only intensified due to the Office for Budget Responsibility's (OBR) productivity report, which is anticipated to widen the public finances gap, as reported by .

The OBR is anticipated to downgrade the output per hour worked by 0.3 per cent—a figure initially suggested by the Financial Times.

The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) has indicated that every 0.1 per cent downgrade would result in public sector net borrowing rising by £7bn in 2029-2030.

This would mean the projected figure from the OBR would add nearly £21bn to the Budget deficit.