Graeme Wearden 

Spring statement: Brexit deal could end austerity, but benefit freeze continues – as it happened

Chancellor reveals growth and borrowing forecasts, plus money for period poverty, knife crime prevention, and affordable housing
  
  

Philip Hammond leaves 11 Downing Street for the House of Commons to deliver his spring statement.
Philip Hammond leaves 11 Downing Street for the House of Commons to deliver his spring statement. Photograph: Jake McPherson/Getty Images

Closing summary

The latest wild developments in Westminster tonight have shown the fundamental flaw in today’s spring statement - Brexit changes everything.

The prediction that growth will only be 1.2% this year, the improved borrowing figures, the £26.6bn war chest which the chancellor is itching to open... they could all evaporate if Britain crashes out of the EU in 16 days.

Hammond’s call for MPs across the house to come together to find a Brexit solution fell on stony ground -- Parliament looks more divided than ever.

Business leaders will reaching the final strands of the end of their very frayed tether, while cash-strapped families will be desperate for austerity to be eased.

As Miles Celic, Chief Executive Officer, TheCityUK, puts it:

“MPs have said ‘no to no deal,’ but without an agreement between the UK and the EU, this vote sadly delivers very little. A constructive and practical way forward must be found. Unless the Withdrawal Agreement or some other realistic course of action is agreed very soon, the UK will still crash out, regardless of MPs’ wishes.

Brexit is speeding towards the end of the road and there is still no bridge to get to the other side.”

That’s all for today. Thanks for reading and commenting. We’ll be back tomorrow to cover reaction to the spring statement, and our politics blog will be covering the Brexit crisis again. Goodnight! GW

There’s big drama in the House of Commons right now -- MPs have narrowly voted for an amendment rejecting the idea of Britain leaving the EU without a deal, by just four votes.

That’s a fresh blow to Theresa May, and possibly makes a Brexit extension even more likely.

It’s also creating quite a lot of chaos in Westminster, as the government’s plans take another hit... although this vote doesn’t, on its own, prevent Britain crashing out on teh 29th.

Andy Sparrow has all the action here:

Spring statement: What the papers say

The Independent highlights several campaign groups who have condemned the government for not ending the benefits freeze early, by tapping into its fiscal headroom.

Campbell Robb, chief executive of the Joseph Rowntree Foundation said: “The government should have shown today that it is serious about tackling the rising tide of poverty in the UK.

“Instead they chose not to end the freeze on benefits, leaving families in poverty to face rising costs and bear all the risks of economic uncertainty, especially if we leave the EU without a deal.”

Child Poverty Action Group chief executive Alison Garnham said: “The chancellor could have sent a lifeline to low-income families.

“That he didn’t is evidence of ministers’ refusal to confront the reality that families have been left with too little money to live on after three long years of stagnant incomes and rising price

Independent: Spring statement: Philip Hammond accused of failing to ease austerity despite £27bn spending boost

The Financial Times points out that Philip Hammond has pledged to spend more, if a Brexit deal is reached:

Mr Hammond said leaving the EU with an agreement would give the UK real choices on how much of a “deal dividend” could be spent on public services or tax cuts. “That is what I mean by an end to austerity,” he added.

After a near-decade of austerity and severe cuts in local authority spending, the UK’s services are showing the strain through crises in the social care system, schools asking parents to donate and a visible rise in rough sleeping.

FT: Spring Statement: Hammond pledges end to austerity if Brexit deal is reached

But, don’t forget that economic outlook has weakened. The Daily Telegraph says:

Rarely has a Chancellor faced such a grim outlook with such little cover.

Britain’s economy is in for a beating: growth forecasts for this year were slashed by a quarter.

GDP will grow by a mere 1.2pc this year, according to the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR), down 0.4 percentage points from its previous update in October.

It puts the economy on course for its weakest year since 2009.

Trade will drag on growth. Employment will rise, but by around 100,000 less than hoped in the years ahead, despite the Chancellor hailing the forecasts.

Hammond criticised for not ending benefits freeze

There’s real anger tonight that Hammond didn’t take the opportunity to end the freeze on working age benefits.

By keeping the welfare payments unchanged in cash terms, recipients will actually get less once inflation is taken into account.

That can be a serious blow to poor families.

Resolution Foundation explains:

The final year of the freeze on working age benefits, which takes effect next month, will leave a low-income couple with children £200 worse off next year, rising to £580 once the full effect of the freeze is included.

Overall tax and benefit changes being introduced this April will take £100 from families in the bottom fifth of the income distribution and give £280 to those in the top 10 per cent.

Professor Costas Milas of Liverpool University reckons the Chancellor may actually have more flexibility to spend and borrow than the OBR has estimated.

The OBR predicts annual GDP growth rates of 1.2% in 2019, 1.4% in 2020 and 1.6% in 2021. Contrast this with the Bank of England’s predictions (made only last month by the Bank’s February 2019 Inflation Report) of 1.2% in 2019, 1.5% in 2020 and 1.9% in 2021. Why is OBR so much more pessimistic than the Bank of England for 2020 and 2021?

In fact, under the assumption of lower Brexit-related uncertainty (let’s call this the ‘deal dividend effect’) the Bank predicts even higher GDP growth rates of 2.2% in 2020 and 2.3% in 2021.

If the Bank is correct and the OBR is wrong in its assessment, then the Chancellor appears to be underestimating the benefits of a deal dividend at a very critical time with further parliamentary voting taking place both today and tomorrow. Alternatively, the cynical reader might conclude that the OBR has already taken into account the adverse (‘sledgehammer’) effects of the tariffs announced today...

This char shows how the UK’s government’s borrowing requirements have fallen, giving more headroom to borrow within the fiscal rules.

Melanie Baker, senior economist at Royal London Asset Management, explains how this boosts the war chest that can be opened if no-deal Brexit is avoided.

That largely reflects projections of higher income tax receipts (higher earnings growth assumptions) and lower debt interest spending (reflecting lower market expectations of rate rises). The amount of ‘headroom’ in the fiscal numbers therefore rose (i.e. the extra net spending the Chancellor could engage in before breaking the fiscal mandate) from £15.4bn to £26.6bn.

The OBR did warn though that, in the event smooth Brexit is achieved, market interest rates and debt interest payment projections may rise again, i.e. reducing that headroom.

Extending Article 50 by a few months would have a damaging impact on the UK’s economy, and erode the chancellor’s headroom to borrow and spend more.

So argues Danielle Haralambous, UK analyst at The Economist Intelligence Unit:

Even though the OBR has slashed its economic growth forecast for 2019, there’s been a marked improvement in the UK’s fiscal ratios, creating more headroom for the Chancellor to loosen fiscal policy if required and allowing him to stick to his declaration of an “end to austerity”. However, there’s a big cloud hanging over these projections, as they all are all conditional on a smooth end-March Brexit transition that parliament pretty much ruled out last night.

Mr Hammond expressed a hope that the negotiated Brexit deal will still be passed in the coming weeks, but that is unrealistic. We don’t expect a “no deal” scenario, but an extension of Article 50 that will compound the current uncertainty associated with Brexit and probably mean a deterioration in the forecasts and slightly less fiscal room for manoeuvre by the Autumn Budget.

My colleague Aditya Chakrabortty says Philip Hammond’s spring statement had one large flaw -- a massive vacuum where the chancellor should have put some new policies.

Ah, but what about Brexit uncertainty pinning Hammond in? Not good enough....

You would not have guessed from listening to him that the economy is on the brink of recession, that local councils are going bust, that schools across the land are sending parents begging letters for cash. Analysis by the TUC shows that by 2024, spending on public services will still be £500 lower per person than it was in 2009.

Hammond claims that all he needs is a deal on Brexit to open the sluice gates and get spending, but there is no logical connection between the two. The UK has its own currency, and interest rates are barely off the floor. Now is the time for a government to spend on public housing, on schools and on a welfare system that doesn’t treat claimants as scammers and idlers. Sadly, it won’t be this government.

Philip Hammond made much play of his Brexit war chest - the £26bn of extra spending that will be possible within the government’s fiscal rules, and the boost to business confidence.

But it’s too late to avoid damage to the economy, says Michael Izza, chief executive of ICAEW (Institute of Chartered Accountants).

“As to be expected after last night’s vote, the Chancellor’s statement provided little sunshine to cut through the Brexit fog.

“If there is a managed deal, we can expect a significant Brexit dividend with businesses investing, consumers more confident and an uptick in the market. However, much damage has already been done as a result of the ongoing uncertainty. Businesses have taken decisions to relocate assets and cancel planned investments, which are unlikely to reversed even if a deal is reached.

Adam Jackson, director of public affairs at Grant Thornton UK LLP, says Philip Hammond has hinted at the likely priorities of this summer’s spending review (assuming’s he’s still chancellor at that stage)

  • taking on ‘digital giants’ (such as Amazon, Google, Facebook) with an investigation into competition in digital advertising and confirmation that the UK will press ahead with a digital services tax despite it being dropped as an EU-wide proposal (it has not been dropped by a number of EU countries such as France, Spain and Italy)
  • confirming that housing investment and Northern Powerhouse transport infrastructure remains a priority
  • measures to tackle climate change, including mandating zero fossil fuels in all new build homes from 2025

Jackson adds:

“These felt like placeholders; a possible government programme if the UK ever completes the interminable current phase of Brexit decisions.

The Treasury says the spring statement offered several new spending and policy commitments for Scotland, which included a £65m share of the £260m on offer in the new Borderlands growth deal which will straddle the English and Scottish border.

Coincidentally boosting the electoral fortunes of the Conservative MPs who have seats on either side of the border, the Treasury said it meant that regional partnership would be getting a total of £362m.

Edinburgh University will get £79m for a new “Archer 2” supercomputer, “providing researchers with a fivefold increase over the current computing capacity, paving the way for new discoveries in pharmaceuticals, climate science and aerospace.”

There would also be reviews of whether the aggregates levy, which is now devolved to Scotland, benefits devolved areas sufficiently; reforms to how VAT is claimed back by government departments after an embarrassing row over a VAT bill for Police Scotland; and efforts to boost oil and gas decommissioning industries.

Updated

Torsten Bell, Director of the Resolution Foundation, says the government has the firepower to end austerity, if it wants to:

“In a speech light on policy, the Chancellor used a £30bn windfall from the OBR to promise sunny uplands if Parliament delivers a smooth Brexit in the months ahead.

“The Chancellor’s £26bn of fiscal firepower is more than enough to bring austerity to an end in the Spending Review later this year. This marks a major shift as the debate in British politics moves to focusing on how much more we should spend, rather than how deeply to cut.

“But despite an improvements to the public finances driven in part by particularly fast earnings growth for high earners, austerity will continue for just about managing families, who face a £1.8 billion hit from the benefit freeze in just three weeks’ time.”

This chart, from the Office for Budget Responsibility’s new report, outlines how future interest tax receipts have strengthened while debt repayment costs have fallen.

The spring statement is being criticised for not providing more help to fight poverty and support poorer families.

Here’s a video clip of the chancellor announcing that fossil fuel heating systems will be banned by 2025, from new homes.

And here’s a reminder that his predecessor tore up plans to make homes carbon neutral, back in 2015.

Activists welcome pledge to ban fossil fuel from new homes

Climate activists have welcomed the government’s pledge to end fossil-fuel heating in new homes by 2025 - which might turn out to be one of the biggest measures today.

Hammond told MPs that a new standard will be introduced by 2025 to future-proof new build homes with low carbon heating and energy efficiency measures,

That appears to means the end of gas boilers being used to warm new-build houses.

Campaign group 10:10 Climate Action’s director, Max Wakefield, backed the move, saying:

“All our homes and buildings must be made efficient, affordable and zero-carbon within the next two decades to address the climate crisis.

Ending the scandal of poor quality new homes is a no-brainer that’s good for everyone.”

Mel Evans, senior campaigner at Greenpeace UK said the plan to end fossil fuels in new homes “is vital”.... but added that we need bigger thinking to tackle the climate emergency.

Conservative MP James Heappey is also impressed (although it’s bad form not to support your own chancellor on these occasions).

Updated

OBR: House prices to fall

Heads-up. The Office for Budget Responsibility has predicted that UK house prices will be falling by the end of this year.

The OBR has downgraded its forecasts for the housing market, due to signs that house price growth has flowed, and subdued turnover in the housing market.

It now thinks house price inflation will turn negative, before bouncing back in 2021.

This is going to make a serious hole in the government’s tax receipts, as stamp duty has been a lucrative tax in recent years.

Greg Hands, Conservative MP for Chelsea, is worried:

Updated

Back in parliament, Chuka Umunna MP has pointed out that Britain’s economy had been expected to grow at over 2% per year, before the 2016 referendum.

Today’s growth forecasts - just 1.2% this year, picking up to 1.6% in 2021 - are sluggish and unimpressive, Umunna points out.

Philip Hammond tells MPs (well, those who have hung around in the chamber) that the OBR’s recent downgrade of likely UK productivity growth is to blame.

Hammond is being criticised for not ending the freeze on benefits (which means the will continue to shrink in real terms).

Heidi Allen MP, who quit the Conservatives to join The Independent Group, says it makes a mockery of ‘compassionate’ Conservatism.

Alison Garnham, chief executive of Child Poverty Action Group, says the government is failing the poorest.

“Struggling families are desperate for an end to the freeze on working age benefits, but this Spring Statement leaves them out in the cold once again. Already the freeze has saved the Treasury more than was ever intended, so there can be no ongoing justification for these ‘stealth cuts’ that mean that the poorest in society have borne the heaviest burden from paying off the deficit.

“Today, the Chancellor could have sent a lifeline to low-income families. That he didn’t is evidence of Ministers’ refusal to confront the reality that families have been left with too little money to live on after three long years of stagnant incomes and rising prices. Funding sanitary products for girls in schools may help with one small area of expenditure, but this will have a minimal impact on poverty overall. It leaves in tatters the prime minister’s claim that austerity is over.

Hammond’s call for MPs to build a ‘consensus’ to prevent a no-deal Brexit has caused a stir at Westminster.

Is he suggesting giving up on Theresa May’s deal, in favour of a new plan that could be backed by Labour?

Labour’s shadow Chancellor, John McDonnell, responded to the spring statement by blasting the government’s record:

The Chancellor has the nerve to tell those who have suffered most at the hands of his Government, that their suffering was necessary.

If austerity wasn’t ideological, why has money been found for tax cuts for big corporations while vital public services have been starved of funding?

Austerity was never a necessity, it was always a political choice.

So when the Chancellor stands there and says that the end of austerity is in sight, talks of a plan for a brighter future – how can anyone who has lived through the last nine years believe him?

This is a Government that has demonstrated a chilling ability to completely disregard the suffering they have caused.

To talk of changing direction after nine years in office is not only impossible to believe, it’s also much too late.

Too late for the thousands who have died while waiting for a decision on their Personal Independence Payments. Too late for families who have lost their home due to cuts in housing benefit. Too late for young people losing their lives to knife crime after youth clubs have shut down and police numbers fallen, whatever he has been forced into announcing today.

He also urged Hammond to help remove the threat of no deal:

Of course Brexit looms large over everything we discuss.

Even today, the Chancellor has tried to use the bribe of a deal double dividend or threat of postponing the spending review to cajole MPs into voting for the government’s deal.

Publication of the tariffs this morning is clearly part of this strategy.

This is a calamitous strategy. It is forcing people into intransigent corners.

What we need now is the Chancellor today to commit to vote to take no deal off the table.

Then to join me in discussing the options available, including Labour’s deal proposal and yes, if it requires it, taking any deal back to the public.

Yael Selfin, chief economist at KPMG, has bad news for the government -- it doesn’t currently have enough firepower to handle a no-deal Brexit.

So it would have to tear up its borrowing and spending plans, if Britain crashes out without a deal.

Updated

OBR: Hammond has £26.6bn Brexit war chest

The Office for Budget Responsibility’s verdict is out.

The independent watchdog’s top line is that growth has slowed, but the public finances look marginally healthier.

Economic growth in the UK and globally has slowed since the Budget in October, leading us to revise down our near-term GDP forecast. But tax receipts have performed better than we expected in the final months of 2018-19 and we judge that much of this buoyancy will endure.

Together with downward pressure on debt interest spending from lower market interest rates, this delivers a modest medium-term improvement in the public finances. The Chancellor has banked most of it in lower borrowing, but has spent some on higher planned public services spending.

The OBR has also confirmed that the chancellor’s now has over £26bn of extra spending power he could unleash, once a no-deal Brexit is off the table.

It says:

This is up from £15.4 billion in October, as the fiscal costs of the temporary nearterm cyclical weakness of the economy have been swamped by the fiscal gains from higher income tax and lower debt interest spending.

But... the government still isn’t on track to balance the budget by 2025-26 - a whole decade later than George Osborne’s first target.

Some reaction from Hammond’s side of the House:

But opposition MPs are predictably less impressed:

Snap summary: Hammond promises more spending, if No-Deal Brexit avoided

As we suspected, there wasn’t much new in that statement.

The economic picture for 2019 has darkened, with growth forecast to only be 1.2%, from 1.6% before. Brexit uncertainty, and the slowdown in the global economy, are both probably to blame.

Hammond pointed to faster projected growth in 2021 and 2022 -- but he’d surely agree that we can’t bank on that until MPs have got their act together on Brexit.

Also, growth is still seen below 2% per year for the next five years; a poor performance by historical standards.

The chancellor’s main message that he could unlock more spending, if MPs backed a deal.

Those improved borrowing figures mean he’s got more than £26bn to play with, and a Spending Review planned for this year.

With a pointed nod to those who marched through the No lobby last night, he said:

“Leaving with no deal would mean significant disruption in the short and medium term and a smaller, less prosperous economy in the long term, than if we leave with a deal.

Higher unemployment, lower wages, higher prices in the shops. That is not what the British people voted for in June 2016.”

Tonight’s votes will show exactly how many MPs agree with Hammond (Andy Sparrow will be tracking that in Politics Live here).

There was welcome news -- money for free sanitary products in secondary schools and colleges, the extra cash for knife crime protection, and a focus on climate change prevention.

Updated

Hammond: Brexit uncertainty must stop

Hammond ends his speech by warning MPs that while the economy is fundamentally robust, it is still overshadowed by Brexit uncertainty.

He tells the House:

We cannot allow that to continue. It is continuing our economy, and damaging our standing in the world.

Tonight we have a choice, he continues. MPs can remove the threat of an imminent no-deal threat.

Tomorrow we can map out a way to build a consensus across the house, to exit the EU in an orderly way, and create a relationship that allows Britain to flourish, he continues.

Another rumour is confirmed, as Hammond announces £100m of extra funding to tackle knife crime.

The money will go to violence reduction units, and for more police overtime. That follows heavy lobbying from the Home Secretary Sajid Javid.

Hammond has confirmed that he is taking action on period poverty.

The Treasury will fund the provision of free sanitary products in schools from the next school year [as we reported last weekend].

Updated

On the environment, Philip Hammond says fresh standards will be introduced for new housing, to mandate the end of fossil fuel heating by 2025.

He also announces a new review into the link between biodiversity and growth.

Plus, the government will designate a further 445,000 square kilometres of ocean around Ascension Island as a Marine protected area.

On housing, Hammond announce a £3bn “affordable homes guarantee” scheme.

Hammond announces probe into digital advertising

As expected, Hammond has announced a review of global tech giants, to ensure they pay a fair share in the UK.

He has also asked the competition and markets authority to undertake a study of the digital advertising market.

The chancellor also announces £45m to the European Bioinformatics Institute for genomics research.

There’s also £81m in a new Extreme Photonics Centre in Oxfordshire to develop a new types of laser. “Cutting edge technology”, grins the chancellor (whose gags haven’t been up to their usual standard)

Hammond announces £79m for Archer 2, a new supercomputer based at the University of Edinburgh, which is five times faster than previous models.

Capable of 10,000 trillion calculations per second, hopefully it’s fast enough to solve the backstop issue, he jokes (this is no time for puns, chancellor)

Updated

Hammond says PhD level roles will be eliminated completely from visa caps - as part of a push to stimulate research and development in the UK.

The government will, as expected, open a consultation on how to replace PFI contracts.

Hammond also announces a review of low pay in Britain

Philip Hammond’s Brexit War Chest has grown to £26.6bn, up from around £15bn, thanks to the lower borrowing forecast by the OBR.

Hammond announces £260m of funding for the Borderlands region (areas in Southern Scotland and the North of England).

Hammond says he wants Britain to embrace the technology of the future, so it can “slay the twin demons of low productivity and low wages”.

The upcoming spending review will focus spending on raising productivity, he adds.

Leaving Brexit without a deal would deliver a significant short-to-medium term hit to the productive capacity of the UK economy, the chancellor warns.

Hammond also says it is “just wrong” to think there is a simple way of coping with the consequences of no deal.

Any fiscal and monetary response would have to be carefully calibrated so as to not simply cause inflation, he explains.

Updated

Hammond also warns that the progress in repairing the UK economy will be at risk if it cannot agree a “smooth and orderly” exit from the EU.

Hammond: Brexit dividend coming if UK agrees deal

Significant news. Hammond says he will launch a full, three-year spending review before the summer recess - ready for the next budget - if a Brexit deal is agreed.

He dangles the prospect of more spending on public services, saying Britain could get a deal dividend.

That would come from increased business confidence and a fiscal boost, as less money needing to be set aside for the consequences of no-deal .

On borrowing, the 2018-19 deficit will be 1.1% of GDP, Hammond says, down from the 1.2% expected in the October budget.

Hammond says the UK will create another 600,00 new jobs by 2023.

The OBR has also revised its wage growth up, to at least 3% each year.

New growth forecasts

Onto the growth forecasts. As feared, growth in 2019 has been cut significantly, to just 1.2% from 1.6% in the last budget.

But there’s good news too - growth in 2021 and 2022 has been revised up.

Here are the new forecasts:

  • 2019: 1.2% compared to 1.6% in last October’s budget
  • 2020: 1.4% compared with 1.4%
  • 2021: 1.6% compared with 1.4%
  • 2022: 1.6% compared with 1.5%
  • 2023: 1.6% compared with 1.6%

Updated

Spring statement begins

Philip Hammond is on his feet now, sporting a smart Tory blue tie, to deliver the spring statement.

Let’s see what light he can shed on the state of the economy, with less than three weeks until Britain is currently due to leave the EU.

The chancellor begins by telling MPs that he knows the House has other pressing issues on its time.

Last night’s vote leaves a cloud of uncertainty over the country, the chancellor says.

But the economy remains robust and has “defied expectations”, he continued.

Hammond says the UK’s economy has grown for 9 years in a row - the longest of any G7 member. And it’s expected to keep growing for the next five years.

He then accuses John McDonnell of living in a “parallel universe”, for predicting the UK would fall into recession.

The chancellor has tweeted.... saying he’ll make announcements on infrastructure, technology, housing, skills, and green energy today.

Chancellor love to produce a crowd-pleasing surprise or two on these occasions. Brexit uncertainty, though, means any rabbits will probably stay firmly inside Hammond’s hat.

We may hear about the ‘Brexit dividend’ today, but how much do taxpayers actually hand to the EU?

A new website lets you find out -- enter your salary, and it calculates how much of your income tax heads to Brussels. Spoiler alert, it might be less than you think.....

[Reminder: other levies, such as corporation tax, also help fund the UK’s bill for EU membership]

Prime Minister’s Questions is underway now. Our Politics Live blog is tracking all the action:

Philip Hammond told the cabinet this morning that the spring statement will set out measures to support an open and competitive economy, according to Theresa May’s spokesman (via Reuters).

Hammond also said it will confirm the resilience of the UK economy, and the progress made “repairing the public finances”....

Philip Hammond has emerged from Number 11 Downing Street, and headed to the House of Commons to deliver the spring statement (after Prime Minister’s Questions).

As it’s not the budget, we didn’t get a photoshoot with the traditional red box. Just a polite smile for the cameras.

Bloomberg Economics have calculated that the chancellor’s war chest - money set aside for a no-deal Brexit - has swelled to over £20bn.

That’s up from £15bn in last autumn’s budget, thanks to strong tax receipts in January. If Britain leaves the EU under the withdrawal agreement, it could be spent elsewhere.

Bloomberg’s Jess Shankleman explains:

U.K. Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond could next week offer the country an extra 5 billion pounds ($7 billion) to end austerity, but only if Parliament backs a Brexit deal with the European Union.

Hammond is expected to receive the windfall to his Brexit war chest when he presents his Spring Statement on Wednesday. He says backing Prime Minister Theresa May’s deal would release extra cash for public services that’s currently held in reserve to mitigate the fallout from a no-deal split.

Alison Thewliss, SNP Treasury spokesperson, says Philip Hammond should announce an emergency budget today, to protect the UK from Brexit confusion.

I fear such an emergency fiscal event might be needed if Britain crashes out on the 29th March. In the meantime, Hammond will probably keep his powder dry (while hinting at a spending boost if Brexit goes more smoothly).

Once upon a time, the Conservative party promised to eliminate Britain’s budget deficit by 2015. They failed (of course), and are now aiming to wipe it out by the middle of the next decade.

But we have seen progress on cutting government borrowing. Last October, the OBR estimated that net borrowing could drop to £25.5bn for 2018-2019, down from £153.1bn in 2009-10 after the financial crisis.

As this chart from RBC Capital Markets shows, Britain’s net borrowing requirement are on track for their lowest level since 2002-03.

You could argue that this is prudent management of the economy (at least compared to the handling of Brexit). But you could also argue that there is freedom to borrow more to invest, and to tackle the public sector funding crisis.

No arguing with this statement, from our parliamentary sketch writer.

Rupert Harrison of investment giant Blackrock (and a former chief of staff for George Osborne) says the spring statement forecasts don’t mean very much.

Harrison told Sky News that they’re effectively ‘fantasy forecasts’, due to Brexit uncertainty.

If we do get a no-deal Brexit, Philip Hammond will be spending a lot more money on emergency measures.

If we get some lifting of the uncertainty, I think there will be more money for public services.

Claire Walker, co-executive policy director at the British Chamber of Commerce, says there are worrying signs in the economy. Brexit has already driven business investment down, so Hammond needs to help.

This is an opportunity to send a strong and supportive message to businesses at this very tricky time, even though there’s a limit to what he can do.

Updated

Spring statement: What the City expects

City investors are more concerned by the Brexit mess than the chancellor’s statement.

They’ll still be watching at 12.30pm, though, to hear the latest growth and borrowing forecasts.

Sam Buckingham, investment analyst at Thomas Miller Investment, explains:

Of particular importance will be the latest forecasts for economic growth and public finances.

It’s expected the former is to be revised down considerably bearing in mind the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) recently reduced their forecast for 2019 economic growth for the UK down to just 0.8%, well below the Office for Budget Responsibility’s (OBR) previous prediction of 1.6%.

Fiona Cincotta of City Index says Brexit chaos will overshadow the speech:

Nevertheless, based on January data the government’s tax income is likely to have worked some way towards reducing the budget deficit.

Economic growth remains woefully subdued, at about 0.2% last month, which will make it less likely for the Chancellor to end austerity measures. This would normally be a negative for the pound but a no-deal Brexit vote will trump that.

Richard Stone, chief executive of The Share Centre, thinks that Philip Hammond should keep his statement as brief as possible:

With so much political uncertainty at present it’s difficult to see how he could possibly commit to any large scale spending plans or initiatives at this point in time.

Indeed, it may well be best for the Chancellor to simply stand-up and say at this stage he has nothing to say. At the very least he must be relieved the Spring Statement is now just that and no longer a full blown March Budget.

Although Hammond’s hands are rather tied, MPs are still hoping to hear some good news in the spring statement.

Labour’s Alison McGovern says the chancellor must do more to tackle the problems with universal credit:

At the budget, the Chancellor made a big show of accepting changes to the work allowances in universal credit that he argued would help address some of the Osborne-era cuts. In essence, this was just making the cut somewhat less punitive. Hammond has some way to go if he is to make sure that no one is worse off under the new system.

The two-child policy remains in place, for example, and we still haven’t had a vote on managed migration. Given that this is allegedly ‘not a fiscal event’, we can assume there is not much hope.

Her colleague Marsha de Cordova has also lobbied the Treasury to help severely disabled people who have lost out under UC.

Liberal Democrat MP Layla Moran wants to see fresh education funding (but isn’t holding her breath).

Conservative Guy Opperman would like to see more funding for the Borderlands (the region covering Southern Scotland and Northern England), after the Scottish Government’s pledged £85m overnight.

Updated

Treasury criticised over funding for devolved regions

The Treasury’s system for funding devolved areas of the UK is under attack from different directions after the National Audit Office, the spending watchdog, said its decisions were sometimes hard to understand, our Scotland editor Severin Carrell reports.

The NAO investigated the controversial way the Scottish, Welsh and Northern Irish governments are funded, flagging issues in several areas – including the Treasury’s opaque ways of sharing out cash, and higher per-head funding of devolved areas.

The Treasury provides core funding for the devolved nations worth £287bn for the five years to 2020/21 through a method called the Barnett formula. That allocates their funds on the basis of need (particularly for Wales), their geographic challenges and population, and it also shares out extra cash if there is a major England-only spending decision such as the Crossrail project in London.

The Treasury said Crossrail was “local” funding, so handed out £500m to all three devolved areas. The NAO wondered why it then ruled the HS2 high speed rail line to Birmingham was “national” infrastructure, which triggered payments to the administrations in Edinburgh and Belfast, but not Cardiff.

Then there was the notorious decision to give Northern Ireland £410m for 2018/19 under Theresa May’s deal with the Democratic Unionist party, but no extra money went to Scotland or Wales. Conversely, if the Treasury awards special one-off funding to devolved nations, there is no consequential extra cash for England.

The Scottish government said these funding disparities needed to be addressed by the Chancellor in today’s spring statement.

It said Scotland should have had £3.3bn extra if the Barnett formula had been properly applied to May’s sweetheart deal with the DUP.

“We have urged the UK government to use the spring statement to provide a proportionate amount of additional finance and flexibility to Scotland in line with the Barnett formula,” a spokesman said.

The Barnett formula, which has no legislative basis, has other unexpected quirks, the NAO said.

Its calculations showed Northern Ireland got £2,110 per capita more than the £9,080 spent in England last year, Scotland £1,801 more and Wales £1,317 more. However, the Barnett formula does not seem sensitive enough to reflect the fact that because England’s population is rising faster than in the devolved nations, their per capita share was growing at England’s expense.

Alan Bermingham, government policy manager for the Chartered Institute of Public Finance and Accountancy, said the NAO’s findings justified Cipfa long-standing criticisms of Barnett.

Bermingham says:

“In light of this investigation, we call on government to consider the long-term future of the formula, and to consider an independent needs-based funding system covering all regions of the UK.”.

The Treasury denied there was a problem, insisting its funding rules were “clearly set out in the published statement of funding policy, the Scottish government fiscal framework, and the Welsh government fiscal framework.

“The Treasury works closely with all three devolved administrations to ensure they understand how these arrangements have been applied.”

The Financial Times says Philip Hammond will launch a consultation into new ways to fund Britain’s infrastructure.

This follows Hammond’s decision to end the discredited PFI scheme in last October’s Budget. That creates a question of how the government can team up with the private sector to pay for major project, such as new hospitals and roads.

This will show that Hammond’s looking to the future. However, we already know that business investment has been hit by Brexit - major companies will be reluctant to take on potentially risky contracts until they have clarity over the UK’s future.

Updated

Philip Hammond is expected to take action on another important issue - period poverty.

Following pressure from campaigners, the chancellor will fund a scheme to make free sanitary products available from September.

My colleague Heather Stewart reported:

The chancellor will announce that he is asking Damian Hinds, the education secretary, and Penny Mordaunt, minister for women and equalities, to design a scheme that would be implemented in all secondary schools in England.

The scheme is expected to mirror one already in place in Scotland. It is understood that the Treasury has not yet carried out a detailed costing, but when the Scottish equivalent was announced last year, it was expected to cost £5m.

Full details of the funding will be announced in the spending review, expected later in the year – but Hammond is expected to make clear that the Treasury will fund it in full, and that availability will not be restricted, for example, to those students eligible for free school meals.

Labour deputy leader Tom Watson has welcomed Hammond’s plan to give consumers more control over their data held by Big Tech:

The Sun is reporting that Hammond will unveil a £100m funding package for the police, in response to the surge in knife crime.

They say most of the new cash will be spent on new violent crime units in seven worst affected UK areas -- London, the West Midlands, South Yorkshire, West Yorkshire, South Wales and Manchester.

The money will also help pay for police officers overtime.

The Sun says:

It is a major victory for Home Secretary Sajid Javid, who demanded the cash after the surge in knife killings this year.

Chancellor Philip Hammond had offered a new package of £50 million but Mr Javid held out for more.

Hammond to target tech giants

The world’s technology giants may find themselves in the firing line in today’s spring statement.

Our economics editor Larry Elliott explains:

A fresh bid to curb the market power of US tech giants will be signalled by Philip Hammond on Wednesday when he welcomes the findings of an independent review calling for government action to ensure companies including Google, Facebook and Apple face stiffer competition.

The chancellor will use his annual spring statement to promise action after a review conducted for the Treasury by Jason Furman, Barack Obama’s chief economic adviser, concluded that the dominance of the big digital players was curbing innovation and reducing consumer choice.

Furman, now a Harvard professor, said a new digital markets unit should be set up in Whitehall staffed by people with technological expertise and equipped with the powers to set and enforce greater competition.

The review says individuals should be given more control over their personal data to enable them to switch between platforms more easily, that the biggest tech companies – Google, Facebook, Amazon, Microsoft and Apple – should have to sign up to an enforceable code of conduct, and that merger policy should be toughened up.

“Over the last 10 years the five largest firms have made over 400 acquisitions globally. None has been blocked and very few have had conditions attached to approval, in the UK or elsewhere, or even been scrutinised by competition authorities,” the review said.

Here’s the full story:

Updated

Labour's McDonnell: It's time to end austerity

Shadow chancellor John McDonnell released a video clip last night, urging Hammond to end austerity once and for all.

Local government is on its knees, child poverty is rising, and people are being driven to food banks by the government’s universal credit system, McDonnell says:

Here’s our preview of what to expect today:

We’ll be tracking the spring statement here, while Politics Live focuses on Brexit:

Introduction: It's the Spring Statement

Good morning.

Britain has seen some famous fiscal events over the years. From Hugh Gaitskell introducing charges on dental work and glasses in 1951 (triggering Nye Bevan’s resignation) to Sir Geoffrey Howe hiking taxes in the teeth of the 1981 recession or Gordon Brown announcing £40bn of fresh NHS funding in 2002, chancellors have made the political and economic weather at the dispatch box.

But not today. Instead, Philip Hammond’s Spring Statement is likely to be more of a fiscal non-event.

For a start, it’s not a full budget - more like an update on the nation’s financial health.

Secondly, it’s being overshadowed the full-blown Brexit crisis raging, now that MPs have rejected Theresa May’s deal again.

So Hammond’s performance will be more like a palate cleanser, between last night’s Meaningful Vote and a new vote tonight on whether to rule out leaving the EU without a deal. Theresa May and Jeremy Corbyn will further steal the limelight when they clash at PMQs at noon, before the chancellor speaks.

But what can we expect?

Hammond will give MPs the latest growth forecasts. The independent Office for Budget Responsibility may have downgraded its view of 2019, given the recent global slowdown. In October 2018, they projected 1.3% growth for 2018 -- but just last week, the OECD said growth will slide to just 0.8% this year.

But the OBR could also bring good news -- the UK may need to borrow less than previously expected, thanks to bumper tax receipts in January.

That means Hammond’s “Brexit war chest” - money set aside to protect the economy if a no-deal Brexit occurs - may have swelled from £15bn close to £20bn.

The chancellor is expected to tell Parliament that this goody bag could be used on urgent priorities such as schools and hospitals, as long as Britain doesn’t crash out of the EU (something to concentrate MPs minds ahead of tonight’s vote).

The statement may also announce some new consultations into the issues facing Britain (productivity problems and climate change, perhaps), or an update on Hammond’s Digital Services Tax.

But more wide-ranging changes to tax and spending plans, to reverse the impact of years of painful austerity, must probably wait for another day.

The agenda

  • 12.30pm GMT: Philip Hammond delivers the Spring Statement
  • 1.30pm GMT (estimate): OBR publishes its Economic and fiscal outlook

Updated

 

Leave a Comment

Required fields are marked *

*

*