Spring statement to take place on March 3, Rachel Reeves tells MPs
A spring statement will be delivered in Parliament on Tuesday March 3, Rachel Reeves has told MPs.
The statement will follow an economic and fiscal forecast by the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR), due to be prepared for that date, the Chancellor said in a written statement to the Commons.
Ms Reeves insisted the Government only plans to โdeliver one major fiscal event a year at the budgetโ each autumn.
โThis approach gives families and businesses the stability and certainty they need and, in turn, to support the Governmentโs growth mission,โ she told MPs.
The spring statement โwill not make an assessment of the Governmentโs performance against the fiscal mandateโ, she said.
Instead it โwill provide an interim update on the economy and public financesโ, following the budget at the end of November.
In her second budget, the Chancellor introduced ยฃ26 billion-worth of hikes across a variety of taxes, in what was described at the time as a โsmorgasbordโ strategy aimed at building a larger buffer for her spending and borrowing plans.
Among the measures were a freeze on income tax thresholds, which followed speculation that the headline rate of the tax could be hiked for the first time in decades.
A cap on salary sacrifice schemes, such as optional higher pension contributions, and the โhigh-value council tax surchargeโ, a so-called โmansion taxโ on properties in England worth more than ยฃ2 million, were also among the rises.
But Ms Reeves also set out extra spending aimed at the least well-off, including by scrapping the two-child cap on benefits with the aim of easing child poverty.
The budget was subject to rampant speculation and apparent leaks from within Government ahead of Ms Reeves standing up to deliver it on November 26.
This was capped off with the OBRโs fiscal and economic outlook โ its in-depth analysis of the budget โ being leaked in full just hours ahead of the Chancellorโs statement in Parliament.
Richard Hughes, head of the budget watchdog, resigned as a result of the leak.
