IMF urges Andy Burnham to avoid public spending hikes
An influential global organisation is urging Andy Burnhamโs incoming government to avoid increasing public spending in the face of pressures such as rising household energy bills.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) published a new report on the UK as Mr Burnham prepares to take the reins as the countryโs new prime minister.
The Washington-based fund, which has around 190 member countries, said the Government should try to stay focused on its plans to grow the economy and stabilise debts in a more volatile world prone to shocks.

โThis calls for a cautious approach to new fiscal pressures: the authorities should be very selective in accommodating new demands and reprioritise, while sticking to the deficit reduction plan,โ the report read.
โFuture spending reviews should focus on reallocating resources across departments, rather than increasing total spending.โ
In particular, it urged the Governmentโs response to the Iran war energy shock to remain โtightly targeted, temporary and budget-neutralโ.
This means avoiding universal support schemes like that introduced after the 2022 energy crisis, which capped annual energy bills for the typical household at ยฃ2,500.
โBroad-based measures, such as cuts in energy taxes, outright energy price caps, or generalised subsidies, should be avoided, as they are costly, difficult to unwind, and weaken price signals,โ the IMF warned.
It also highlighted rising spending pressures from an ageing population, defence commitments and the transition away from fossil fuels.
The IMF has previously praised Chancellor Rachel Reevesโ fiscal strategy for striking a good balance between reducing the UKโs deficit and โgrowth-friendly spendingโ and investment into industries such as health and education.

But Ms Reeves appears to have conceded she will not stay on as Mr Burnhamโs chancellor, though the presumptive next prime minister has not yet confirmed any Cabinet appointments.
Ed Miliband has been widely tipped as a possible successor for the key post.
Responding to the IMFโs report, Ms Reeves said: โWe have the right economic plan to build a stronger, more secure Britain, with the IMF backing the choices Iโve made to put the country in a much stronger position than it was two years ago.โ
