Should the triple lock be scrapped? | Politics | News

Rachel Reeves is under mounting pressure to scrap the state pension triple lock after a stark warning from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) – but would such a move be fair? The global financial watchdog said the Chancellor faces โsignificant challengesโ in keeping public finances on track without raising taxes or cutting spending.
In a major intervention, the IMF said Ms Reeves may need to revisit Labourโs commitment not to raise taxes on working people โ and urged her to consider reforms to both pensions and public services. The report stated: โThe triple lock could be replaced with a policy of indexing the state pension to the cost of living.โ It also recommended charging higher earners for NHS services and expanding means testing for benefits, saying access to public services should โdepend more on an individualโs capacity to payโ.
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The warning comes as Ms Reeves faces criticism over the rising tax burden, with her main fiscal headroom โ estimated at ยฃ9.9billion during the Spring Statement โ now thought to have been wiped out by recent U-turns on welfare spending.
Shadow Chancellor Mr Mel Stride said: โThe IMFโs conclusion is clear โ the Chancellor has already maxed out the credit card. Her only options are to cut spending or raise taxes. Be in no doubt, this mess is down to Labourโs choices, and it is the working people Labour claim to be protecting who are paying the price.โ
Ms Reeves insisted the Governmentโs plans were โtackling deep-rooted economic challengesโ and โensuring Britainโs recovery is under way.โ
But with pressure mounting from economists and political opponents alike, the triple lock โ which guarantees pensions rise in line with inflation, average earnings or 2.5%, whichever is highest โ may now be on borrowed time.