Spring forecast: Rachel Reeves to insist government has ‘right economic plan’, as Middle East crisis threatens inflation spike – live updates

Spring forecast: Rachel Reeves to insist government has ‘right economic plan’, as Middle East crisis threatens inflation spike – live updates


Introduction: Reeves to respond to spring forecast after oil and gas prices surge

Good morning.

“Events, dear boy, events”. Rachel Reeves may have the (probably apocryphal, oft-quoted) wisdom of Harold Macmillan in mind today, as she responds to the latest official assessment of the UK economy.

The Office for Budget Responsibility’s new Spring Forecast could, in happier times, have brought the chancellor good news this afternoon.

Economists predict they will show that the UK is still keeping within the OBR’s fiscal forecasts – helped by a record budget surplus in January – and that inflation is heading down towards target.

However, the Middle East crisis mean such predictions are out of date before they’re even published, as the world faces the threat of a new energy crisis.

Yesterday, liquefied natural gas (LNG) prices rocked by over 40%, and oil rose by over 7%, after Qatar’s state-run energy firm halted LNG production and Saudi Arabia temporarily shutting down some units of its massive Ras Tanura oil refinery following attacks by Iran.

A chart showing European gas prices

These moves, as the US-Israel war on Iran rages, risk reigniting the cost-of-living crisis.

As economists at Investec explain:

double quotation markThe main economic consequence of higher energy prices would be to boost inflation.

In the UK, illustratively, the current level of the oil price would, if maintained, add about 0.2%pts to headline inflation via higher petrol prices; and a sustained 40% shift up in natural gas price futures would boost this by a further 0.7%pts or so, via higher household utility bills.

We’re not expecting major policy changes today, as the government has committed to holding just one major fiscal event each year in the autumn. That’s why it’s billed as the ‘spring forecast’ not the ‘spring statement’.

Instead the chancellor is expected to insist the government has the “right economic plan for the country” in a “yet more uncertain” world.

Reeves is expected to tell MPs:

double quotation mark“Stability in the public finances, investment in infrastructure and reform to our economy.

Building growth not on the contribution of a few people or a few parts of the country, but in every part of Britain with a state that doesn’t stand back, but steps up.”

The agenda

  • 8am GMT: Worldpanel supermarket inflation and sales figures

  • 9.30am GMT: ONS data: Mergers and Acquisitions involving UK companies: October to December 2025

  • 10am GMT: Flash estimate of eurozone inflation in February

  • 12.30pm GMT: spring forecast statement from Chancellor Rachel Reeves

  • 1pm GMT (roughly): Office for Budget Responsibility’s spring forecasts published

  • 2.30pm GMT: Office for Budget Responsibility press conference

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Key events

Oil rising again

The oil price is rising again this morning, as the Middle East crisis threatens energy supplies.

Brent crude, the international benchmark, is up 3.2% at $80.24 a barrel, adding to Monday’s 7.2% rise.

There is ongoing confusion over the status of navigation in the strait of Hormuz after a general in Iran’s Revolutionary Guards threatened to “burn any ship” seeking to navigate the waterway, a vital route for oil and gas shipments.

But US Central Command said the strait – through which a fifth of global oil and gas travel – was not closed, according to Fox News.

However, leading maritime insurers have cancelled war risk cover for vessels operating in the Gulf, driving up freight costs and deterring shipping companies from sailing through the strait.



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Sarkiya Ranen

I am an editor for Ny Journals, focusing on business and entrepreneurship. I love uncovering emerging trends and crafting stories that inspire and inform readers about innovative ventures and industry insights.

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