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Reeves will hope weaker wage growth enables more interest rate cuts

Reeves will hope weaker wage growth enables more interest rate cuts

The Guardian2 days ago

The downturn in the UK's jobs market appears to be gathering pace, but the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, will hope that means slower wage growth will open the way to more interest rate cuts.
Unemployment has continued to rise, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said, ticking up to 4.6% in the three months to April, from 4.5% in the three months to March.
Vacancies declined in the three months to May, the 35th successive fall – with some evidence that the downturn is accelerating, as rising employment costs, including the higher minimum wage and Reeves's £25bn employer national insurance increase, start to bite.
The ONS said the 63,000 fall in vacancies was the sharpest since mid-2023, reflecting survey evidence that 'some firms may not be recruiting new workers or replacing workers who have left'.
Payrolled employment – a more timely estimate, but one the ONS suggests treating with caution – declined by 109,000, or 0.4%, in May.
The governor of the Bank of England, Andrew Bailey, has made clear that he sees the labour market – and specifically wage growth – as the key determinant of whether interest rates can come down, from their elevated level of 4.25%.
Speaking to MPs on the cross-party Treasury select committee last week, Bailey said the question of whether pay settlements would decline through this year was, 'a crucial judgment going forward'.
One dovish member of the Bank's nine-member monetary policy committee (MPC), Swati Dhingra, suggested she feared keeping rates high for such an extended period was damaging the economy.
Bailey is likely to have been modestly reassured, then, to see wage growth slipping in the three months to April, to 5.2% for regular pay, down from 5.5% in the three months to March.
The MPC acknowledges that interest rates are squeezing economic growth – but are nervous about cutting further until they are confident lower rates won't unleash a fresh surge of inflation.
Thomas Pugh, an economist at the consultancy RSM UK, suggested the Bank is likely to continue to hold off, for now: 'a rising unemployment rate, another slump in payroll numbers, fewer vacancies and slowing wage growth paints a pretty clear picture of a rapidly cooling labour market. However, with private sector pay growth still running at almost double the rate the MPC is comfortable with, further policy easing will be gradual.'
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Along with many analysts, he believes a rate cut could come in August – continuing with the Bank's pace of quarterly reductions.
In her speech in Rochdale last week, highlighting £15bn planned investment in buses, trams and other transport links, Reeves claimed the credit for the four rate cuts the Bank has already made since she arrived in No 11, arguing her strict fiscal rules had helped.
'It is the stability that my rules supports, and the choices we made as a government in October, that have helped facilitate four cuts to interest rates since the last election – saving £650 a year for a family taking out a new, typical two-year fixed-rate mortgage,' she told bored-looking bus workers.
The Treasury knows that lower rates are a key determinant of the cost of living, as well as feeding through to yields on government bonds.
Reeves will be hoping wage growth continues to cool off enough to persuade Bailey and his colleagues to cut again – most likely in August – but the Treasury will also be watching nervously, in case the downturn in the jobs market accelerates.

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Fury as Brighton Council plan for gender-neutral changing village at new pool being built by firm founded by Olympic swimmers
Fury as Brighton Council plan for gender-neutral changing village at new pool being built by firm founded by Olympic swimmers

Daily Mail​

time27 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Fury as Brighton Council plan for gender-neutral changing village at new pool being built by firm founded by Olympic swimmers

A new £5.5million pool in Brighton designed by a firm founded by Olympic swimming stars have provoked fury over plans suggesting a gender-neutral changing village. Campaigners say women and children could be put at risk as they raised questions about the mooted new facilities at Withdean Sports Complex. Venue owner Brighton and Hove City Council has handed the contract for the pool's design to ReCreation, a company set up by four-time Olympic medallist Dame Rebecca Adlington and fellow Olympic swimmers Steve Parry and Adrian Turner. Councillors have hailed 'plans for this much needed new swimming pool' to be built at the Withdean sports base, which has an athletics stadium that was formerly home to Brighton and Hove Albion FC between 1999 and 2011. But critics have drawn attention to how the newly published plans, put out to public consultation, promise 'Gender neutral changing village and toilets'. The local authority has since said there has been a 'misunderstanding' about the published plans, while suggesting they had been wrongly phrased. Complaints are now pouring in to the council's online questionnaire seeking reaction, with gender-critical campaigners raising concerns about single-sex only facilities potentially allowing predatory men access to women and children. Planning documents shared as part of an ongoing public consultation plan show designs for the new pool's footprint, accompanied by a page listing 'Key considerations' and headed 'Accessible for everyone'. The document says the proposals are for 'a new facility designed for inclusion and wellbeing' that would 'ensure access for all users'. The design features are listed as including 'ramped and stair access to suit all levels of mobility', a 'wheelchair-accessible changing cubicle' and 'designated wheelchair spaces in the spectator area'. Yet critics have highlighted one of the other bullet points which states: 'Gender-neutral changing village and toilets designed with inclusivity in mind.' Similar concerns have been raised over gender-neutral changing facilities at other leisure centres nationwide, with the group Women's Rights Network calling for curbs. Brighton and Hove City Council has shared a possible floor plan for the proposed new pool - saying cubicles would include 'a mix of single, double, family and accessible'. Human rights charity Sex Matters have said the floor plan did not appear to indicate provision for single-sex facilities. The organisation's director of advocacy Helen Joyce said: 'It's incomprehensible that any council would choose to build a new community pool with only "gender neutral" - that is, mixed sex - changing facilities. 'Most people, of both sexes, prefer single sex facilities for privacy and dignity, and for women they are important for safety too. 'There is increasing evidence that mixed sex changing rooms and toilets are a gift to predatory men who seek to harass, abuse and sexually assault women and girls.' She told of increasing reports of phone-related incidents in 'gender-neutral' changing rooms and toilets as well as complaints that men have been hiding cameras in such facilities to record women in a state of undress. Ms Joyce added: 'If Withdean Sports Complex really wants to be "inclusive", it shouldn't design its facilities in a way that will put off women and girls, especially those who have suffered abuse or are from religions and cultures where sharing changing rooms with men is unacceptable.' Faye McGinty, of Women's Rights Network which has been campaigning against such 'gender-neutral changing villages', called for authorities to show more concern. She said: 'We know that the changing village design for swimming pools is a magnet for predatory males. 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He said: 'As a coastal city it's vital that all our children and young people have the chance to learn to swim at an affordable price, and that we listen to the views of our residents and do everything we can to provide modern, sustainable and affordable sporting facilities for all.' The project, given an estimated budget of £5.5million, is being overseen by swimming pool design firm ReCreation, part of the Swim network of UK-wide community pools. The company says on its website: 'Using innovative technology and designs, we deliver bespoke public leisure buildings for a fraction of the traditional cost. 'Every project we undertake becomes our passion and we offer a complete, dedicated design and delivery team that collaborates with each client on a case-by-case basis to provide an optimum, cost-effective leisure solution.' Adrian Turner, director of ReCreation, said earlier this year when the Withdean partnership was announced: 'Our guarantee is a swimming pool that the community will love. 'We will be using the latest design and engineering technologies to develop a pool that will be warm, safe and inviting. 'For 11 years in a row, more pools in the UK have closed than opened, so we are thrilled to be reversing that trend with Brighton & Hove City Council.' The firm has been described as the country's leading provider of above-ground pools, after being founded in 2009 alongside the Pools4Schools initiative. They opened Britain's first Olympic-length above-ground pool in the London borough of Barking and Dagenham in 2019. Dame Rebecca and Parry also set up Swim!, an organisation set up 'to help children to swim' - with regular sessions held weekly at pools across the country. The company describes them as 'passionate about teaching children to swim' and how they were 'achieving this by opening state-of-the-art, family-friendly centres around the UK'. Dame Rebecca, 36, won two gold medals at London 2012 - the first British swimmer to hold two golds since 1908. She followed that up with a pair of bronzes at the Summer Games in Rio four years later.

Poorest to benefit from Reeves's spending but tax rises likely, says thinktank
Poorest to benefit from Reeves's spending but tax rises likely, says thinktank

The Guardian

time30 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Poorest to benefit from Reeves's spending but tax rises likely, says thinktank

Rachel Reeves's multibillion-pound plan to repair public services will benefit Britain's poorest households most but means tax rises are likely this autumn, according to a leading thinktank. The Resolution Foundation said the extra funding for hospitals, schools and the police announced by the chancellor would provide a valuable 'benefit-in-kind' for households who would gain from the improvements. A middle-income household would gain the equivalent of £1,400 a year on average by the time of the next general election through access to better services, rising to as much as £1,700 for the poorest fifth of households in the country. However, the thinktank warned that Reeves could be forced into further tax increases to maintain higher levels of spending at the forthcoming autumn budget, amid a worsening outlook for the economy and public finances. 'A combination of a weaker economic outlook, an unfunded spending commitment on winter fuel payments, and just £9.9bn of headroom against the chancellor's fiscal rules, mean further tax rises are likely to be needed this autumn,' it said. Reeves used Wednesday's spending review to prioritise funding for the NHS, defence and more than £100bn for long-term capital projects despite leaving some key areas facing a tough squeeze. In a pivotal speech to the Commons setting out Labour's plans up to the next general election, the chancellor said she was taking action to 'renew Britain' after years of underinvestment and austerity measures overseen by successive Conservative-led governments. The Resolution Foundation said the package showed that Britain was turning into a 'National Health State', with health accounting for 90% of the extra spending announced. In a major reshaping of the state, it calculated the NHS was on track to account for half (49%) of all day-to-day public service spending controlled by Westminster by the end of the decade – up from a third (34%) in 2009-10. The thinktank said real day-to-day spending was now rising again in the 2020s by 2.2% a year, after a 0.5% fall per year in the 2010s. However, in the decade prior to that under the last Labour government, spending rose by 4.3% on average each year. While the health service is taking up a larger share of public spending, other areas have faced real-terms budget cuts, including a 16% reduction in real, per-person funding for justice and a 50% decline for housing, communities and local government since 2010. Sign up to Business Today Get set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morning after newsletter promotion However, experts warned that Reeves could face a summer of speculation over tax increases in the run-up to the autumn budget. Mel Stride, the Conservative shadow chancellor, said: 'This is the spend now, tax later review, because [she] knows she will need to come back here in the autumn with yet more taxes.' Labour argues that its plans allocate money that has already been raised, highlighting that the spending review is based on last year's autumn budget and this year's spring statement, when the Office for Budget Responsibility judged that Reeves was meeting her main fiscal rule to balance day-to-day spending with revenues within the fifth year of its forecast. However, economists warned that a weak growth outlook and rising government borrowing costs amid Donald Trump's global trade wars could blow the chancellor's plans off course. This could force the OBR to downgrade its forecasts for the government finances, which would require Reeves to take action to announce spending cuts or tax rises if she wanted to stick to her fiscal rule. Andrew Goodwin, the chief UK economist at the consultancy Oxford Economics, said: 'Considering the government's recent U-turn on winter fuel payments could be a precursor to higher government spending in other areas, it looks increasingly likely that substantial tax increases will be needed.'

Rachel Reeves refuses to rule out MORE tax hikes after spending spree plunged into turmoil
Rachel Reeves refuses to rule out MORE tax hikes after spending spree plunged into turmoil

Scottish Sun

time33 minutes ago

  • Scottish Sun

Rachel Reeves refuses to rule out MORE tax hikes after spending spree plunged into turmoil

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