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Rachel Reeves rules out cutting ISA limit but remains vague on cash savings

Rachel Reeves rules out cutting ISA limit but remains vague on cash savings

Yahoo20-05-2025

Rachel Reeves has ruled out reducing the annual tax-free allowance on individual savings accounts (ISAs) but did not refer to the cash ISA limit specifically.
There has been speculation that the chancellor might consider lowering the annual allowance on cash ISAs, in order to encourage more people to invest their money. Savers can currently put £20,000 tax-free into one ISA, or split this allowance across different types of ISAs, such as those in cash or stocks and shares.
When asked about the allowance on the latest episode of the BBC's Newscast podcast, Reeves said that she was "certainly not going to reduce that limit".
"I'm not going to reduce to limit of what people can put into an ISA," she said. "But I do want people to get better returns on their savings, whether that's in a pension or in their day-to-day savings, and at the moment a lot of money is put into cash or bonds, when it could be invested in equities, in stock markets and earn a better return for people."
Reeves said that this was one of the reasons the government was "looking at advice and guidance that financial firms can give to their customers ... to make sure that people are making informed decisions about how to invest their money."
"Whether that's their pensions, savings or their ISA savings, so those are things that we're looking at," the chancellor added. "I absolutely want to preserve that £20,000 tax free investment that people can make every year."
However, Reeves did not specifically refer to the cash ISA limit in her comments.
Read more: Pros and cons of lifetime ISAs
Sarah Coles, head of personal finance at Hargreaves Lansdown, said: "The fact there won't be a change to the overall ISA limit is welcome in itself. The government has clearly been listening when it comes to the importance of choice, flexibility and information to support people making the best savings and investment decisions."
It has been reported that Reeves is preparing to launch a review of the ISA market to look at how to reform the savings wrapper.
"What is important now is that through the consultation process, there is some certainty over the cash ISA specifically," said Coles. "It's an overwhelmingly popular product and the cornerstone of millions of people's savings. They need to know they can rely on their allowances, so they can plan effectively."
"Investing for the longer term clearly offers enormous benefits, so your money works harder and your financial freedom is closer at hand," Coles added. "However, savers can't be forced to invest by removing choice."
According to the Financial Conduct Authority's (FCA) latest Financial Lives survey findings, published on Friday, 61% of UK adults with £10,000 or more in investible assets held all or at least three-quarters of these assets in cash.
The survey also found that 39% of UK adults – the equivalent of 21.2 million – held investments in 2024. Excluding those with an investment property or other real investments (such as wine, art or jewellery) but with no other investment products, this proportion fell to 35%, which was down from 37% in 2022.
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When is the spending review and what might Rachel Reeves announce?
When is the spending review and what might Rachel Reeves announce?

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

When is the spending review and what might Rachel Reeves announce?

All eyes are on the Treasury this week as Rachel Reeves is set to lay out her spending review to Parliament on Wednesday. She'll announce the Government's day-to-day spending commitments up to 2028-29, and investment spending plans to 2029-30 – but there have been varying reports of what we can expect. Here, Telegraph Money takes you through what we know and what the plans could mean for you. Spending reviews take place every few years, and it is when the Government lays out all spending that can be reasonably planned. The plans account for around 40pc of all public spending, according to the House of Commons Library, with the rest dependent on demands such as the benefits bill. The last multi-year spending review was in 2021 under Boris Johnson's Conservative administration. In the run-up to the review, government departments have been in negotiations with the Treasury to try to secure as much funding as they can. The current review process was launched in December last year, and the Institute for Fiscal Studies has said it could be 'one of the most significant domestic policy events of this parliament'. However, Ms Reeves has warned that 'not every department will get everything that they want', as she has had to 'say no' to things that she would support in an ideal world. Many departments are expecting a real-terms cut in their funding. The Government previously said that the review is 'zero-based', meaning that decisions will be made based on an assessment of spending line by line, rather than an overall increase or decrease to the current budget. The Chancellor will stand up in the House of Commons on Wednesday June 11 after Prime Minister's Questions, at roughly 12.30pm. Once Ms Reeves has finished speaking the review will be published on the government website, along with any accompanying documents. Some government spending plans have already been announced. Last week, Reeves announced £15.6bn of funding for regional transport, and the Government has confirmed a partial U-turn on the decision to remove winter fuel payments from all but the poorest pensioners. The Treasury has today announced that nine million pensioners will receive winter fuel payments this winter as a result. It has also been reported that the Chancellor will focus on three priorities in the spending review: health, security and the economy. This means spending on the NHS, defence and infrastructure, with Home Secretary Yvette Cooper understood to be putting in a final plea for more police funding. There are also suggestions that the two-child benefit cap may be lifted, and schools are understood to be in line for £4.5bn uplift. Funding these plans may be tricky, however. Ms Reeves has confirmed she will be sticking to the Government's non-negotiable fiscal rules on borrowing. At the same time, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) said 'momentum is weakening' in the economy, as they told Ms Reeves that efforts to cut government borrowing must be 'stepped up'. If more borrowing is off the table, it may mean cuts for some departments. The IFS has warned that 'because headline real growth rates [over the period] are relatively modest, sharp trade-offs are unavoidable. Achieving stated objectives in some areas will likely require real-terms cuts elsewhere.' Deutsche Bank is a little more optimistic. In a recent analyst note Sanjay Raja, senior economist, said the bank is seeing more 'resilience than expected' in the UK economy, and their forecasts for growth until the end of 2027 currently sit above the consensus. But, in short, Reeves still needs to find more money. No, there will be no tax rises in the spending review on Wednesday. As tax increases demand new legislation through a finance bill, we won't hear about any changes until the Budget in the autumn – but there is already speculation that any additional spending will necessitate a higher tax burden unless a spur in economic growth helps to boost the Treasury's coffers. Tom Selby, director of public policy at AJ Bell, said: 'Of course, a lot can happen between now and the Budget and we have a number of economic data points that could influence the Chancellor's decisions come the autumn, but speculation about what may be on the table is naturally already rife. 'Perhaps the most drastic decision the Government could make would be to walk back on its manifesto commitment not to tax 'working people' and consider increasing income tax, national insurance or VAT.' Mr Selby added that ideas for a wealth tax may also be considered, along with speculation of further pensions reform. Another option Ms Reeves could be weighing up is extending the current freeze on income tax thresholds. The Finance Act 2025 extended the freeze on inheritance tax thresholds until 2030 – and the Chancellor will be under pressure to do the same to other allowances and thresholds, too. The latest forecasts suggest eight million workers will be pulled into higher rates of tax by 2028, raising an extra £38bn per year for the Treasury. Extending the threshold would also allow the Chancellor to keep to Labour's manifesto commitment not to raise taxes on working people. Lindsay James, investment strategist at Quilter, said as there were no tax rises in the Spring Statement, investors are expecting to see rises in the autumn Budget if growth continues to 'lag'. Angela Rayner, the Deputy Prime Minister, made a series of suggestions in a leaked memo – including reinstating the pensions lifetime allowance and removing more inheritance tax reliefs, which were calculated to raise approximately £3bn in total. Chris Etherington, tax partner at RSM UK, added: 'It may already feel pretty claustrophobic at the Treasury, with limited headroom below the fiscal ceiling. The hope will be that economic growth will ease this pressure, and the next few months could be crucial to the Chancellor's plans. 'As it stands, the foundations may need further stabilisation and another sizeable rise in tax receipts to fund that.' Sign in to access your portfolio

CNBC's UK Exchange newsletter: No easy answers for Reeves
CNBC's UK Exchange newsletter: No easy answers for Reeves

CNBC

time2 hours ago

  • CNBC

CNBC's UK Exchange newsletter: No easy answers for Reeves

It says much about the current state of U.K. politics that today's spending review has taken on such importance. What should be a relatively straightforward event, in which Rachel Reeves, the chancellor of the Exchequer, sets out the government's spending plans for the next three financial years, has even been billed by some commentators as the defining moment of this parliament. This is because, little under a year after being handed a landslide majority by the U.K. electorate, Prime Minister Keir Starmer's government is deeply unpopular and thrashing around for ways to appease a surly and resentful public. It is important, at the outset, to make clear what won't happen today. This is not a fiscal event — Reeves is committed to just one of these a year and the next will be her Autumn Budget. So there will be no forecasts from the Office for Budget Responsibility and no details on how the government plans to raise money during the next financial year. There will also be no changes to tax policy announced; nor, unless something remarkable happens, will there be any changes to the overall sums the government expects to spend. That is because those figures are already in the public domain: Reeves set out last October the "spending envelope" for the next three financial years, with day-to-day spending (such as salaries for public sector workers) set to rise by an average of 1.2% in real terms over the next three years and capital spending (such as transport infrastructure) set to rise by an average of 1.3% in real terms over the next four years. That spending envelope, the tightest for many years, has been dictated by Reeves' much-vaunted fiscal rules — that day-to-day spending must be covered by tax revenues, not borrowing, and that debt, as a proportion of GDP, should be falling by the end of this parliament. Most economists think she is in severe danger of breaking those rules, though, having set herself wiggle room of just £9.9 billion ($13.4 billion) in her last Budget — since when the economic outlook has deteriorated and yields on gilts (U.K. government bonds) have risen, implying higher-than-expected government borrowing costs in the coming years. All of which adds to the significance of today's spending review which is, as the independent Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) points out, "the first multi-year spending review since 2021 and the first to happen outside of a pandemic since 2015." And, despite it not being a fiscal event, the bond markets will be watching for hints on what to expect regarding taxation and borrowing in the autumn. We received one such hint when, on Monday, the Treasury announced a humiliating U-turn on one of the government's first big decisions. Shortly after being elected in July last year, Reeves announced that the winter fuel allowance — a bung to pensioners of either £200 or £300 a year introduced in 1997 by one of her Labour predecessors Gordon Brown — would henceforth be means-tested, effectively stripping it from 10 million pensioners. However, after a political backlash, the Treasury said on Monday the benefit would be restored to all but the wealthiest 2 million pensioners in a move that will cost the government £1.5 billion annually. No indication was given on where that money will come from. There have also been plenty of other leaks concerning the spending review. The Times reported on Saturday that the National Health Service (NHS) will receive a 2.8% increase in real terms to its day-to-day budget over the three-year period, roughly equivalent to an extra £30 billion in cash terms by 2028. The question here (with leaders of the doctors union already agitating for industrial action) is how much of that will actually go toward improving patient services and how much will be handed to doctors in pay awards to stave off strikes. The other big winner looks to be defense which, as the IFS has noted, seems to have been implicitly allocated all of the increase in capital spending over the spending review period. The government has already set out plans to raise defense spending from the present 2.3% of GDP to 2.5% of GDP by 2027 and to 3% by the early 2030s — and it is under pressure to go further. The Trump administration has made clear it thinks NATO members should be spending 5% of GDP on defense and, in a speech on Monday, Mark Rutte, the NATO secretary-general, said the same. Reeves would need to find an extra £24 billion to take defense spending to just 3% of GDP. These big spending commitments — particularly for the NHS, which already consumes £2 in every £5 of day-to-day government spending — will mean real-term cuts in other departments. Many of these have already been stretched by years of austerity following the global financial crisis, from which the U.K. emerged with a deficit-to-GDP ratio of 10%. Britain's justice system, from courts to prisons, is under huge pressure. So is local government which, at a time of rising costs due to an ageing population, must pick up the tab for a lot of social care. The country's schools also face a squeeze; while some new money has been allocated, schools have been told to fund around a quarter of the 4% pay rise awarded to teachers this year from existing budgets. Anecdotally, stories abound of teaching assistants — many of whom work part-time — being laid off or having their hours reduced. Elsewhere, newspaper reports have prominently covered rows within the cabinet. Ed Miliband, the energy secretary, faces cuts in his department in order to protect his cherished home insulation program, while Angela Rayner, the deputy prime minister and housing secretary, is said to have clashed with Treasury officials as she sought to protect her plan to build more affordable homes. The biggest arguments, though, are said to have been between the Treasury and Yvette Cooper, the experienced home secretary and a veteran of the last Labour government, over the policing budget. At the center of all this is the urgent need for great swathes of the British state to do more with less. As Sanjay Raja, senior U.K. economist at Deutsche Bank, said in a note to clients last week: "Markets will be keeping an eye on any fallout from the spending review, while we will also be looking at the sustainability of spending policy. What do we mean by sustainability? For one, sustainability in maintaining such tight spending envelopes, via ambitious cost-saving measures. And two, sustainability in sticking to existing spending envelopes despite diminishing headroom from higher interest rates, potential downgrades to productivity growth, global trade tensions, and a looser labour market." And this speaks to the heart of the U.K.'s problem: the dreadful productivity record of its public sector and particularly the NHS. As an example, it emerged at the weekend that the NHS spent at least £102 million sending letters by post last year — causing countless missed appointments due to slow deliveries — despite promising to go digital in an era in which nearly every patient now has email access. Poor NHS productivity is not a new phenomenon. As long ago as March 2010, during the dying days of Brown's government, the Office for National Statistics reported that, from 1995 to 2008, NHS productivity fell by an average of 0.3% per year, with the decline accelerating after 2001 when Brown, as chancellor, unleashed a huge increase in spending on the service. In the absence of productivity improvements or economic growth, future spending increases will have to be met by increased borrowing or taxation. Given Reeves' devotion to her fiscal rules, she is unlikely to opt for the former. Strikingly, during interviews on Monday to discuss the winter fuel climbdown, she conspicuously failed to rule out tax increases come the autumn. Many economists now think that is almost inevitable, among them Raja, who wrote: "Perhaps even more difficult decisions lie ahead for the Chancellor. On our estimates, we see a fiscal hole of near £10-15 billion emerging ahead of the Autumn Budget. Tax rises, we think, are inevitable as spending cuts are pushed to their political limits. It could be a noisy few quarters as we move closer to the Chancellor's second budget." Another reason to expect tax increases come the autumn is the government's seeming inability to make even modest spending cuts, as shown by the winter fuel U-turn. As Simon French, the chief economist and head of research at stockbroker Panmure Liberum, put it: "Whilst not macroeconomically significant, it speaks to a problem that if Chancellors/PMs can't find it politically intolerable to find a saving of £1.5 billion (1% of this year's PSBR) then bond markets are going to be unconvinced on the decisions (regarding the cost of aging, supply-side reforms) necessary to keep public sector debt on a sustainable path." This being a political event, Reeves is bound to try and produce at least one rabbit from her hat, even though most spending decisions have already been announced or leaked. Labour MPs would love her to abolish the cap that restricts child benefit to the first two children in a family — a move that would cost £3.5 billion. The biggest surprise of all would be an increase in the overall spending envelope, perhaps justified by the fact that the economic outlook has been altered by unforeseen events, chiefly U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs. But an announcement of that type — unaccompanied by how the extra spending would be paid for — would likely spark a violent reaction not just in gilts, but also from government CEO Jensen Huang praises UK AI scene Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang spoke at London Tech Week, heaping praise on Britain's artificial intelligence sector. CNBC's Arjun Kharpal reports on the buzz around Huang's speech. British fintech Wise deals fresh blow to the London stock exchange Shares of Wise popped in early Thursday trade after the firm announced plans to move its primary listing to the U.S., in a fresh blow to the London Stock Exchange. Watch CNBC's full interview with London Mayor Sadiq Khan London Mayor Sadiq Khan sits down with Tania Bryer to discuss a range of issues including London's attractiveness as a financial hub, democracy in the U.S., and CEO says the UK is in a 'Goldilocks' moment: 'I'm going to invest here.' Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang poured praise on the U.K. on Monday, promising to boost investment in the country's artificial intelligence sector. Sam Altman brings his eye-scanning startup to the UK. Sam Altman's biometric identity verification system World will become available in London from Thursday and roll out to several other major U.K. cities in the coming months. CNBC Pro: London's IPO drought deepens but could Trump's tariffs shake things up? Some market watchers say a tariffs-driven diversification away from the U.S. could help the U.K. win back a greater share of the IPO momentum in U.K. stocks has pushed the FTSE 100 up by around 0.75% over the last week, taking it to 8,853 points by end of play Tuesday — just shy of March's record close of 8,871.3. The index is heavy in oil and gas firms, which have gained on higher crude prices. Jobs data also moved markets on Tuesday. Wage growth cooled to 5.3% from 5.6%, job vacancies fell and the unemployment rate rose to 4.6% from 4.5%, all signs of a loosening labor market that will be welcome news to the Bank of England. Investors subsequently increased their bets on the interest rate cuts expected this year, with a full half-percentage-point cut to 3.75% now fully priced in by December. That drove sterling lower against the U.S. dollar on Tuesday, with U.K. borrowing costs also broadly declining. Bond market sentiment could all change on Wednesday, however, as Reeves walks a fine line with her spending review.

Reeves's spending priorities leave little wiggle room
Reeves's spending priorities leave little wiggle room

Yahoo

time9 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Reeves's spending priorities leave little wiggle room

The words Spending Review may not instantly quicken the heart rate of many, but what we hear from the Chancellor Rachel Reeves will have an impact on what your life is like in the UK in the coming years. It could be one of the defining moments between now and the next general election, as the government divvies up spending for the health service, defence, schools, the police, prisons, courts and much else. After plenty of words about the government's priorities, we will get a sense of the numbers. And yes, a sense of the winners and losers. We can expect ministers to claim that much of what it has done in its first year in office has been about "fixing the foundations". That is code for the tricky stuff: think those big and in many places unpopular tax rises, such as the increase in employers national insurance contributions. There is also a keen awareness that rarely has a new government suffered such a big whack to its popularity so fast. Yes a whopping majority, but just 34% of the vote last summer, and they have gone a long way backwards since. Little wonder we can expect the chancellor to claim "this government is renewing Britain" but also acknowledge "I know too many people in too many parts of the country are yet to feel it". Baked into what we can expect to hear is an emphasis from Reeves of the importance of stability. As an illustration of that, the chancellor recently returned from a meeting of G7 finance ministers in Canada, where she, not yet a year in office, was the second longest serving attendee around the table. It is a volatile world. As the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) and others have pointed out, the key decision above all others that we await in the Spending Review is how much money is allocated to the health service. The NHS makes up such a big chunk of day-to-day government spending - about 40% - that how well or otherwise it does shapes everything else. This has long been the case, particularly because it is often also gets a proportionately more generous settlement than others. And, on top of that, what has changed more recently as well the government's desire to spend more on defence too and to do so in an era of low growth. If we put all these things together, you have an explanation for why other budgets will be squeezed. Or, as Paul Johnson, the outgoing director of the IFS puts it, "this will be one of the tightest spending reviews in modern times, outside of the austerity period of the early 2010s". For much of the last week, the government has been leaning into the elements of its plan that it feels most comfortable selling: the long term, so-called capital spending on transport and nuclear power. What gets squeezed and by how much is the detail we are waiting for. Labour MPs have been invited in to see the chancellor and be talked through the plans. The aim, as one person put it to me, was to give them "a song to sing", things they can talk about when they are asked what the government is up to. Plenty of Labour MPs I talk to welcome the long-term spending but are also acutely conscious of how bumpy politics feels right now and how important it is they are seen to deliver and deliver quickly. "The problem with talk of 'a decade of national renewal' is so much of this stuff is long term and so we could get half way through the decade and then lose the election," one MP reflects. Folk in the Treasury are aware of this critique and particularly those who might point to some squeezed day-to-day budgets and claim we are experiencing what they see as austerity. It has led those around Reeves to declare a "war on graphs" or, as Laura Kuenssberg reported the other day, a desire to point to graphs that help illustrate a key part of their argument in taking on this criticism. They point out that when you combine day-to-day spending with capital spending, the graph is going up - the opposite of what some might describe as austerity. "This is about four trillion pounds of spending," one senior figure tells me. "We reset the foundations. This is stage two: setting things out. Then, we hope for the delivery." Let's see. The political and economic backdrop is perilous: an electorate without much patience, limited economic growth and a wildly unpredictable international landscape, not least President Trump. Given what the government has chosen to prioritise - the NHS and defence - and the rules it has set itself with the aim of projecting economic competence, it leaves the chancellor with little room for manoeuvre. Spending review now settled, says Downing Street Reeves admits some will lose out in spending review IFS says tough public spending choices unavoidable

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