Skip to content
CityAM
Main navigation
  • News
    • News
      • Latest Business News
      • Economics
      • Politics
      • Tech
      • Banking
      • FTSE 100 Live
      • Retail
      • Insurance
      • Legal
      • Property
      • Transport
      • Markets
    • From our partners
      • AON
      • Bayes Business School
      • Canada BIDs
      • Central London Alliance CIC
      • Destination City
      • Halkin
      • Olympia
      • Inside Saudi
      • Tottenham Hotspur Stadium
      • Santander X
      • YEAR SIX Dividend
    • Featured

      The next person to shop your store may not be a person at all

      AI shopping agents are rewriting the rules of online retail across North America

      Submit a story

      Tell us your story.

      Submit
  • Opinion
  • Sport
    • Latest Sports News
      • Sport
      • Sport Business
    • From our partners
      • The Morning Briefing: SBS x CityAM
      • Aramco Team Series
      • LIV Golf
    • Featured

      Cohere's Aidan Gomez bets the house on 'sovereign AI' with Aleph Alpha merger valuing the group at $20bn

      Cohere CEO Aidan Gomez on stage discussing the Toronto AI lab's strategy

      Submit a story

      Tell us your story.

      Submit
  • Life&Style
    • Life&Style
      • Life&Style
      • Toast the City Awards
      • The Magazine
      • Travel
      • Culture
      • Motoring
      • Wellness
      • The RED BULLETiN
      • Do it with Shared Ownership
      • Media Speak Hub
    • Featured

      Moonvalley's Naeem Talukdar is selling Hollywood the one thing rival AI video tools cannot: legal cover

      Moonvalley's Marey AI video model produces Hollywood-grade footage trained on licensed data

      Submit a story

      Tell us your story.

      Submit
  • Investec
  • Events
  • Latest Paper
Wednesday 26 November 2025 5:26 am  |  Updated:  Wednesday 26 November 2025 12:00 am

‘Fiscal rules’ have made Budgets a farce

By: Ayushma Maharjan

Add as a preferred source on Google
GettyImages 2181228503 showing a business meeting with diverse professionals discussing strategy in a modern office setting
Reeves will not subject pensioners to the cash ISA cut

Chancellors increasingly make policy not on economic grounds, but to satisfy the letter of their own self-imposed fiscal rules, writes Ayushma Maharjan

Today, Rachel Reeves will unveil her second Budget. Her fiscal rules commit her to reducing public debt and returning to surplus. Yet if history is any guide, these pledges will prove no more durable than those of her predecessors. Successive Chancellors have introduced their own fiscal rules, and successive Chancellors have watched them crumble under political pressure.

When Gordon Brown first introduced fiscal rules in the late 1990s, they were intended to end the “short-termism” of British economic management. Yet public debt has since surged from under 40 per cent of GDP to nearly 100 per cent. Of the 54 medium-term forecasts made between 1990 and 2019, none saw actual spending come in below projections. Successive governments have consistently spent more than they planned, and while every Chancellor since Brown has unveiled their own fiscal rules, few have endured once political realities set in.

So what keeps going wrong? A recent Centre for Policy Studies report identifies several deep-rooted flaws. One is that our fiscal rules encourage governments to spend freely during good years without building buffers for the bad ones. In theory, the Treasury should pay down debt when the economy is strong and borrow only when recessions hit. In practice, even in perfectly ordinary years, governments have overspent by an average of 3.5 per cent of GDP – around £100bn in today’s money. This is why every major shock leaves Britain scrambling: we enter each crisis already over-borrowed and fiscally exposed.

Budget goal posts keep moving

Another weakness is the built-in incentive to postpone hard decisions. Chancellors are judged on targets set “four years from now”, which means the deadline is always far enough away to be reset before it matters. There is no accountability for what is actually delivered, only for what is promised. Reeves’ own numbers illustrate this. Her plan assumes day-to-day departmental spending will slow to just one per cent real growth by 2028, even as the NHS is guaranteed three per cent annual increases. Achieving those figures would require austerity levels no recent government has had the political courage to enforce.

Can economists really forecast public finances with precision half a decade into the future? The OBR’s track record suggests not. It and its predecessors have consistently underestimated the size of the state and the trajectory of debt because such accuracy is impossible. Yet Budgets still turn on tiny changes in the OBR’s spreadsheets, treated as if they were scientific truth.

This has become painfully obvious in recent months. Chancellors increasingly make policy not on economic grounds, but to satisfy the letter of the fiscal rules or to respond to tiny movements in the OBR’s forecasts. Shifts of a few billion pounds – in a £1.5 trillion budget – can trigger headlines, ministerial scrambling and hastily constructed policy packages.

We saw this clearly at the April 2025 Spring Statement, when Reeves unveiled a bundle of welfare changes seemingly crafted for one purpose: to restore the exact amount of “headroom” she had before the OBR revised its outlook. As many observers noted, this was an almost farcical exercise – weeks of political theatre over £14bn of projected spending changes five years from now, treated as if they were precise numbers rather than broad estimates.

Better approaches abroad

There are far better approaches abroad. New Zealand has moved away from rigid numerical targets toward broader “fiscal objectives” that require governments to consider spending, debt, revenue and net worth in a long-term, integrated way. The goal is not to hit a forecast line but to leave future generations a stronger fiscal foundation. Switzerland’s constitutional “debt brake” offers another model: it caps spending in line with expected revenue over the economic cycle, forcing governments to run surpluses in good years and repay borrowing from bad ones. The result is one of the most stable fiscal records in the developed world.

For nearly three decades, fiscal rules have allowed politicians to sound disciplined while behaving otherwise. They talk tough, juggle the forecasts and shift the goalposts. Meanwhile, debt rises, taxpayers shoulder the cost and future generations pick up the tab.

What Britain ultimately lacks is not better rules but genuine accountability. Chancellors should no longer be able to announce targets and quietly abandon them. If promises are missed, the next Budget should begin with a clear explanation of what went wrong and how the gap will be closed. Until that culture changes, every ‘responsible’ Budget will remain exactly what it has become: a very expensive pantomime.

Ayushma Maharjan is a researcher at the Centre for Policy Studies

Read more

Conservatives have the right diagnosis, but can they cure Britain’s ailments?

Mel Stride speaking at a business conference podium, addressing economic strategies and policy updates.

Share this article

  • Facebook
  • X
  • LinkedIn
  • WhatsApp
  • Email

Similarly tagged content:

Sections

  • Opinion

Categories

  • Opinion
  • Business

People & Organisations

  • Autumn Budget 2025
  • Budget
  • Centre for Policy Studies
  • Labour Party
  • Rachel Reeves
  • UK economy
  • UK Government

Trending Articles

  • KPMG’s Summer Friday half-day rollback signals deeper woes for Big Four giants

  • Inflation expectations at record high in interest rates signal

  • London Tech Week sums up everything wrong with UK tech

  • KPMG report on AI found riddled with AI hallucinations

  • UK economy falters as deeper damage to growth to come

More from CityAM

  • Conservatives have the right diagnosis, but can they cure Britain’s ailments?

    Opinion
    Mel Stride speaking at a business conference podium, addressing economic strategies and policy updates.
  • ZayZoon, the Calgary fintech born on a fishing boat, posts 1,487% growth as earned wage access goes mainstream

    ZayZoon co-founder Tate Hackert built the Calgary fintech around earned wage access
  • Botpress raises $25m as Quebec's Sylvain Perron pitches his startup as the 'infrastructure layer' for AI agents

    Botpress product UI: the Quebec startup pitches itself as the infrastructure layer for enterprise AI agents
  • Labour has two visions for the economy, only one is even close to credible

    Opinion
    Keir Starmer
  • Jeevun Sandher MP: I am committed to Labour’s fiscal rules, but delivery matters too

    Opinion
    Labour Party celebrates new leaders election with cheering supporters and waving flags at campaign headquarters
  • FluidAI wins US FDA clearance for its surgical monitor as Waterloo's Youssef Helwa targets 100,000 operations

    FluidAI's Origin surgical monitor wins FDA clearance for use in US hospitals
  • OBR chiefs warn jostling Labour MPs against fiscal rules change

    Economics
    Louise Haigh has hit out at Rachel Reeves' "excessive deference" for the OBR.
  • Mel Stride: Markets have issued ‘damning verdict’ on Labour

    Politics
    Professional stride in business attire walking confidently in corporate setting, reflecting leadership and ambition
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • News
  • Markets & Economics
  • Politics
  • Opinion
  • Life&Style
  • Personal Finance

Follow us for breaking news and latest updates

  • Facebook
  • X
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
Copyright 2026 CityAM Limited