
Independent Thinking Britain's budget – a recipe for growth or decline?
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Nov 28, 2025 This discussion features Olivia O'Sullivan, a director and policy expert on UK politics, James Kynge, a senior researcher on China and Asia-Pacific economic strategies, and Sébastien Maillard, an associate fellow on European politics and economics. They dive into the implications of the UK's latest budget amid political leaks and constrained choices due to Labour's manifesto. Comparisons are drawn between UK and Asian growth strategies, highlighting the challenges of a slow EU reset and the urgent need for reform to boost productivity in Europe.
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Debt, Low Growth Raise Credibility Stakes
- High public debt plus low growth makes the UK's fiscal position harder to manage and demands credibility with markets.
- The government must show falling debt-to-GDP and cover day-to-day spending by decade-end under its fiscal rules.
Ageing Costs Crowd Out New Priorities
- Structural drivers like ageing and costly healthcare make public spending inflexible and crowd out new priorities.
- These long-term pressures make it hard for governments to reallocate funds toward productivity-boosting areas quickly.
Stabilise Politics Before Big Reforms
- Use the budget to rebuild political stability by placating restless backbenchers and securing a working majority.
- Prioritise measures that reduce rebellion risk to enable longer-term reforms.

