Rachel Reeves LIVE: Chancellor to deliver major speech in desperate bid to boost economy

Embattled is making a major speech this morning in a desperate bid to kickstart the economy.

The Chancellor is in Oxfordshire to set out policies aimed at boosting growth from 10am.

Ms Reeves, who faced a major backlash to her tax-hiking Budget, is saying that Britain has been “held back” and “accepted stagnation”.

But the claimed Sir and Ms Reeves herself are the “biggest barriers to growth”.

Shadow chancellor Mel Stride said: “Hastily cobbled together announcements of growth in the 2030s will do nothing to help the businesses cutting jobs right now because of Labour’s punishing jobs tax, the companies being crushed under their barrage of new regulations, or the farmers facing bankruptcy over the cruel family farm tax.”

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Cost of living crisis isn’t over

Reeves says the impact of the crisis isn’t over with too many peoplke still struggling to pay bills and mortgages.

Growth is ‘number one mission’

Reeves begins her speech and says without economic growth ‘we cannot improve the living standards of ordinary working people’

Growth is her ‘number one mission’ she says.

The message is ‘kickstart economic growth’

Journalists and business people have assembled to hear Rachel Reeves speak on a plinth that reads “kickstart economic growth”

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Reeves will vow to take on the

The Chancellor will make it clear she plans to build with “cranes in the sky” – and won’t let “blockers” stop her.

New reservoirs also planned

New reservoirs will be built near Abingdon in Oxfordshire and in the Fens near Cambridge. They will be among nine new reservoirs built as the Government has agreed for water companies to invest £7.9 billion to improve infrastructure.

Senior Minister defends airport expansion

Allowing Heathrow to expand will be controversial with some local residents and environment campagners.

But the UK “can’t afford” to be a country that “doesn’t build runways” or other major projects, a senior minister has said.

Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds warned the UK risks being “left behind” if it does not go for growth.

He told Breakfast: “I want people to know that things that have been too difficult in the past will be focused on, will be changed, will be delivered on, by this Government.

“It’s not just about aviation expansion, there’s a whole range of things.”

He added: “We’re not going to have endless judicial reviews effectively try to second-guess democratically-elected decisions from the elected government of the day. We will follow process, but that process has got to be one that can deliver the things.

“We simply cannot afford to say we don’t build reservoirs any more, we don’t build railways, we don’t build runways. That’s not good enough, we will be left behind.”

Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham delighted with Old Trafford scheme

The Chancellor is backing plans to redevelop Old Trafford.

A new or redeveloped Old Trafford can cement Manchester’s place as “the global capital of football”, the Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham has said.

are set to make a decision by the end of the season on whether to redevelop the existing stadium into an 87,000-capacity venue or build a brand-new 100,000-capacity ground.

The club will pay for whichever option they eventually choose, but the initiative has been boosted by the UK Government and Trafford Council both giving their backing to plans to provide public funds to regenerate the area around the stadium over recent days.

Burnham said the project, which also involves relocating freight terminals, will benefit other parts of the north-west, as well as his city.

He told Breakfast: “This truly… it’s one of those rare projects that’s a win-win, the benefits will be felt far and wide.”

A new rail line is planned

East West Rail involves boosting railway links between Oxford and Cambridge with new and upgraded lines.

The scheme has three stages, with initial services from Oxford to Bletchley and Milton Keynes scheduled to begin this year.

The other two stages are reliant on Government funding and approval.

These involve services being extended from Oxford to Bedford, and then from Oxford to Cambridge via Bedford and Bletchley.

Backing for Old Trafford scheme

The Chancellor will confirm she backs plans to redevelop Old Trafford.

is eager to create a new venue by either redeveloping its current stadium to increase capacity to 87,000, or build a new ground which could hold 100,000 fans.

The club has said it will decide on its preferred option “ahead of the summer”.

The project would also involve a major regeneration of the area around Old Trafford, with residential, transport and entertainment developments.

Devastating impact of winter fuel cuts

Pensioners are “feeling more ill and depressed after Labour’s cuts” according to a survey by one of Labours trade union allies.

Farmers protest against the Chancellor’s inheritance tax changes

Farmer Julie Adams said she would have to find hundreds or thousands of pounds to pay for Rachel Reeves’s inheritance tax raid.

She called the Chancellor’s policy “horrendous”. Julie, from Bicester, in Oxfordshire, said: “It will make everyone scared and worried that they’ve got to find this extra money.”

The eyes of the world are on this speech

The UK’s economic problems have been noticed around the world.

US-based world-leading financial analysts S&P Global warning the UK economy “largely stalled at the start of 2025” this week.

It said firms cut employment in January thanks partly to “widespread concerns over higher staff costs associated with the Budget changes”.

Reeves forced to act after economy stalls

Why the speech today? Rachel Reeves is desperate to reassure businesses suffering as a result of her Budget decisions which included putting up National Insurance, which increases the cost of employing people.

In just one example, he’s the latest warning from the British Chambers of Commerce.

Jane Gratton, Deputy Director Public Policy at the British Chambers of Commerce said: “The full impact of the changes to national insurance and the minimum wage, announced at the Budget, won’t be fully seen until later in the year. However, the warning lights on recruitment, employment and training are already flashing.

“Our latest survey paints a worrying picture of weak workforce growth, persistent hiring difficulties and cuts in workplace training. It also revealed that 55% of firms are planning to put up prices, with labour cost the main driver.

“To grow the economy, we need businesses and the workforce to thrive. Government must ease the cost-pressures on firms so they can invest in people. Working proactively with employers to tackle the long running skills crisis is likely to become even more important in the months to come.”

Pension reforms to bring billions into the economy

The Chancellor will confirm plans to give pension fund managers more freedom over how they spend the money they control.

This will allow them to invest billions of “surplus” funds in UK businesses.

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Keir Starmer wants to slash red tape like Thatcher

The Prime Minister vowed to cut regulation which he says is holding growth back – in a similar way to Conservative Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher.

Writing in The Times, Sir Keir said: “There is a morass of regulation that effectively bans billions of pounds more of investment from flowing into Britain.

“Thickets of red tape that, for all the talked a good game, was allowed to spread through the British economy like Japanese knotweed.

“In the 1980s, the Thatcher government deregulated finance capital. In the New Labour era, globalisation increased the opportunities for trade. This is our equivalent.”

Plans for new UK ‘silicon valley’

The speech will include plans for a new UK ‘silicon valley’ in the Oxford and Cambridge region, including Milton Keynes.

See more on that:

/news/politics/2006688/rachel-reeves-announces-oxford-cambridge-mega-city

Plus, it’s the worst-kept secret at Westminster that Ms Reeves will confirm her support for allowing to build a third runway.

Rachel Reeves

Chancellor Rachel Reeves will make the announcement this morning (Image: Getty)

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