OECD forecasts UK to have highest inflation in G7 in 2025
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OECD forecasts UK to have highest inflation in G7 in 2025
"At the same time, growth projections remain muted. The OECD has nudged up its forecast for UK GDP growth in 2025 to 1.4%, but expects the economy to slow to just 1% in 2026. The organisation warned this downturn would be driven by a "tighter fiscal stance" - pointing to likely tax rises or spending cuts - and ongoing trade frictions."
"The figures come as Chancellor Rachel Reeves prepares her November Budget, in which she is under pressure to plug a potential £20bn-£30bn hole in the public finances while sticking to Labour's self-imposed borrowing rules. Reeves said the OECD's findings confirmed that "the British economy is stronger than forecast" but acknowledged "there is more to do to build an economy that works for working people"."
"The OECD's assessment also comes against a backdrop of stubbornly high domestic price pressures. UK inflation stood at 3.8% in August, driven by food costs and higher wage bills, and the Bank of England has warned it could climb to 4% before easing. Globally, the OECD upgraded its forecast for growth this year to 3.2% from 2.9%, highlighting resilience in the US economy where investment in artificial intelligence has helped offset the drag from higher tariffs imposed by President Donald Trump."
The OECD raised its forecast for UK inflation to 3.5% in 2025, up from 3.1%, citing rising food prices and higher business costs, and expects 2.7% in 2026. UK GDP growth is nudged to 1.4% in 2025 but is forecast to slow to 1% in 2026. The OECD attributes the slowdown to a tighter fiscal stance and ongoing trade frictions. Chancellor Rachel Reeves faces pressure to fill a potential £20bn-£30bn public finances gap while adhering to borrowing rules. UK inflation was 3.8% in August; the Bank of England warned it could reach 4%.
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