Osborne readies for spending cuts in UK budget

Britain's Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne arrives at Downing Street in London on February 20 , 2016 ahead of an expected meeting of the cabinet following Prime Minister David Cameron's return from EU negotiations in Brussels.  Prime Minister David Cameron takes a deal giving Britain "special status" in the EU back to London on February 20 hoping it will be enough to keep his country in the bloc as campaigning begins for a crucial in-out referendum. The British premier is expected to announce a date for the vote, likely June 23, after sealing unanimous support for the agreement during two days and nights of intense negotiations in Brussels.  Cameron was set to hold a cabinet meeting at 1000 GMT.  / AFP / JUSTIN TALLIS

Bloomberg

Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne warned he may make further cuts in public spending in his annual budget on March 16 after data showed Britain’s economic recovery is not as advanced as he hoped.
Osborne will seek further “efficiencies” in government departments before making cuts to services, he said in an interview with the BBC in Shanghai, where he is attending a meeting of Group of 20 finance ministers and central-bank heads. This puts the chancellor at odds with the G-20’s pledge to use fiscal policy flexibly to support growth, according to a draft statement obtained on Saturday by Bloomberg News.
“The storm clouds are clearly gathering in the world economy and that has a consequence for lots of countries including Britain. Now, we are weathering it better than most but we’ve just had confirmation that our own economy is not as big as we had hoped,” Osborne said. “We may need to undertake further reductions in spending because this country can only afford what it can afford.”
The need for more cuts would be a setback for Osborne, who has built his reputation — and pinned his hopes of succeeding David Cameron as PM — on Britain’s economic recovery since he became chancellor in 2010.
Britain’s growth has outstripped most of its peers as Osborne pursued a policy of cuts to services and public-sector job reductions in a bid to trim what was a record budget deficit.
That also goes against the G-20 finance chiefs’ pledge in Shanghai to use monetary, fiscal and structural tools to support economic growth.

Latest Data
Still, data published by the Office for National Statistics on Thursday showed growth is now being almost entirely driven by consumer spending. While the economy expanded 0.5 percent in the fourth quarter of 2015, exports declined for the second straight three-month period and business investment fell the most in almost two years. ONS public-finance figures last week suggested Osborne may struggle to avoid overshooting his deficit forecast for the fiscal year ending in March.

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