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Macro-financial risk 2026-04-26 10 minute read 10 sources

UK Labour Year Two: Reeves, the Fiscal Lock, and the 2026 Spending Choice

Twenty months in, Rachel Reeves has redefined the borrowing rules, raised employer National Insurance, and committed to a 100 billion pound capital programme. The arithmetic for the 2026 Budget is unforgiving and the politics are tighter still.

Keir Starmer's government enters its second full fiscal year with the choices set in October 2024 hardening into a path. The 40 billion pound revenue raise was anchored on a 1.2 percentage point employer National Insurance increase and a lower secondary threshold. The 100 billion pound capital uplift over five years was made affordable on...

Macro-financial risk 2026-04-26 11 minute read 18 sources

UK fiscal trajectory under Reeves: gilt market discipline meets a Labour spending review

Sterling assets are repricing the second year of Reeves's chancellorship. Two budgets, one spending review, and a quarter of acute gilt stress have left the fiscal stance technically compliant with the rules and operationally fragile. The next eighteen months decide whether the framework holds.

Rachel Reeves entered the 2026 budget cycle with public sector net debt at roughly 94.5 percent of GDP, a 30 year gilt yield that touched 5.43 percent in early April, and a tax take heading toward an all time high of 38 percent of GDP by 2030-31. The Autumn Budget 2025 raised an additional 26.1 billion pounds, the June 2025 Spending Revie...

Electoral and political intelligence 2026-04-26 11 minute read 12 sources

Reform UK in 2026: From Five Seats to Polling Lead, and the Reshaping of British Politics

Reform UK won five seats and 14.3 percent of the vote in July 2024. By the first quarter of 2026 it leads national polling, controls ten English councils, and has drained Conservative donors and members at speed. The arithmetic of British politics is being rewritten.

Reform UK enters the second year of the 2024 parliament as the United Kingdom's leading party in published voting intention. The 4 July 2024 election delivered five seats on a 14.3 percent vote share, with second places in 98 constituencies. By January 2026 YouGov, More in Common, and Find Out Now placed Reform on 25 to 29 percent, ahead ...