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Pound suffers further falls as UK’s fiscal troubles set to deepens - THE INDEPENDENT

OCTOBER 29, 2025

The pound has fallen sharply as worries over the UK’s bleak fiscal outlook weigh heavily before next month’s closely-watched Budget.

Sterling tumbled to a two-and-a-half-year low against the euro and a three-month low versus the US dollar, down 0.4% at 1.13 euros and 0.4% lower at 1.32 dollars, following steep falls on Tuesday.

It comes after reports that the UK’s independent fiscal watchdog, the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR), had cut its productivity forecast – due to be unveiled in November’s Budget – by 0.3 percentage points, possibly leaving the Government facing a more than £20 billion hit to the public finances.

Each percentage point downgrade means the Chancellor needs to find around £7 billion to meet her plans.

This could leave Chancellor Rachel Reeves with a gap of more than £20 billion, even before paying for the expected abolition of the two-child benefit cap.

Fears are building that Ms Reeves may need to renege on the Government’s manifesto pledge not to raise taxes for working people as she needs to plug a gaping hole in the nation’s finances, with tax hikes and spending cuts expected in the Budget.

The pound’s falls also come before the Bank of England’s interest rate meeting on November 6, when it will publish accompanying quarterly growth and inflation forecasts.

The Bank is expected to keep rates on hold at 4% in the next decision, with some economists now not forecasting a cut until 2026 as stubbornly high inflation holds policymakers back from further reductions.

The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) warned earlier this month that Ms Reeves could need to find £22 billion of tax rises or spending cuts if she is to restore the £10 billion of headroom she left herself against her debt targets in the spring.

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