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Tax rises ‘inevitable’, thinktank warns, as Reeves set to warn markets of budget plans – business live | Business

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Goldman Sachs also expect tax rises

Analysts at Goldman Sachs have predicted that Rachel Reeves’s budget could push down government borrowing costs, if she reassures the bond markets that she’s committed to tackling the deficit.

In a research note released to clients last Friday, Goldman Sachs predict that the chancellor’s budget measures – and pre-budget hints about what’s to come – could knock up to 0.2 percentage points off the cost of borrowing (the ‘yield’ on a 10-year bond) for a decade.

They explain:

Given the modest downside impact on growth and inflation, plus the potential for increased credibility in the deficit path, we expect the budget measures to lower 10y Gilt yields by around 10-20bp, although given budget expectations are already forming we see this as a tailwind for Gilts into the budget more than the on-the-day reaction.

Goldman Sachs also point out that UK bond yields remain the highest in the G10.

They also expect tax rises in the budget, saying:

The upcoming budget is set to tighten fiscal policy by around £30bn, which our economists expect will mainly comprise tax increases, including freezing income tax thresholds from 2028, broadening the NI [national insurance] tax base, pensions and property taxes.

We expect limited spending cuts, but that the budget delivers a modest increase in headroom at the end of the forecast horizon.

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