Mini-budget: PM to meet head of OBR following market turmoil
- Published
Liz Truss will meet the head of the UK's independent economic forecaster later after days of market turmoil.
In an unusual move, the prime minister and Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng will meet the chairman of the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) to discuss the fallout after last week's mini-budget.
The watchdog offered to prepare a draft forecast in time for the mini-budget but it was not taken up.
A group of MPs has called for the forecast to be released "immediately".
The Treasury Select Committee said the lack of this forecast before last Friday's announcements had "in some part driven the lack of confidence in the markets".
News of the meeting with OBR chairman Richard Hughes came as a new poll gave Labour a 33 percentage point lead over the Tories.
Government sources have dismissed suggestions the talks with the independent forecaster, announced late on Thursday and first reported by the Guardian, external, amounted to an "emergency meeting".
It is understood the forecast process will be discussed, as well as economic and fiscal developments since March.
Financial Secretary to the Treasury Andrew Griffith told the BBC: "I think a meeting between the prime minister, the chancellor and the OBR shows the importance of getting that forecast right, and it's a very welcome thing to see."
The chancellor has asked the OBR to report back to him by 23 November - the date of his next financial statement.
Mr Griffith added the government did not take up the OBR's offer for a draft forecast in time for the mini-budget because "some of those growth plans are still to be brought forward".
Earlier on Thursday, the prime minister and chancellor defended their policy after a dramatic week that saw the pound slump against the dollar and the Bank of England forced to step in and take action.
Forecasts of the UK's economic outlook by the OBR are usually published when the government makes major financial announcements, for example on Budget day.
Conservative MP Mel Stride, who chairs the cross-party Treasury Select Committee, said in his letter on Thursday the lack of an OBR forecast had left some people with the impression the government was trying to avoid scrutiny.
He said the next forecast should be brought forward, and that the chancellor's next planned financial statement on 23 November should also be moved forward "to as early a date as possible", given "the continued uncertainty within markets".
The OBR publicly confirmed it had sent the chancellor a forecast when he took office in September - and also offered to update it in line with any planned government announcements but was not commissioned to do so.
The intervention from the committee came after the prime minister gave interviews to a number of BBC outlets on Thursday in which she insisted the tax cuts outlined in the mini-budget were the "right plan".
Speaking later on BBC Question Time, Local Government Minister Paul Scully acknowledged "things had been really difficult" since last week, but said the government had "had to go further" than simply limiting the rise in energy bills.
"We need to make sure that the economy can grow," he said. "There's no way we can just have more of the same, tax your way out of a relatively stagnant economy."
Forecasts from the independent OBR give an indication of the health of the nation's finances and there have been calls for a forecast to be published in the past week.
In defending his policies to Conservative MPs, Mr Kwarteng said they were needed to stop a collapse in consumer spending - and that he was working at pace to show markets he had a "clear plan".
He pledged that reforms "on childcare, business regulations, financial services, agriculture and more" would be set out in the next six weeks.
His message to colleagues on WhatsApp contained a list of "talking points" to defend the government's handling of the economy, including that the "government needed to act urgently".
Speaking to BBC Two's Newsnight, Conservative MP Geoffrey Clifton-Brown said the government had so far failed to "reassure the international markets that we actually really know what we want to do with the economy".
"It's all very well getting the fiscal side of it, but you need the expenditure side to balance that," he said. "They need to [say] what the debt-to-GDP ratio will be this year, next year, and in five years' time."
Since it was announced at the end of last week, the mini-budget has faced widespread criticism, with the International Monetary Fund and former Bank of England governor Mark Carney disparaging the plan.
On Tuesday the Bank of England said it would buy up to £65bn worth of government bonds to prevent the collapse of some pension funds.
Across all polls Labour have opened up an average 19.5% lead over the Conservatives since Ms Truss became prime minister three weeks ago.
A new poll, by YouGov for The Times and carried out on Wednesday, found Labour had a 33-point lead.
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