Secretary of State Rachel Reeves, UK Prime Minister, told the media before his second day speech at the Labour Party meeting at ACC Liverpool in Liverpool, England on September 29, 2025.
Ian Forsyth | Getty Images News | Getty Images
British Prime Minister Rachel Reeves was barely apart on the possibility that x could fall into the upcoming budget on Monday as he is trying to fill the UK’s finances hole.
Attending the Labour Party’s annual meeting in Liverpool on Monday, Finance Minister Reeves said he would defend the UK’s economy “update” ahead of the Treasury’s fall budget on November 26th, focusing on “abolizing long-term youth unemployment.”
The Minister of Finance instead announced plans to have thousands of young people placed in paid jobs as part of the “Youth Guarantee” scheme, which disappoints anyone hoping for clues on tax payments and spending reduction plans.
“All young people are guaranteed to either the university location, those who want to continue studying or apprenticeships, and help them learn trade, which is essential to their plans to rebuild the country, or to learn one-on-one support to find work,” she told representatives at the conference.
“More than that, our guarantee ensures that a paid job placement will be given to young people who have been abolished for 18 months of work. Actual work, practical experience and new skills,” she said in a comment released by the government before her speech.
Reeves didn’t specifically refer to the budget, but she hinted at the tough choices ahead, telling the audience.
“In the coming months, we will face further testing. Future options will become even more difficult due to harsh global headwinds and long-term damages that have been put in place on the economy, which is becoming increasingly clear.”
“The world has changed.”
While listening to the positive notes to young people, Reeves’ speech rarely dispels wider public concern that taxes need to rise to fill the growing fiscal hole.
The issue is exacerbated by the Prime Minister’s determination to balance out spending commitments made by Reeves last year, U-turns on welfare reductions, and her own imposed rules on lowering UK debt and borrowing investments alone.
Estimates vary, but economists suggest that the Prime Minister will need to find an additional ÂŁ500 billion ($671.6 billion) to close the UK’s fiscal gap amid substantial spending on welfare and public services, reduced tax receipts and growth, and increased borrowing costs.
Reeves carried out a $40 billion tax raid in the budget last fall, where the UK businesses and employers were attacked largely and raised minimum wage and national insurance contributions they had to pay. She had promised to raise taxes on workers before Labour took power in a landslide victory in July 2024, but she promised that she would not smash any further business.
Now, facing her own strict rules on budget spending, borrowing and balance, the Prime Minister is very likely to have to break his promises as he is trying to fill in the financial hole.
Balancing the book is an incompetent task for Reeves, who made headlines earlier this year after she cried in Congress. Questions about whether she is being plundered by a plundered market amid accusations that she mismanages Europe’s second largest economy after Germany.
“The prime minister is boxed by her own numbers and political reality,” Nigel Green, chief executive of financial advisory firm Debele Group, said in an email on Monday. “The market demands discipline, but her party demands action. The path to least resistance is higher taxation.”
“Investors should take the risk of acquiring a wide range of taxes seriously,” he said.
Kiel Prime Minister Starmer and Finance Minister Rachel Reeves appear visibly upset in the House on Wednesday.
Images procured under open council license v3.0
In fact, Reeves and British Prime Minister Kiel Starmer have repeatedly supported her — suggesting that tax rises could be close by.
Speaking to the BBC early on Monday, Reeves refused to ensure that the freeze on the income tax standard, a rate in which workers pay higher taxes, would not be extended.
“I wouldn’t be able to do that,” Reeves told the broadcaster, saying “the world has changed” amidst the trade tariffs and ongoing conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East.
She added that the workers’ pre-election commitment to not procure VAT, taxes added to most products and services, still standing, reflecting the stated position of Star, who was questioned on Sunday about the matter.