General Election ’24: the takeaway for business
The votes are in and the UK is set for a new government. What might that mean for UK Plc?
The votes are in and the UK is set for a new government. What might that mean for UK Plc?
Consistent pre-election surveys signalled it, while the exit poll all but confirmed it: a Labour majority so sizeable it warrants the already-worn hashtag ‘Starmergeddon’. By mid-morning on 5 July, Labour had won 412 of 650 constituency seats, putting Sir Kier Starmer as the new Prime Minister, joined by Rachel Reeves as Chancellor.
While Labour has not shared its full economic plans – expect an autumn Budget for that – it has indicated the direction of policies over the coming term. What are the takeaways for businesses, and what targeted support might different industrial sectors enjoy?
During the course of the election we have followed the major (and minor) developments. Below is a summary of the policy announcements we’ve seen and, with an obligatory asterisk, what we may expect*.
* - Other runes may be cast
The overriding economic policy challenge – acknowledged by Labour – is to improve the UK’s lacklustre economic growth. Labour’s Manifesto sets out the (distinctly ambitious) goal of ‘securing the highest sustained growth in the G7’. Alas, on a per capita basis, UK Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth has languished towards the bottom of the G7 since the 2016 Brexit referendum.
UK trend GDP growth rates appear to have deteriorated from around 2.75% during the Great Moderation (1998-2007) and around 2% in the decade following the Global Financial Crisis to before the pandemic (2010-19), to around 1.25% on some estimates. The latest Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) forecasts, from the March 2024 Budget, are however relatively optimistic for UK output: averaging 1.85% between 2025 and 2028, albeit without much scope for upward revisions to its growth assumptions.
The incoming Labour Government’s fiscal inheritance is unenviable. To achieve the principal fiscal rule – for public sector debt as a percentage of GDP to be falling in the fifth year of the official forecast – the structural budget deficit (the cyclically-adjusted primary budget) needs to move from a substantial stimulus (averaging around 4.5% of GDP over the past five years) to broad balance by next year and then ever larger surpluses.
The Institute for Fiscal Studies has described the debt rule as ‘an arbitrary and gameable target’. But to be seen to be credibly trying to achieve this will require government to deliver genuine fiscal tightening (not simply promised). That will entail a significant, multi-year fiscal consolidation – dramatically different to the years of largesse since the pandemic.
To speak with our market specialists about the UK policy outlook and what it could mean for your business, get in touch with your NatWest representative or contact us.
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