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Reeves plans spark tax rise warning after economic shrank in April

June 12, 2025
in Business
Reading Time: 7 mins read
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Reeves plans spark tax rise warning after economic shrank in April
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Michael Race

Business reporter, BBC News

Getty Images Young woman with long blonde hair tied back in a loose ponytail wearing a high vis jacket in a warehouse scanning a parcel on a trolley. There are shelves of parcels behind her and two colleagues also wearing high vis walking towards her.Getty Images

Chancellor Rachel Reeves has refused to rule out future tax rises after the UK economy suffered its worst contraction for a year and a half in April.

The economy unexpectedly shrank by 0.3% after taxes increased for businesses, household bills jumped and exports to the US plunged.

The figures come a day after Reeves set out spending plans aimed at boosting growth, with funding increases for the NHS and defence, but budgets squeezed elsewhere.

Economists warned that a failure to increase UK growth would “almost certainly spark more tax rises” later this year for the government to balance its spending commitments.

Reeves acknowledged the latest economic figures were “clearly disappointing” and refused to rule out tax rises.

“No chancellor is able to write another four budgets in the first year of a government, you know how much uncertainty there is in the world at the moment,” she told the BBC.

Monthly figures on the economy are volatile, and the more stable three-month figure to April showed the economy grew by 0.7%.

“With spending plans set… any move in the wrong direction will almost certainly spark more tax rises,” said Paul Johnson, director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS), an influential think tank.

In the Spending Review, Reeves prioritised ploughing billions into long-term projects, in a bid to boost economic growth and improve living standards.

But many of the chancellor’s plans such as new railway lines and the development of new UK nuclear plant Sizewell C will take years, with current day-to-day spending budgets being squeezed.

Council tax is also expected to rise to pay for local services including policing.

Opposition parties said the chancellor’s previous decision to raise employers’ national insurance, which took effect in April, was dragging on growth.

Bar chart showing the estimated monthly GDP growth of the UK economy, from April 2023 to 2025. The figures are as follows: Apr 2023 (0.1%), May 2023 (-0.4%), Jun 2023 (0.7%), Jul 2023 (-0.4%), Aug 2023 (0.0%), Sep 2023 (0.0%), Oct 2023 (-0.4%), Nov 2023 (0.3%), Dec 2023 (0.0%), Jan 2024 (0.5%), Feb 2024 (0.2%), Mar 2024 (0.6%), Apr 2024 (-0.1%), May 2024 (0.3%), Jun 2024 (-0.1%), Jul 2024 (-0.1%), Aug 2024 (0.2%), Sep 2024 (-0.1%), Oct 2024 (-0.2%), Nov 2024 (0.1%), Dec 2024 (0.4%), Jan 2025 (0.0%), Feb 2025 (0.5%), Mar 2025 (0.2%), Apr 2025 (-0.3%).

The government is also paying more to borrow money.

Lindsay James, investment strategist at British multinational wealth management company Quilter, said the higher cost was due to investors being cynical over the government’s spending plans.

“With the economy now weakening, we can expect to see concerns around further tax rises increase as we near the autumn Budget – which is likely to weigh on growth even more.”

Growth rising steadily is widely welcomed, as it usually means people are spending more, extra jobs are created, more tax is paid, and workers get better pay rises.

But growth in the UK has been sluggish for many years.

The Office for National Statistics said a poor month for the services sector, which includes businesses ranging from shops and restaurants to hairdressers and financial firms, were behind the contraction in April.

Legal firms and property companies also “fared badly”, it said, following a strong March which saw many homebuyers rushing to complete purchases to avoid stamp duty increases.

Car manufacturing was also weak after the introduction of 25% tariffs on UK vehicles exported to the US. Cars are the UK’s biggest US export, with one in eight cars built in Britain shipped across the Atlantic.

Trade data showed the value of UK exports decreased by some £2.7bn in April, with goods to America alone falling by £2bn, the largest monthly fall on record in exports across the Atlantic.

Since April, the government has agreed a deal on tariffs with the US and had also made trade agreements with the European Union and India.

Despite the tariff pact with the US, a 10% import tax still applies to most UK goods entering America, with taxes still higher for steel and cars until the deal comes into force.

Grace Sangster and Ollie Vaulkhard Grace Sangster and Ollie Vaulkhard pictured with their cat, smilingGrace Sangster and Ollie Vaulkhard

Ollie Vaulkhard, director of Vaulkhard group which owns 17 hospitality venues across Newcastle upon Tyne, said the business was under pressure from the cost increases.

“Each one of those is manageable – you put them all into a pot, ultimately we’ve got to charge our customers more,” he said.

Grace Sangster, who is on an apprenticeship scheme earning £40,000, said the government should do more to help first time buyers.

She and her partner Ollie Vass, both 19, bought their first home in April, but said due to the stamp duty increases, the couple had to pay £3,125, as opposed to zero previously.

‘More taxes coming’

Shadow chancellor Mel Stride blamed Reeves’s economic choices for the weak growth.

“The chancellor should have taken corrective action to fix the problems she has caused. But instead her Spending Review has all but confirmed what many feared: more taxes are coming.”

Liberal Democrat Treasury spokesperson Daisy Cooper said the figures were a “wake up call for the government which has so far refused to listen to the small businesses struggling to cope with the jobs tax”.

In April, employers’ National Insurance contributions rose to 15% from 13.8% with the threshold for payments reduced from £9,100 per year to £5,000.

Firms also saw minimum wages and business rates go up.

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