History

Thought-provoking, interpretive history essays that use the past to illuminate the present. These articles are speculative and exploratory – offering a modern lens on historical events, ideas, and figures

James Taylor James Taylor

Rachel Reeves, the Budget ‘Black Hole,’ and the OBR: Did the Government Mislead the Nation?

Rachel Reeves, the Budget ‘Black Hole,’ and the OBR: Did the Government Mislead the Nation?

The row over Rachel Reeves’s recent Budget has turned into a wider crisis of trust. The UK chancellor is accused of misleading the country about a looming “budget black hole” to justify £26 billion in tax rises, even as official forecasts pointed to a small surplus rather than a gaping deficit. At the same time, the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) has been rocked by an embarrassing leak of its Economic and Fiscal Outlook, culminating in the resignation of its chair.

This dispute over the “Rachel Reeves budget black hole” is no longer just a fight about numbers. It has become a test of honesty in politics, the independence of fiscal watchdogs, and the credibility of a government that promised stability after years of turmoil. Critics say voters were scared with talk of a hole in the public finances that did not exist in the way implied; defenders insist Reeves still faced a tighter outlook and needed to act.

This article unpacks how the row began, what the OBR’s figures actually showed, why the leak matters, and how the clash between narrative and reality could shape both the government’s future and public faith in economic policy.

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