By Amal Shah
04 Mar 2026
We are delighted to release our summary of the key announcements in the Spring Forecast 2026.
It has been an eventful few months, with U-turns on both the 2024 Budget measures relating to Inheritance Tax (IHT) agricultural and business reliefs and the 2025 Budget proposals for business rates. And that is before the political storms of the winter are considered, which have had their own economic impact via the uncertainty created.
The current flare up of hostilities in the Middle East may, as the Office for Budget Responsibility notes, have “very significant impacts on the global and UK economies”. In turn that could call into question the Forecast numbers. With oil prices already affected and the stock and bond markets reacting negatively to the uncertainty created, the Chancellor will be hoping the repercussions do not prove too serious for UK plc by the time of her next Budget this autumn.
The Autumn 2025 Budget took place against a backdrop of UK GDP growth having slowed to just 0.1% in the third quarter, after starting the year with a first quarter reading of 0.7%. Preliminary figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) released in mid-February 2026, suggested GDP growth remained at 0.1% in the final quarter and that 2025 GDP growth was 1.3%. In the same month, the ONS also published its usual monthly data on the labour market, inflation and retail sales:
Mixed economic data is less of a problem for the government’s finances than it would have been a year ago, thanks to the Chancellor’s decision in November 2025 to build an extra £11.8 billion into her fiscal headroom – the amount by which the government’s revenues are projected to exceed its day-to-day spending in 2029/30.
Source: Office for National Statistics
*Labour Force Survey, Source: Office for Budget Responsibility
With little more than three months since the OBR published (slightly prematurely…) its last Economic and Fiscal Outlook (EFO), it was likely there would be few significant changes in the numbers.
As the table above shows, the OBR’S projection for economic growth in the current year has been cut to 1.1%, bringing it into line with the February market consensus, but still above last month’s Bank of England’s forecast of 0.9%. The OBR increased its projections for growth in both 2027 and 2028 to 1.6% (from 1.5%), largely countering the impact of its 2026 reduction over its five-year forecast period.
The OBR’s inflation projection for this year was cut by 0.2% to 2.3%, which closely matches the Bank of England’s own estimate for inflation. To a degree this fall of inflation has been engineered by the government with the actions it has taken on administered prices, such as the energy price cap and rail fares.
The better outlook for inflation may also be due in part to a gloomier projection for unemployment, which the OBR now sees as averaging 5.3% in 2026, against the 4.9% which it projected back in November 2025. Unemployment stays above those previous EFO levels until 2029, by which time it is projected to have fallen back down to 4.2%, marginally below where it was in 2024.
Fiscal headroom, which caused so much angst for the Chancellor a year ago, barely received a mention in her speech. The ‘stability rule’ headroom – the extent to which the current budget is projected to be in surplus by 2029/30 – rose from £21.7 billion to £23.6 billion. The increase was the result of a mix of factors, including:
Government borrowing for the current year is now projected to be £132.7 billion, down £5.5 billion from the OBR’s November 2025 number, but £15 billion more than it projected a year ago. 2026/27’s borrowing is projected to be £115.5 billion, 3.1% higher than projected in November. Thereafter borrowing is below November’s projections.
The uptick in borrowing contrasts with a £51.6 billion drop in projected gilt sales to £252.1 billion in 2026/27. Over half that decline stems from £27.5 billion less in gilt redemptions requiring refinancing in the next financial year. Net debt interest in 2026/27 is projected to be £109.4 billion, £3.9 billion below the November forecast, thanks to lower inflation and interest rates.
All these projections come with an obvious, elephant-sized caveat. To quote the OBR from the EFO’s executive summary, “Conflict in the Middle East, which escalated as we were finalising this document, could have very significant impacts on the global and UK economies”. On Tuesday Brent crude was trading at close to $84 a barrel, over $20 above the OBR’s forecast for the 2026 average price.
The gilts market also underlined that OBR caution on Tuesday 3 March, with the yield on the ten-year gilt rising to 4.57% from 4.39% at close on Monday. At the same time money markets movements suggested hopes that the Bank of England would cut bank rate later this month have largely faded.
There are now about eight months until the Budget, by which time the next round of OBR figures could be more challenging than the spring’s set.
If you have any questions relating to the announcements made in the Spring Forecast Statement, please get in touch with one of our expert Tax Advisers.
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