Millions hit by benefit cuts as Rachel Reeves warns ‘if you can work, you should work!’ in bid to fix ‘broken system’

BENEFITS were slashed and a bonfire of civil service jobs was lit in Rachel Reeves' gloom-ridden Spring Statement today.
Amid a dire economic forecast, the Chancellor swung the axe at Britain's bloated welfare bill - shredding it by £3.4bn.
Ms Reeves also confirmed that at least 10,000 civil service pen-pushers will have their jobs abolished, with desperately needed cash redirected to front-line services such as policing.
But the entire £10bn budget surplus the Chancellor's statement is predicted to create by 2029 will be completely wiped out if Donald Trump imposes 20 per cent tariffs on Britain.
In a bitter blow to the Chancellor, the Office for Budget Responsibility downgraded its economic forecast for 2025 from 2 to an anaemic 1 per cent.
Key announcements in the Spring Statement:
No new tax rises: The Chancellor ruled out further tax hikes and pledged to crack down on tax avoidance, aiming to raise an extra £1bn.
Growth downgraded for 2025: The OBR halved its GDP growth forecast for next year from 2% to just 1%.
Growth boost from planning reforms: New housing policies expected to raise GDP by 0.6 per cent over the next decade.
House building surge: 1.3 million homes expected over five years, with construction hitting a 40-year high.
£2.2bn extra for defence: Additional funding confirmed to help meet the 2.5 per cent of GDP defence target.
£400m Defence Innovation Fund: Backing new tech like drones and AI for the front line.
Welfare shake-up: Targeted employment support and welfare reform to reduce benefit spending.
Civil service cuts: New voluntary exit schemes and AI tools to shrink Government.
The economic watchdog warned inflation is set to go up, with figures averaging 3.8 per cent in July this year before falling to 2.1 per cent in 2026.
The unemployment rate is also forecast to rise, reaching 4.5 per cent in 2025, up from 4.3 per cent in 2024.
Meanwhile, Britain's budget deficit will remain high at 4.8 per cent of GDP in 2024-25 before falling to 2.1 per cent by 2029-30.
The OBR predicted that the measures announced in the Spring Statement will result in Treasury coffers achieving a surplus of £6bn in 2027-28 and £9.9bn in 2029-30.
And households are predicted to be £500 better off each year by 2029.
The reforms will also permanently increase levels of real GDP - but only by a meagre 0.2 per cent, translating to £6.8bn, by 2029-30.
Meanwhile, house-building will hit a 40-year high.
BUT the OBR found that Ms Reeves has just a 50 per cent chance of avoiding having to come back with more tax rises or spending cuts in the Autumn Budget.
And President Trump's tariffs could entirely wipe out the government's fiscal headroom, with a 0.6 per cent hit to GDP in 2026-27.
Addressing a sea of furious faces on the Labour Commons benches, Ms Reeves said: "As the previous government learned to their detriment – there are no shortcuts to economic growth.
"It will take long-term decisions. It will take hard yards.
"It will take time for the reforms we are introducing to be felt in the everyday economy."
By Ryan Sabey, Deputy Political Editor
RACHEL Reeves is trying shift any blame away from herself and the Labour government as it grapples with the sluggish economy.
The Chancellor is telling MPs that the “world had changed” meaning she has to take drastic action when it comes to spending and welfare.
The trouble for Ms Reeves and Sir Keir Starmer is that they put growth as their “number one” mission and that, to put it mildly, is stalling.
The independent watchdog say growth forecasts has halved for this year and the financial headroom wiped out - hence the savings to be made elsewhere.
But for Ms Reeves all this puts her in a very tight spot insisting she will stick to her iron clad rules - with her looking to find up to £15 billion of savings.
The Tories and commentators are aiming their fire over how she hasn’t helped herself as growth has fallen.
They point out that she was the person who decided to go on a £40 billion tax raid at October’s Budget - with £25 billion of it falling on the shoulders of business.
The upcoming Donald Trump-led tariff war ledcould easily throw the government off course again unless a limited trade deal can be struck.
Rachel Reeves will be pushing every leaver possible to get that over the line before it kicks in next week to give her some breathing space.
But we could be back at square one come the autumn with the Budget to balance the books - with speculation there could be tax rises and Whitehall departments scratching around for more savings.
Justifying her billions worth of cuts, Ms Reeves added: "Our task is to secure Britain’s future in a world that is changing before our eyes.
"The threat facing our continent was transformed when Putin invaded Ukraine.
"At the same time, the global economy has become more uncertain bringing insecurity at home as trading patterns become more unstable and borrowing costs rise for many major economies.
"This moment demands an active government.
"A government not stepping back, but stepping up."
In her crackdown on benefits, the Chancellor froze key Universal Credit payments for those too ill to work until 2030, meaning they will get less help every year as prices rise.
A small cut to the basic rate of Universal Credit in 2029 has also been announced, clawing back even more cash from the welfare budget.
Changes announced last week will also make it harder to claim disability payments like PIP from 2026, with tougher tests and more face-to-face assessments.
The Work Capability Assessment will be scrapped in 2028 and replaced with a single test, based on PIP.
New incapacity claimants will see their payments slashed from £97 to £50 a week, while existing ones will have their payments frozen until 2030.
The Chancellor said: "We are reforming our welfare system making it more sustainable, protecting the most vulnerable and supporting more people back into work.
"The Labour party is the party of work.
"We believe that if you can work, you should work and if you can’t, you should be properly supported."
By Ryan Sabey, Deputy Political Editor
Rachel Reeves is delivering the Spring Statement - nearly fifty years after the first such “mini-Budget” was delivered.
The statement, which over the years has been delivered in both autumn and Spring, was started in 1976 at the end of the year.
The law changed in 1975 to ensure there were two economic forecasts every year as opposition MPs and the public could keep track of government plans.
Rachel Reeves has insisted there will only be one major fiscal event each year with a Budget planned for the autumn - so no tax hikes or reductions this year.
Her Labour predecessor Gordon Brown held the Budget in the the autumn and each autumn he would deliver a Pre-Budget Report giving an update on the state of the country’s finances.
Fast forward to 2010 and George Osborne, Chancellor until 2016, set up the Office for Budget Responsibility, to provide an independent forecast.
They were also there to dissect the state of the economy - producing five-year forecasts twice a year.
But the OBR weren’t asked for a forecast by short-lived Prime Minister Liz Truss in 2022 despite their mini-Budget containing an array of tax cuts causing a market meltdown.
Turning to the mega size of Whitehall, Ms Reeves insisted "we can make our state leaner, and more agile, delivering more resources to the frontline."
She confirmed tens of thousands of back office civil service jobs will go, leading to £3.5bn of day-to-day savings by 2029-30.
Ms Reeves also announced a clampdown on tax evaders by investing in AI to catch financial criminals.
A £3.25 billion Whitehall “transformation fund” will be used to pay off failing civil servants.
The Chancellor said that the first allocations from the scheme, designed to help public services invest in modern technology such as artificial intelligence, would include “funding for voluntary exit schemes to reduce the size of the civil service”.
The cutting edge technology will increase the number of tax fraudsters charged each year by 20 per cent and add £1bn to Treasury coffers.
In a boost for the UK's depleted defence sector, the Chancellor announced she will pump an extra £2bn into defence spending.
Cash will help fit warships with guns that can hit a £1 coin at 1,000 metres and down drones from three miles.
Drawn from Treasury reserves and the overseas aid budget, it will push defence spending to 2.36 per cent of GDP — with a commitment to hit 2.5 per cent in 2027.
Ms Reeves vowed to turn Britain into a "defence industrial superpower".
She pledged to spend a minimum of 10 per cent of the Ministry of Defence’s equipment budget on new tech such as drones and AI enabled weapons.
The Chancellor promised to drive forward advanced manufacturing production in locations including Glasgow, Derby and Newport.
Responding to the statement in the Commons, Shadow Chancellor Mel Stride accused Ms Reeves of having "reneged" on her pledges to Brits.
He slammed his opposite as a "gambler" who "destroyed" livelihoods and "clobbered" businesses.
Mr Stride said: "At the last budget Ms Reeves said she would bring stability to the public finances but this statement, more appropriately referred to as an emergency budget, has brought her to a cold, hard reckoning.
The Chancellor says of course that none of this is her fault, that it's the war in Ukraine, it is President Trump, it is tariffs, it is President Putin, it is the Conservatives, it is legacy, it is anybody but her.
"But what the British people know is that this is a consequence of her choices.
"She is the architect of her own misfortune: it was her who talked down the economy ... so that business surveys and confidence crashed through the floor."
He added: "It was the Chancellor who confected a £22 billion black hole, a smokescreen that was only ever there in order to cover up for the fact that she and the Prime Minister reneged on their promises to the British people during the last general election."
THE Office for Budget Responsibility is an independent watchdog that analysis the government's spending plans.
Among other things, it makes projections on how much taxes will raise, how much policies will cost, and how much growth will go up or down.
These forecasts have become central to Budgets and Statements in recent years.
George Osborne set up the OBR when Chancellor to avoid accusations the Treasury was "marking its own homework" with its own forecast.
But critics say it has become too powerful by forcing ministers to perpetuate the "tax and spend" doom loop to satisfy the OBR.
Liz Truss famously did not commission an OBR forecast for her notorious mini-Budget, which spooked the markets into meltdown.