Britain | Office for Budget Responsibility

Britain’s fiscal watchdog is caught up in a political storm

All eyes are on the Office for Budget Responsibility

Chancellor of the Exchequer, Kwasi Kwarteng delivers his keynote speech to party members at the annual Conservative Party conference in Birmingham. Picture date: Monday October 3, 2022.

When KWASI KWARTENG unveiled the biggest package of tax cuts in half a century on September 23rd, something was missing. Ordinarily the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR), a fiscal watchdog, accompanies budget announcements with a forecast of the health of the public finances. But its services were rejected by the chancellor, and without the OBR’s conclusions to look at, investors drew their own. Now Mr Kwarteng is scrabbling to make amends. The OBR’s forecasts, along with its assessment of whether the government is meeting new medium-term fiscal commitments, may now be published before the end of the month.

This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline “Watched dog”

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