World

The Telegraph
Trump’s economic self-harm is throwing Reeves a lifeline
rachel reeves
The fallout from Trump’s tariff war could inadvertently play into the Chancellor’s hands, just when she needs it - Jason Alden/Bloomberg Finance LP

Might the UK end up a surprise financial beneficiary of Trumpite chaos?

I ask this question not because there is still some hope of Britain winning a carve-out from the swingeing tariffs that America threatens to impose on Europe – though this does indeed remain a possibility – but because if international investors are losing faith in the mighty dollar, then they need somewhere else to go, and sterling may be a good alternative.

This might seem an odd thing to argue given the doom-laden narrative that has hung like a pall over the UK economy ever since Brexit. Nor is it even as if the outlook is beginning to brighten.

To the contrary, things are again on the slide, with the Office of Budget Responsibility expected to halve its growth forecast for this year to just 1pc in the Spring Statement on Wednesday.

The public finances too are once more on a deteriorating trajectory, forcing Rachel Reeves, the Chancellor, to find more than £10bn of additional spending cuts to stay within her fiscal rules.

If growth has stalled, inflation is meanwhile rising, a classic stagflationary environment that leaves the Bank of England at a loss to know which way to turn on interest rates.

Policymakers would cut rates if they were looking at growth prospects alone, but would raise them if focused instead on inflation, where many of the immediate pressures are strongly upwards.

There will no doubt be a furious argument when the new growth forecast is announced over whether it is international factors or the self-harm of UK government policy which is causing this miserable state of affairs.

Probably a bit of both. Labour’s cack-handed tax on jobs, set to come into force next month, has dealt a hammer-blow to business confidence, which has in turn been further damaged by the Government’s employment rights legislation.

But international factors, and in particular fears of further fragmentation in the world economy on the back of Trump’s tariff war, are also plainly weighing heavily on sentiment.

The OECD cut its growth forecasts for virtually all economies last week in its updated outlook, with the UK notably faring rather less badly than most. All the same, things still look worrying enough.

Why then would investors be flocking to the UK’s door?

All things are relative, and in a lineup of the ugly, it is the least ugly that wins the prize.

The point is that both politically and economically, Britain looks more stable than most. Sir Keir Starmer, moreover, talks a good game on deregulation and reform, even if his party would not seem temperamentally well-suited to practical implementation of the laudable objectives he has taken to trumpeting.