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IMF raises UK growth forecast and backs Reeves’s deficit reduction plans – business live | Business

IMF raises UK growth forecast for 2026

Newsflash: The International Monetary Fund has raised its forecast for UK growth this year.

IMF economists now expect UK GDP to rise by 1.0% in 2026, up from the 0.8% it forecast in April, due to the economy’s “strong pre-war momentum” and a “robust” performance in the first quarter of this year when the economy grew by 0.6%.

That upgrade should cheer ministers, even though it’s still below the 1.3% growth which the IMF predicted in January before the Iran war began, and would be a slowdown compared with 2025 when the UK grew by 1.4%.

The improved forecast comes after the IMF concluded its annual assessment of the UK economy (known as an Article IV Mission).

The IMF says:

double quotation markWhile the UK economy has remained resilient in recent years, the war in the Middle East is dampening near-term prospects.

Growth is projected to slow to 1.0 percent this year, then gradually recover as the shock dissipates. Higher energy prices are expected to push inflation up temporarily and delay the return to the central bank’s target by about one year.

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Petrol pump price closing in on April’s three-and-a-half-year high

Motorist groups are warning that UK fuel prices will soon rise over the highs set early in the Iran war.

The AA confirm that petrol pump prices are closing in on April’s three-and-a-half-year high, which they predict could be hit within days as the bank holiday weekend approaches.

The RAC has predicted that later this week the average price of a litre of petrol will eclipse the peak on 15 April, which was the last day prices peaked since the war in Iran began.

According to the RAC, the average price of a litre of petrol has risen to 158.24 today, only slightly below the 158.31p recorded on 15 April.

A chart showing UK petrol and diesel prices Photograph: RAC

Luke Bosdet, the AA’s spokesman on pump prices, says:

double quotation mark“The need for ditching or delaying the fuel duty increase, due from September onwards, has been made more critical by average UK petrol pump prices climbing to within 1p of the three-and-a-half-year high, set in April.”

Yesterday, the Sun on Sunday reported that Rachel Reeves is expected this week to announced that the 5p increase in fuel duty that was due to take effect in the autumn will not now go ahead.

Downing Street have declined to comment on ‘tax speculation’, but didn’t deny the story, our Politics Live blog reports.

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