More cost of living help coming as Reeves heads to G7 to coordinate war response
Saturday, 16 May 2026 22:30
This week, the Chancellor will travel to Paris to meet G7 finance
ministers and central bankers – the first Chancellor visit to Paris
since Brexit. Close partnership with allies is a key pillar of the
action she's taking to strengthen our economic and energy security
in response to the conflict in the Middle East. Reeves will
reassert her ambition to ensure the UK is at the heart of Europe,
deepening ties and driving practical progress to reduce trade
barriers. She...Request free trial
- This week, the Chancellor will travel to Paris to meet G7
finance ministers and central bankers – the first Chancellor
visit to Paris since Brexit.
- Close partnership with allies is a key pillar of the action
she's taking to strengthen our economic and energy security in
response to the conflict in the Middle East.
- Reeves will reassert her ambition to ensure the UK is at the
heart of Europe, deepening ties and driving practical progress to
reduce trade barriers. She will also press for coordinated action
to limit inflation and supply chain pressures, and restore
freedom of navigation through the Strait of Hormuz.
- She will also lead discussions on support for Ukraine,
reiterating the UK's backing for Ukraine and its IMF programme.
Reeves will underline the need to maintain pressure on Russia ,
including on energy revenues, and agree credible, coordinated
approaches to Ukraine's ongoing financing needs with partners.
- The Chancellor is later this week expected to make further
announcements on how the government will deliver a responsible
plan to support with the cost of living in response to the war in
Iran, which threatens to continue to push up prices for UK
households.
- Reeves has been pushing Treasury officials to work up a range
of options to ease cost of living pressures made worse by the war
in Iran, and next week she will set out the next phase of the
plan to protect family finances and go further to deliver
economic security.
- Since the war began, the Chancellor has pledged to be
responsive to a changing world and act in the national interest,
focused on keeping costs down and targeting support where it's
needed, while rejecting knee‑jerk measures that would risk higher
inflation and interest rates.
- The government has already acted to help ease pressures:
extending the 5p cut to fuel duty (twice), freezing prescription
charges (two years running) and rail fares (for the first time in
30 years), and taking £150 off energy bills with extra help for
those using heating oil; for business, expanding the British
Industrial Competitiveness Scheme to over 10,000 manufacturers to
cut electricity costs from this year.
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