Chancellor George Osborne will today learn if his proposed austerity measures have the backing of the International Monetary Fund.
The highly-respected global watchdog will publish a hard-hitting report - the first since the Coalition came to power - on the health of the UK economy and its prospects.
Osborne will be anxious that it approves his controversial plans to tackle the record budget deficit of £155 billion or 11 per cent of GDP.
IMF inspectors have spent a week in Britain, meeting officials at the treasury and the Bank of England, and taking the temperature of the economy.
The report will also deliver the IMF's verdict on the newly-created Office for Budget Responsibility and its economic forecasts, monetary policy set by the Bank of England, and reforms of the financial system including the planned abolition of the Financial Services Authority.
Read more: http://www.dail*****.co.uk/money/ar...measures.html?ito=feeds-newsxml#ixzz10k29H09w
The highly-respected global watchdog will publish a hard-hitting report - the first since the Coalition came to power - on the health of the UK economy and its prospects.
Osborne will be anxious that it approves his controversial plans to tackle the record budget deficit of £155 billion or 11 per cent of GDP.
IMF inspectors have spent a week in Britain, meeting officials at the treasury and the Bank of England, and taking the temperature of the economy.
The report will also deliver the IMF's verdict on the newly-created Office for Budget Responsibility and its economic forecasts, monetary policy set by the Bank of England, and reforms of the financial system including the planned abolition of the Financial Services Authority.
Read more: http://www.dail*****.co.uk/money/ar...measures.html?ito=feeds-newsxml#ixzz10k29H09w