
-
Bayern survive St. Pauli scare to stay on course for Bundesliga title
-
Atletico title hopes evaporate in Liga draw with Espanyol
-
Capuozzo stars as reinforced Toulouse pulverise Pau
-
Fears and hopes at collapsed Mandalay school
-
Bayern survive St. Pauli scare to stay on course for title
-
Simmons takes wind-hit Tour of Catalonia stage six victory
-
Bourgeois inspires France to Six Nations rout of Scots
-
Sudan army says retakes Khartoum-area market from paramilitaries
-
Eze leads Crystal Palace into FA Cup semi-finals
-
Guinea ex-dictator freed from jail after 2009 massacre pardon: junta
-
Martinez punishment 'out of Flick's hands' as Barca focus on title
-
Hundreds of thousands join Istanbul protest rally
-
Australian sprinting prodigy Gout Gout upstaged in 200m
-
'We need aid': rescuers in quake-hit Myanmar city plead for help
-
Protesters flock to mass opposition rally in Istanbul
-
Are women allowed their own dreams, wonders Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
-
Deadly earthquake forces Thai patients into sports hall
-
'Everyone was screaming': quake shocks Thailand tourists
-
Rallies grow in South Korea as court weighs president's fate
-
Scientists explain why Myanmar quake was so deadly
-
Turkey opposition calls mass rally in Istanbul
-
Chapman blasts ton as New Zealand win first Pakistan ODI by 73 runs
-
French chefs quake as Michelin prepares new guide
-
Mike Leigh on the 'hard truths' of film, happiness and World War III
-
Myanmar quake toll passes 1,000 as rescuers dig for survivors
-
Lights out: Bali guards protect island's day of silence
-
Myanmar-Thailand quake toll passes 700 as rescuers dig for survivors
-
UK gallery to return Nazi-looted painting to heirs of Jewish collector
-
UK dreams of US trade deal before Trump tariffs
-
'Blink of an eye': survivor tells of Bangkok skyscraper collapse horror
-
The hand of GOAT, Mensik wins with Messi touch
-
Partial solar eclipse to cross swathe of Northern Hemisphere
-
Tunisian startup turns olive waste into clean energy
-
Guinea ex-dictator sentenced for 2009 massacre pardoned: junta
-
Chapman ton lifts New Zealand to 344-9 in first Pakistan ODI
-
Myanmar quake: what we know
-
Vu fires 64 to seize lead at LPGA Ford Championship
-
Resurgent Liu wins women's figure skating world title
-
Djokovic to face Mensik with 100th title within reach
-
Rescuers dig for survivors after huge quake hits Myanmar, Thailand
-
South Korea firefighters deploy helicopters as wildfires reignite
-
'Defiant' Canada autoworkers vow to fight tariff layoffs
-
Performance, museums, history: Trump's cultural power grab
-
Russian-born 12-ranked Kasatkina says to play for Australia tennis
-
WyHy Celebrates Grand Opening of New Lyman Branch
-
New to The Street Show #639 Premieres Nationwide on Bloomberg Television, March 29 at 6:30 PM EST Featuring BioVie, Roadzen, Tonix Pharma, and eXoZymes Inc.
-
Wallabies back Jorgensen suffers serious ankle injury
-
Academy apologizes after stars say it 'failed to defend' Palestinian filmmaker
-
UN rights chief demands end to 'horrific suffering' in Ukraine
-
Djokovic oozing confidence ahead of century bid

UK set to cut public spending by billions of pounds
Britain's finance minister Rachel Reeves is set to detail billions of pounds of spending cuts in her Spring Statement on Wednesday to address the country's ailing public finances.
The spending update comes as the Labour government, elected in July after a landslide election win, faces sluggish economic growth and rising borrowing costs.
In a glimmer of good news, Britain's annual inflation rate eased to 2.8 percent in February, down from 3.0 percent in January, according to the Office for National Statistics.
But despite the slowdown, inflation remains elevated above the Bank of England's two percent target. The central bank kept interest rates unchanged last week after a series of cuts, warning of "economic uncertainty".
Reeves has warned that since her inaugural budget in October, "the world has changed."
Heightened global uncertainty over US tariffs and the war in Ukraine have added to the UK's economic woes, chipping away at the Labour government's £9.9 billion ($12.8 billion) fiscal cushion.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer has recently pledged to hike spending on defence, with the government announcing late Tuesday a £2.2 billion boost next year.
"This moment demands an active government stepping up to secure Britain's future," Reeves said in a press statement ahead of the fiscal update.
An advocate of iron discipline over public finances, Reeves is set to detail cuts to welfare payments and government departmental budgets in Wednesday's highly-anticipated update.
- Gloomy outlook -
An accompanying forecast from the Office for Budget Responsibility, the country's spending watchdog, is expected to paint a gloomy picture of the outlook for the UK economy.
"The Chancellor (Rachel Reeves) is unlikely to announce much today that will help quell the fears around the UK economy," commented Lindsay James, investment strategist at wealth management firm Quilter.
"Economic growth is miniscule and risks going backwards," she added.
Reeves's attempts to shore up the public purse are constrained by her own fiscal rules and her pledge not to increase taxes, raising the prospect of spending cuts.
The rules prevent her from borrowing to fund day-to-day spending and call for debt to fall as a share of the gross domestic product by 2029-2030.
The centre-left government has already announced it will slash the costs of running the government by 15 percent over the next five years, targeting annual savings of over £2 billion across Britain's civil service.
It also announced contested cuts to disability welfare payments, in the hopes of saving more than £5 billion annually by the end of the decade.
While Labour has highlighted increased funding for housing, the struggling National Health Service, and reforms to workers' rights, it is spending cuts that have remained in the spotlight.
The cuts add to criticism piled on Labour after it scrapped a winter-fuel benefit scheme for millions of pensioners last year.
The update also comes ahead of a business tax hike, announced in Labour's inaugural budget, coming into effect in April.
Businesses heavily criticised the tax increase, warning about the adverse effects on hiring and wages.
T.Sanchez--AT