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How Labour can unpick the triple lock

The Observer

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October 12, 2025

It's a commonplace that Britain is in an economic jam. There is not a sufficiently robust and growing economic base to provide the tax revenues at reasonable tax rates to fund all the public spending we crave from a fit-for-purpose NHS to the defence of a newly threatened realm.

- Will Hutton

How Labour can unpick the triple lock

Borrow? The bond markets stand ready to punish any misstep. Labour, in the crosshairs of these dilemmas, is witnessing its standing collapse - just as it has for its predecessors, and as it will for putative successors.

But there is an original way out. Britain should create a national investment superfund, the British Pension Plan (BPP), whose investments over the next two generations would grow so large that by the end of this century it would pay every British retiree their pension guaranteed in real terms, so creating vital public financial headroom.

The taxpayer would be free of a bill that already this year will top £138bn and which is set to increase by half in real terms within 50 years. An ageing society and the apparently politically irreversible commitment to the triple lock are wreaking their fiscal consequences.

The triple lock is the promise upheld by every political party (bar Reform) to increase the state pension annually by whatever metric offers the highest percentage - growth in real wages, inflation or 2.5% - introduced by the coalition government to address widespread pension poverty in 2010. As a result, the state pension has climbed to the highest in relation to average earnings since 1968 - but it needs to be that high. One in eight pensioners who have no other savings rely on it completely, a number which will proportionally double in the next decade as yet more pensioners with no savings join their ranks.

MEER VERHALEN VAN The Observer

The Observer

Can a biopic of the Boss be anything other than blinded by his light?

Heavens above, not another biopic. I'm still in recovery from A Complete Unknown, James Mangold’s attempted unveiling of The Mysterious Soul of Bob Dylan starring Timothy Someone-or-other.

time to read

2 mins

October 26, 2025

The Observer

The Observer

Reeves is still only getting part of the Brexit message

The financial markets, and much of the media, seem obsessed by the level of public sector debt and borrowing.

time to read

3 mins

October 26, 2025

The Observer

The Observer

The anonymous Twitter troll account set up to discredit Virginia Giuffre

The online attacks came thick and fast, all 479 of them designed to discredit the accuser of Epstein, Maxwell and Prince Andrew.

time to read

5 mins

October 26, 2025

The Observer

The Observer

Badenoch and Farage should stop playground politics of making rules they can't keep

Do unto others as you would have them do unto you. That's the golden rule I remember being taught as a child in primary school. Not a bad guiding principle.

time to read

3 mins

October 26, 2025

The Observer

The Observer

Museums are in the pink while corporate sponsors remain shy

By embracing private philanthropy, the sector has received record sums, however businesses are feeling burnt by protests, write Nicole Fan and Stephen Armstrong

time to read

3 mins

October 26, 2025

The Observer

The Observer

'Democrat saviour' or 'commie bastard': Mamdani, would-be king of New York

The 34-year-old socialist set to become the Big Apple's first Muslim mayor may be the left's greatest hope - and biggest threat. Hugh Tomlinson joins the new star of US politics on the campaign trail

time to read

8 mins

October 26, 2025

The Observer

Use Russia's money

Europe has missed its chance to hit Putin's finances

time to read

2 mins

October 26, 2025

The Observer

Struggling 'clean food' brands dig in for long haul

Autumn, season of mists and mellow fruitfulness, wrote Keats. Not if you're in the plant-based food industry. Sales at major brands, including Oatly and Beyond Meat, are stalling.

time to read

2 mins

October 26, 2025

The Observer

Reeves mission: to build a European Silicon Valley centred on 'golden triangle'

Brexit is costing the UK 80bn a year in lost taxes, hitting output by up to 8% and investment by more than twice as much. The chancellor has her work cut out

time to read

5 mins

October 26, 2025

The Observer

The Observer

Academics sign letter of support after ‘vile’ abuse of Israeli professor

Tom Watson, Margaret Hodge, Michael Grade, Prof Andrew Roberts and hundreds of academics are among more than 1,600 signatories of an open letter condemning a “targeted harassment campaign” against an Israeli professor at a London university.

time to read

1 mins

October 26, 2025

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