Public  borrowing is £4.7 billion higher than expected this year underlining the  difficult choices facing Chancellor Rachel Reeves at the Autumn Budget.
Treasury spending audit had already revealed £22 billion of unfunded pledges  inherited from the previous government before the Office for Budget Responsibility's  (OBR's) latest grim forecast.
The  Chancellor has said there will be significant changes to tax and spending plans  at the Budget on 30 October. Here, we take a look at what Ms Reeves has said so  far and what it means for taxpayers.
Fix the  foundations
The Chancellor said that she has inherited a '£22 billion  hole' in the public finances and outlined the 'urgent work' required to reduce  the pressure on finances by £5.5 billion this year and over £8 billion next  year.
Ms Reeves announced that the government will cut winter fuel  payments to those not in receipt of pension credits and axe funding for certain  infrastructure projects.
Ms Reeves said the government will 'treat taxpayers'  money with respect by ensuring that every pound is well spent and use the  Budget to 'fix the foundations of our economy'.
Ms Reeves added: 'This is not the statement I wanted to give  today, and these are not the decisions I wanted to make. But they are the right  decisions in difficult circumstances.'
Immediate  savings
The Chancellor announced a number of immediate savings,  including:
    -  £800 million this year and  £1.4 billion next year from scrapping the Rwanda migration partnership and  scrapping retrospection of the Illegal Migration Act.
-  £70 million this year by  cancelling the Investment Opportunity Fund and other small projects.
-  £185 million next year from  cancelling the Advanced British Standard.
-  £785 million next year from  stopping unaffordable road and railway schemes.
The Chancellor also announced a review of the New Hospital  Programme.  
Manifesto  commitments
Ms Reeves also outlined the next steps in delivering tax  commitments from Labour's election manifesto.
This includes ending the VAT tax breaks for private schools  from 1 January 2025 to help recruit 6,500 new teachers, as well as replacing  the non-domicile regime with a new internationally competitive residence-based  regime.
The Chancellor confirmed plans for the Energy Profits Levy  to be extended one year to 31 March 2030, have its investment allowances  tightened and to increase the rate of the levy by three percentage points to  38% from 1 November 2024.
Tax and  spending
The Chancellor will be making a number of further tax and  spending announcements at the Autumn Budget.
Ms Reeves said: 'I can repeat – from the despatch box – our  manifesto commitment that we will not increase National Insurance, the basic,  higher or additional rates of income tax or VAT.
'My Right Honourable Friend the Exchequer Secretary is  publishing further detail on our manifesto commitments to close tax loopholes  and clamp down on tax avoidance to ensure we bring that money in as quickly as  possible.'
Ready to  help
Whatever the Chancellor's Autumn Budget brings we will be on  hand to help. If you need advice on any related matter, please contact us.