The British economy has officially entered contraction territory, with GDP figures released this morning showing a sharper than expected downturn, driven directly by the compounding costs of military engagement in the Gulf. The conflict with Iran, now entering its fourth month, has triggered a cascade of fiscal pressure that the Chancellor can no longer ignore. Gilt yields have spiked past 4.
8%, the highest since the 2008 crisis, as markets price in the risk of a prolonged, expensive war with no clear exit strategy. Capital flight is accelerating: institutional investors are rotating out of sterling-denominated assets, sending the pound to a two-year low against the dollar. The Treasury is now openly discussing emergency measures, including a potential suspension of fiscal rules and a further issuance of war bonds.
But this is not a free lunch. Every pound borrowed today is a tax hike deferred. The Bank of England is caught between a rock and a hard place: raising rates to defend the currency would crush what little domestic demand remains, while holding steady invites further weakness.
The numbers are ugly. GDP contracted 0.6% in the last quarter, worse than the 0.
3% forecast. Consumer confidence has collapsed, with retail sales down 4% year on year. Business investment?
Frozen. The energy price cap is set to rise again in October, squeezing household budgets further. The Chancellor's war chest, announced with great fanfare in March, is already depleted.
We have spent £12 billion on military operations, plus another £8 billion in humanitarian aid and economic support to allied nations. Total, the fiscal cost of the Iran conflict exceeds £25 billion and counting. The government bond market is signalling distress.
The spread between UK and German 10-year yields has widened to 150 basis points, a clear vote of no confidence in the UK's fiscal trajectory. The irony is that this war was sold as a means of protecting British interests. Instead, it is demolishing the very foundations of our economic stability.
Emergency measures are coming. The Treasury is preparing a mini-Budget for next week, likely including spending cuts to non-defence departments, a freeze on public sector pay, and a new levy on energy companies. None of this will be popular.
But the markets demand action. The question is whether the Chancellor has the stomach for the necessary fiscal discipline. I doubt it.
In my 20 years watching the Square Mile, I have seen governments blush at tough choices. They prefer the opium of debt. This time, there are no easy options.
The war economy is here, and it demands sacrifice. The question for every reader is whether they trust the government to manage that sacrifice fairly. I don't.
I expect inflation to remain sticky, gilt yields to stay elevated, and the pound to weaken further. For the average household, that means a painful squeeze. The Treasury can announce all the emergency measures it likes, but the bottom line is this: the UK is paying the price for a conflict it could ill afford.










