The Treasury is ripping up the rulebook. Sources confirm that a new growth strategy, briefed to the Cabinet this morning, is a direct response to Washington's blistering economic performance. Chancellor Jeremy Hunt has reportedly told allies that Britain can no longer afford to be 'politely outpaced.' The plan is aggressive. It targets deregulation, tax breaks for tech, and a sweeping overhaul of planning laws.
Whitehall insiders describe it as a 'pivot to American-style dynamism.' The mood in the Treasury is anxious but determined. One official told me: 'We have been sleepwalking. The US economy is on steroids, and we are still on decaf.' The chancellor is betting big on a productivity surge. But the details are thin. Critics within the party warn that copying the US model ignores structural differences. 'We don't have their shale, their scale, or their risk appetite,' a former minister grumbled.
Polling shows the public is skeptical. Only 34% believe the government can deliver growth matching the US. Yet Number 10 is pushing hard. They see this as a wedge issue for the next election. The strategy will be formally unveiled next week. Expect fireworks from the usual suspects on the backbenches. This is a high-stakes gamble. Failure is not an option, but success is far from guaranteed.









