Pretty much all of that was already baked in.
Tories took us from 80% debt GDP at ~1%, to now being 100% at 5%, that has only been going in one direction before Labour came in, and will be a slow ship to turn. The difference alone there is ~100bn a year, just on debt payments, and that's just to stay stagnant with all the things the Tories drove through the floor. They could have brought in some tax or done something decent in that 14 years but did nothing but make rich peoples lives better, and poor peoples lives worse.
Tories took 10 year gilts from ~0.2% to 4.7%, and also increased debt massively since covid (some of that was inevitable due to covid, but no way all of it), and nobody was saying much, but Labour take it up 0.5% and not really increasing debt and people have a melt down.
Tax income had to go up, or we would be further into a debt spiral.
The nurses didn't get an inflation busting pay rise, it's still not parity to where it was when labour were last in power. Labour have just tried to restore some of that party, as if they don't we will lose even more healthcare staff. If we lose more healthcare staff we will have to rely on contractors more, it will probably put up the cost of wages if we don't increase the wages of our own experienced folk.
The uncertainty in the economy was baked in, it's baked in for the next decade basically. The only thing they could do to make it better is go back in the EU or SM, but they can't do that as it needs a mandate and would take time, and once the leavers get a sniff they would be out in force again to send us back to the dark ages again. This is rock and hard place scenario.
There's projects going on all over and removing the ban for onshore wind should bring in some investment. There's tons of jobs related to renewables in the Midlands, North, Scotland, never mind other projects. There is more investment in the south, sure, but the south drives the economy unfortunately, so the North basically ends up like the poor brother, I can't see much of a way around this. We kind of have to hope the improvements in the south can help the south and help it bail out the north. I hate it being this way, but we're kind of stuck with it with the Tories being in power 2/3rds of the time, who don't travel north of the M25. We're kind of forced to go along with the "south plan".
It's not a gamble as such, we have to do something, and doing nothing comes with even more risk. It hasn't failed, as we've only had two months since the budget, maybe you can say it's failed in 5,10,20 years as that's how long some things are going to take to play out.
It's also nothing compared to the Truss catastrophe, which was so bad that she got the boot almost immediately.
Sky explain it quite well:
The big picture is the UK is being charged higher interest rates by international investors to compensate them for concerns about our economic future - about rising debt levels, about the threat of higher inflation and about fears of sub-par growth.
news.sky.com
Truss was so bad, after other bad tories that the debt markets actually recovered a bit as they were so sure she was going to get the boot.
Interest rate levels won't hit anywhere near 1980's levels, they're going to go down if anything.
Most Tories and anti labour lot are just crying because inflation seems to be increasing again, but when you dig into the raw numbers it's largely just due to energy deflation stopping. Good months of deflation numbers are being replaced with flat or normal inflation numbers. The problem with inflation now is most of it is down to OOH (which won't reverse until base rates are cut significantly), and when interest rates come down (which they will) then the base rate will too, which will then bring OOH down, and possibly deflating when people get off these 2 year fixeds at 6-7% they're being forced on. It's all baked in and very laggy.
The base rates need to be cut significantly, and quickly, regardless of what we're paying for debt gilts etc, these gilt and BOE base rates don't need to correlate. That base rate also being high is stifling growth, it needs to go.
Most economists and the likes are saying we will end up cutting rates more than the BOE are forecasting. BOE will hopefully eventually realise it's the rates they're setting which are causing inflation, they're not bringing it down, they only really bring it down when inflation is not caused by the base rate.
There's next to zero chance base rates go back up above 5% after we had so long with rates at basically 0%. This would probably lead to a long crash in the housing markets, and if it went to like 10% it would put millions on the street, sat outside millions of empty houses, it's not going to happen. We could probably do with a housing market price crash though (the price to earnings is way too high), and it would help young folk get on the ladder, and the crash would largely get funded by the older/ richer folk who can afford a bit of an equity hit anyway.
Inflation and wage increase are eating house prices at the minute mind, and have been for a while now, especially in the least well of areas.