Opening the way for a possible relaxation of
Hammond's tight grip on spending, borrowing in the 12 months to
the end of March totaled 24.7 billion pounds ($31.9 billion), 41
percent less than in the 2017/18 tax year.
However, the deficit was higher than the forecast of 22.8
billion pounds made by Britain's independent budget office last
month.
Wednesday's numbers were provisional and could be revised.
As a share of economic output, the deficit fell to 1.2 percent,
its lowest since the 12 months to March 2002 and down from
nearly 10 percent during the depths of the global banking crisis
a decade ago, the Office for National Statistics said.
Following publication of the figures, Hammond said the
government looked on track to meet its goal of reducing overall
government debt levels as a percentage of the economy by 2021
and keeping the core budget deficit below 2 percent.
"The key thing for me is that we are, probably for the first
time in a decade, in a position where we have choices," Hammond
told lawmakers in parliament's Treasury Committee.
HIGHER SPENDING
Nevertheless, in March alone, the budget deficit stood at 1.7
billion pounds, above all forecasts in a Reuters poll of
economists that had pointed to borrowing of 400 million pounds.
The figures showed tax receipts continued to grow strongly in
March, but higher government spending accounted for the
wider-than-expected deficit, mostly down to purchases of goods
and services.
"While there are many political and economic uncertainties
ahead, the fact that the public finances are in their best shape
for 17 years should give (Hammond) some room for maneuver in his
Autumn Budget and Spending Review," PwC chief economist John
Hawksworth said.
Britain's debt agency said it planned to sell an extra 3.7
billion pounds of government bonds in the current 2019/20
financial year, or 117.8 billion pounds in total, based on the
public finances data published on Wednesday.
Hammond has held out the prospect of billions of pounds of extra
public spending or tax cuts if parliament approves a deal on the
UK's withdrawal from the European Union agreed between Prime
Minister Theresa May and other EU leaders.
But lawmakers within the Conservative Party of May and Hammond
remain divided on the deal, leading to the EU extending the
Brexit deadline until the end of October.
Hammond has said he could also use his "fiscal headroom" to help
the economy weather a no-deal Brexit shock.
(Reporting by Andy Bruce; Editing by Gareth Jones)
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