UK budget deficit shows limited room for election giveaways
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[December 21, 2023] By
Andy Bruce and William Schomberg
LONDON (Reuters) -The budget picture for British Prime Minister Rishi
Sunak has deteriorated, official data showed on Thursday, but a smaller
debt interest bill thanks to slowing inflation could yet restore some of
his limited room for pre-election tax cuts.
Public sector net borrowing, excluding state-owned banks, totalled 116.4
billion pounds ($147 billion) in the financial year so far, 24.4 billion
pounds higher than in the April-November period a year earlier, the
Office for National Statistics said.
In November alone, the deficit of 14.3 billion pounds was bigger than
expected - a Reuters poll of economists had pointed to a shortfall of
12.9 billion pounds.
Britain's statistics office revised up borrowing for each of the
previous seven months by 3.7 billion pounds in total.
British borrowing has surged in recent years, first as the government
supported the economy during the COVID pandemic and then as it provided
massive aid to households and businesses to offset the surge in energy
prices in 2022.
Thursday's figures served as a reminder of the fragility of the
so-called fiscal headroom which Sunak hopes will allow for more tax cuts
ahead of elections expected next year.
Opinion polls show his Conservative Party lagging far behind the
opposition Labour Party.
Headroom refers to the margin by which Britain's finance minister Jeremy
Hunt can expand fiscal policy - through tax cuts or spending increases -
before running into rules that are designed to keep borrowing and debt
in check.
HEADROOM FOR HUNT
Britain's budget watchdog, the Office for Budget Responsibility,
estimated that headroom at 13 billion pounds in November when Hunt gave
tax cuts to workers and businesses and tightened a squeeze on already
stretched public services in the years ahead in order to pay for them.
But cooling inflation - which dropped last month to the lowest annual
rate since September 2021 at 3.9% - is likely to increase the amount of
headroom for Hunt by lowering Britain's debt interest bill in the coming
months.
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People shop on Oxford Street in London, Britain April 10, 2023.
REUTERS/Anna Gordon/File Photo/
Samuel Tombs, an economist with Pantheon Macroeconomics, said Hunt
might see his room for manoeuvre to cut taxes or raise spending
almost double to about 25 billion pounds by the time of his annual
budget statement due in early 2024.
"Nonetheless, we think that the Chancellor will be relatively
restrained with pre-election bribes," Tombs said, noting how bond
prices fell shortly after the announcement of his tax cuts in
November.
The government's interest rate bill, while still high by historical
standards, fell by 15% to 61 billion pounds in the April-November
period as price growth slowed, easing the hit to the government from
its inflation-linked bonds.
Thursday's data also showed how inflation and rising wages had
boosted receipts from income tax, corporation tax and value added
tax by 8-10% in the April-November period compared with a year
earlier.
There was a 12% increase to 195 billion pounds in spending on items
such as benefits and pensions in the financial year to date,
reflecting a big inflation-adjusted increase in welfare.
Public sector net debt, excluding state owned banks, stood at 2.67
trillion pounds, equivalent to 97.5% of economic output.
Sunak has promised to get debt down.
($1 = 0.7918 pounds)
(Reporting by Andy Bruce and William Schomberg; Editing by Catherine
Evans and Emelia Sithole-Matarise)
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