The Scotsman

Government borrowing in April highest in three years

● Amount reached £10.4bn last month, ONS reveals ● Comes in ahead of £8.8bn forecast by economists

- By BEN WOODS

The UK government borrowed a surprise £10.4 billion in April in the last update on the public finances before the general election next month.

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) said public sector net borrowing, excluding state-owned banks, rose by £1.2bn last month to reach the highest amount borrowed for the month since 2014. It came in higher than economists’ expectatio­ns of £8.8bn.

Martin Beck, senior economic adviser for think tank EY Item Club, said the new fiscal year has “began on a disappoint­ing note for the public finances. The culprit for April’s weakness partly lay with tax receipts. Total central government revenues rose by 3.9 per cent compared to 6.2 per cent in March, the slowest rate of increase in 12 months. Meanwhile, income tax receipts were up by only 1.4 per cent.”

However, the statistics agency gave the government a boost ahead of the election on 8 June by revising down last year’s deficit.

It said government borrowing, excluding banks, for the last financial year dropped by £23.4bn to £48.7bn,from the previous year. It was the lowest annual borrowing figure since March 2008 and below the Office for Budget Responsibi­lity’s (OBR) prediction of £51.7bn.

The government will face a stiff challenge to balance the books in the coming months as economists expect rising inflation to eat into consumer spending, causing the UK economy to slow.

Samuel Tombs, chief UK economist at Pantheon Macroecono­mics, said April’s borrowing figures suggest the drop in gross domestic product (GDP) to 0.3 per cent growth in the first quarter “won’t be just a blip”.

He said: “Admittedly, the OBR expects borrowing to rise this year to £58.3bn in 2017-18, from £51.7bn in 2016-17 and it anticipate­s tax receipts rising only by 3.7 per cent. But this forecast reflects the fact that the surge in self-assessment tax receipts in January and February 2017 will not be repeated this fiscal year.

“Tax receipts growth, therefore, would have to significan­tly exceed the OBR’S fullyear forecast in the first few months of this fiscal year in order to suggest that the fiscal consolidat­ion is on track.”

Chancellor­philiphamm­ond had ditched his predecesso­r’s target of balancing the books by 2020, and vowed instead to put the public finances back in the black “as early as possible” in the next parliament as part of a new Charter for Budget Responsibi­lity. Springfiel­d Properties – headed by MD Innes Smith, left, with Connor Christie who joined as an apprentice bricklayer in October 2013 – said it had “smashed” training ambitions after announcing that 23 per cent of all staff are now engaged with training or education. Less than three years ago, the housebuild­er pledged to have 10 per cent of its workforce in training. The company said it currently supports 110 employees in further education, training and apprentice­ships.

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