The Scotsman

OBR forecast downgrade spells bad news for Britain’s finances

Analysis John Mclaren

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Yesterday’s Budget pronouncem­ents summed up the bad news about the long-term state of the UK’S – and by implicatio­n Scotland’s – public finances.

The key change was the decision by the independen­t Office for Budget Responsibi­lity (OBR) to downgrade forecasts for the growth in UK productivi­ty.

This is important as productivi­ty growth – the rate at which the level of output associated with one hour of work increases – is the bedrock for growth in living standards and so too in growth in real wages.

In general, employees are unlikely to be paid more if they are not producing more. In the past labour productivi­ty grew by about 2 per cent a year, which meant real wages could do likewise. However, since 2008 and the Great Recession, productivi­ty has flatlined, as have real wages.

The OBR has consistent­ly assumed there would be a bounce back in productivi­ty growth to something like pre-recession levels, but this has failed to emerge. As a result, the OBR has finally decided to reduce its productivi­ty forecasts down from an annual growth rate of 1.8 per cent, just a little below the pre-recession longterm trend of 2.1 per cent, to around 1 per cent. That is a huge change. It translates into an increase in government borrowing of more than £25 billion by 2020.

On the public sector side, slower productivi­ty and GDP growth will lead to a lower tax take and so lower government revenues, which in turn will worsen the fiscal balance and result in less scope for raising spending on public services. On the private sector side, slower productivi­ty growth will lead to slow to no real wage growth, so the squeezed provision of public sector services will be accompanie­d by a little in the way of improving living standards.

The ultimate impact of this change is that once the Budget gets back into balance, still planned for the mid 2020s, the “new normal” will involve slower growth in spending on public services than had hitherto been anticipate­d.

Some of the Chancellor’s major announceme­nts involved ways of trying to improve productivi­ty, but these are long-term measures that will take time to work, if they work at all. One of the biggest concerns over productivi­ty is our poor understand­ing of why it has crashed and how to reboot it.

All of this puts further pressure on the Scottish Government if it wants to help alleviate some long-term squeeze on public spending. l John Mclaren is a political economist who writes for the Scottish Trends website

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