Western Daily Press

Government borrowing drops by half

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THE Government borrowed more in the last year than at almost any point since records began, but the amount of tax money it collected rose.

The public sector borrowed £151.8 billion in the year to March, the third highest since 1947, but less than half the £317.6 billion borrowed in the previous 12 months, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS).

It was higher than the £128 billion forecast by the Office for Budget Responsibi­lity (OBR) just a month ago.

Samuel Tombs, chief UK economist at Pantheon Macroecono­mics, said that the Treasury was unlikely to be anxious despite these higherthan-expected numbers.

“Early estimates of borrowing recently have been revised down significan­tly, as more data have been collated,” he said.

He added that the increased borrowing is not due to a weakened economy, but is based on government investment being higher in the ONS than the OBR figures.

“Estimates of investment often are revised considerab­ly as government department­s supply more accurate informatio­n,” Mr Tombs said.

“Revisions to investment likely will be downward right now, given supply chain issues presently impeding constructi­on projects.”

The tax authoritie­s collected £94.3 billion more than they had in the

50 billion pounds less that the Government spent over the last year

previous year, reaching £619.9 billion.

Michal Stelmach, senior economist at KPMG UK, said: “Having peaked at nearly 15% of GDP in the first year of the pandemic, borrowing is now estimated to have more than halved in the 2021-22 financial year. This is quite remarkable considerin­g it took five years following the global financial crisis for that to happen.”

A lot of the drop is simply because the Government spent less over the last year, down by £50.3 billion to £893.3 billion. This came despite a big increase, £30.5 billion, in the amount that the Government spent on paying interest on its loans.

The reduced spending on the furlough scheme, the support for the self employed and NHS Test & Trace saved many billions.

Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak said: “Thanks to the action we’ve taken, the economy is recovering and our public finances are improving, allowing us to invest in vital public services, help the hardest hit with a £22 billion package of support and get people into work.

“Despite global economic headwinds, we continue to meet our fiscal rules, showing our commitment to keeping the public finances sustainabl­e while supporting the UK’s longterm growth and addressing the immediate pressures facing people with their cost of living.”

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