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Borrowing jumped ahead of Christmas, Bank of England says | |
(34 minutes later) | |
The amount of money being borrowed by consumers in the run-up to Christmas rose by £1.5bn, the largest rise for nearly eight years. | The amount of money being borrowed by consumers in the run-up to Christmas rose by £1.5bn, the largest rise for nearly eight years. |
In November, consumers owed a total of £178.2bn on credit cards and loans, figures from the Bank of England show. | In November, consumers owed a total of £178.2bn on credit cards and loans, figures from the Bank of England show. |
The monthly increase was the largest since February 2008 and compares with a rise of £1.2bn in October. | The monthly increase was the largest since February 2008 and compares with a rise of £1.2bn in October. |
The rise in consumer credit follows signs of increased spending on the High Street. | |
Retail sales volumes rose by 5% in November compared with the same month in 2014, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS). | |
'Concern' | |
The Money Advice Trust, the charity which runs National Debtline, said it was concerned by the figures, and expected an increase in personal debt in the months ahead. | |
"These figures confirm that we do need to keep a watchful eye on the huge growth in consumer credit we are now seeing," said Joanna Elson, chief executive of the Money Advice Trust. | |
"Increased borrowing is to be expected in an economy that is recovering - but such steep rises in borrowing in recent months are a cause for concern." | |
Economic boost | |
It also comes at a time when consumers are saving less. | It also comes at a time when consumers are saving less. |
In the last quarter of 2015, the ONS said households saved 4.4% of their income, the equal lowest ratio for 50 years. | |
"This will fuel concern that consumers are borrowing more and saving less to finance their spending, which is likely a consequence of relatively high consumer confidence and extended low interest rates," said Howard Archer, the chief UK economist at IHS Global Insight. | "This will fuel concern that consumers are borrowing more and saving less to finance their spending, which is likely a consequence of relatively high consumer confidence and extended low interest rates," said Howard Archer, the chief UK economist at IHS Global Insight. |
However, other experts said that increased consumer borrowing provided a useful boost to economic growth. | |
"Credit flows are continuing to strengthen gradually, providing much-needed support to the economy as growth is hindered by slowing real income gains, the fiscal squeeze and the strong pound," said Samuel Tombs, chief UK economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics. |