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Rachel Reeves faces gloomy autumn after borrowing overshoots | Rachel Reeves faces gloomy autumn after borrowing overshoots |
(about 5 hours later) | |
Very tough budget looms as interest rate costs on bonds drive June figure to second-highest on record | Very tough budget looms as interest rate costs on bonds drive June figure to second-highest on record |
UK borrowing rises more than expected | UK borrowing rises more than expected |
Business live – latest updates | Business live – latest updates |
June’s public finances data, published on Tuesday, make a depressing end-of-term report card for Rachel Reeves, as MPs prepare to depart Westminster for the summer recess. | June’s public finances data, published on Tuesday, make a depressing end-of-term report card for Rachel Reeves, as MPs prepare to depart Westminster for the summer recess. |
The Office for National Statistics (ONS) said public borrowing jumped to £20.7bn last month – a full £3.5bn higher than expected by the independent Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR). | The Office for National Statistics (ONS) said public borrowing jumped to £20.7bn last month – a full £3.5bn higher than expected by the independent Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR). |
That made it the second-highest figure for any June on record, aside from in the Covid-hit year of 2020, when the government was paying millions of workers’ salaries through the furlough scheme. | That made it the second-highest figure for any June on record, aside from in the Covid-hit year of 2020, when the government was paying millions of workers’ salaries through the furlough scheme. |
The current deficit for the month, which Reeves watches closely, as her key fiscal rule aims to eliminate it in five years’ time, was £16.3bn – £7.1bn more than the equivalent month in 2024. | The current deficit for the month, which Reeves watches closely, as her key fiscal rule aims to eliminate it in five years’ time, was £16.3bn – £7.1bn more than the equivalent month in 2024. |
The overshoot appears to have been driven not so much by a spendthrift Labour Treasury, but by higher-than-expected interest costs for government bonds, or gilts, some of which rise automatically with inflation, as measured by the traditional retail prices index (RPI). | The overshoot appears to have been driven not so much by a spendthrift Labour Treasury, but by higher-than-expected interest costs for government bonds, or gilts, some of which rise automatically with inflation, as measured by the traditional retail prices index (RPI). |
Inflation has been climbing in recent months, hitting 4.4% on the RPI measure. The Treasury paid £16.4bn in interest on gilts in June, the ONS said – almost twice the £8.4bn of the same month a year ago, and £2.4bn more than the OBR expected. | Inflation has been climbing in recent months, hitting 4.4% on the RPI measure. The Treasury paid £16.4bn in interest on gilts in June, the ONS said – almost twice the £8.4bn of the same month a year ago, and £2.4bn more than the OBR expected. |
The news doesn’t look nearly so bad when the first three months of the new financial year are taken as a whole, however – the ONS says the £57.8bn of borrowing over this period is in line with what the OBR forecast in March. | The news doesn’t look nearly so bad when the first three months of the new financial year are taken as a whole, however – the ONS says the £57.8bn of borrowing over this period is in line with what the OBR forecast in March. |
That suggests, at least, that the watchdog need not start its autumn budget forecast from a baseline that has already drifted way out of line with its March expectations. | That suggests, at least, that the watchdog need not start its autumn budget forecast from a baseline that has already drifted way out of line with its March expectations. |
But the worse-than-expected June figure underlines how delicate the chancellor’s situation remains, with headroom of just £9.9bn at the end of the five-year forecast period, according to the OBR – some of which has already been eaten up by the reversal of the £5bn disability benefits cuts, and the £1.25bn cost of restoring the winter fuel allowance to most pensioners. | But the worse-than-expected June figure underlines how delicate the chancellor’s situation remains, with headroom of just £9.9bn at the end of the five-year forecast period, according to the OBR – some of which has already been eaten up by the reversal of the £5bn disability benefits cuts, and the £1.25bn cost of restoring the winter fuel allowance to most pensioners. |
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Potentially much larger than that is the impact of the OBR’s summer forecast “stocktake”, which will revisit its economic modelling and could result in significant revisions, perhaps of £10bn or even £20bn according to some forecasters, which Reeves will then have to contend with in the autumn. | |
The Institute for Fiscal Studies suggested a shift to Reeves’s framework on Monday that would free her from the need to adjust policy in spring statements, in response to relatively small swings in forecasts. | The Institute for Fiscal Studies suggested a shift to Reeves’s framework on Monday that would free her from the need to adjust policy in spring statements, in response to relatively small swings in forecasts. |
The chancellor’s team are considering the role of the OBR forecasts, and this kind of change could help to avoid a repeat of the hasty target-driven policymaking that ultimately led to the welfare U-turn. | The chancellor’s team are considering the role of the OBR forecasts, and this kind of change could help to avoid a repeat of the hasty target-driven policymaking that ultimately led to the welfare U-turn. |
But none of it appears likely to rescue the chancellor in time for what looks likely to be a very tough budget in the autumn – made no easier at all by the worse-than-expected state of the public finances for June. | But none of it appears likely to rescue the chancellor in time for what looks likely to be a very tough budget in the autumn – made no easier at all by the worse-than-expected state of the public finances for June. |
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