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Thursday 21 November 2024 7:18 am  |  Updated:  Thursday 21 November 2024 9:00 am

Borrowing in October hits second-highest on record after inflation blow

By: Jack Mendel

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The government borrowed £1.6bn more in October than the previous year, making it the second-highest figure for the month in more than 30 years.

The government’s borrowing – the difference between spending and income – hit £17.4bn in the last month, the Office for National Statistics said this morning.

The body said the government’s current budget deficit, meaning borrowing to fund day-to-day spending, sat at £12.7bn last month, almost half-a-billion pounds up on the previous, marking the second-highest October deficit since 1997.

This comes after the ONS said yesterday that inflation had risen to 2.3 per cent, all but snuffing out hopes of a Christmas interest rate cut.

It also said central government debt interest payable was £9.1bn, £0.5 billion more than in October 2023 – and the highest figure for the month since records.

ONS Deputy Director for Public Sector Finances Jessica Barnaby said: “This month’s borrowing was the second highest October figure since monthly records began in January 1993.”

Despite the cut in the main rates of National Insurance earlier in 2024, total receipts rose on last year. However, with spending on public services, benefits and debt interest costs all up on last year, expenditure rose faster than revenue overall.”

In its figures, the ONS also said borrowing in the financial year to October was £96.6bn, an increase of £1.1bn and the third highest financial year-to-October, ever.

This comes after the government’s Autumn Budget which included a massive £40bn tax raid, including an increase in inheritance tax and the minimum wage. This was to fuel a spending spree on public services, and to tackle what the government called a £22bn black hole in the public finances.

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Rachel Reeves oversees borrowing spike as benefits spending offsets tax haul

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Responding to this morning’s figures, Chief Secretary to the Treasury Darren Jones said: “We inherited a £22 billion black hole in our public finances from the previous government. At the Budget we addressed this, fixing the foundations and putting public finances on a sustainable footing to rebuild the country.  

“This government will never play fast and loose with the public finances. Our new robust fiscal rules will deliver stability by getting debt down while prioritising investment to deliver growth.”

Danni Hewson, AJ Bell head of financial analysis, said: “Whilst this set of figures predates the chancellor’s tax raising Budget, the numbers raise big questions about whether the measures announced at the end of October will be enough to balance the books.

“Borrowing shot up in the month of October to levels only eclipsed by the amount needed at the height of the pandemic when millions of people’s wages were being subsidised by the government.

“At £17.4 billion the figure is significantly higher than had been forecast by economists and £1.6 billion higher than last year when cost of living payments were still being funnelled into many household bank accounts.

“The decision to increase public sector pay has played a massive part, with the cost of government spend on goods and services up a significant £2.5 billion in October.

“Whilst the tax take was also up considerably, boosting total receipts by £3.8 billion, that was offset by the cut to NI contributions implemented by the previous government.

“An increase in debt interest payments didn’t help but the end of cost of living payments did mean that despite the uprating of benefits, the additional spend was only £0.5 billion compared to the same time last year.

“Rachel Reeves has promised that she won’t borrow to fund day-to-day spending which is why the Budget contained those huge and unpopular tax increases. But if jobs are cut, if wages don’t go up as they might otherwise have done, and if inflation does remain steadfastly sticky, then those sums get rather more difficult and the spectre of further tax increases looms that bit larger.”

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Gilt traders fear Labour electoral losses

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