The Economist - UK (2022-03-26)

(Antfer) #1
TheEconomistMarch26th 2022 21
Britain

Thepublicfinances


Spring in his step


W


ith british households  facing  a
cost­of­living  crunch,  the  “spring
statement” on March 23rd, an occasion for
the  chancellor  to  course­correct  between
autumn  budgets,  offered  several  eye­
catching  giveaways.  Fuel  duty  will  be  cut
immediately.  From  July  national  insur­
ance, a payroll tax, will kick in at a higher
income  threshold.  And  in  2024  the  stan­
dard  rate  of  income  tax,  paid  by  30m
Britons,  will  fall  by  one  percentage  point.
As Rishi Sunak spoke at the despatch box,
Conservatives  brayed  their  support.  But
the measures add up to less than billed.
Alongside the spring statement came a
new set of forecasts for the public finances,
produced by the Office for Budget Respon­
sibility  (obr),  an  official  fiscal  watchdog.
Those supported the case for some kind of
relief  for  hard­pressed  households.  Since
October, when such figures were last pub­
lished,  inflation  had  increased  by  more
than expected, eating into household bud­
gets. As incomes fell behind rising prices,
the obr predicted that disposable income
per  person  would  fall  by  over  3%  in  real


termsoverthecomingyear,unlesspolicies
changed to mitigate the impact. That
wouldhaveconstitutedthebiggestannual
dropsincerecordsbeganin1956.
Theworseningeconomicoutlookhas
notpinchedthepublicfinances,however.
Revenuesfromtaxesonincomesandcor­
porateprofitshavebeenbuoyant.Thisis

partly because inMarch 2021 MrSunak
froze income­tax thresholds. Sincethen
earningshaverisenfasterthanexpectedin
cashterms.Theresultingfiscaldragmeans
thatmorepeoplearepaying tax,andat
higherrates.LastOctobertheobrexpected
that0.9mmorepeoplewouldbecaughtby
thehigher40%marginalrateinthe2023­
24 fiscalyear;it nowthinksthat1.3mwill.
Asrevenueshaverisen,publicspend­
inghasnotkeptpace.Economicdevelop­
ments such as higher inflation have
pushedupprojectedspendingattheendof
thisparliamentbyonlyabouttwo­thirds
oftheexpectedriseof£37bninrevenues.
Mostofthatishigherbenefitsanddebt­in­
terestpayments.(Morethana fifthofgov­
ernmentgiltsarelinkedtotheretail­price
index,a measureofinflation.)A changeto
thetermsforstudentloansannouncedin
Februarywillsavearound£5bninthesame
year.CostshavealsobeencontainedbyMr
Sunak’srefusaltoincreasethebudgetsof
government departments beyond what
wasagreedlastOctober,eventhoughthey
willbepummelledbyrisingenergycosts,
justashouseholdswill.Intimesofhighin­
flation,chancellorsareabletomakestiff
spendingcutsbystealth.
HadMrSunakchosento donothing,
then,expectedborrowingwouldhavebeen
about£20bnlowerin2024­25thanprevi­
ouslyforecast.Insteadheoptedtocuttax­
es—compared withwhathadpreviously
beenpencilledin,thatis.Hesoothedmo­
toristsupsetaboutrisingpetrolpricesby

Rishi Sunak longs, but does not deserve,tobeknownasa tax-cuttingchancellor


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Dropping pennies
Britain, real household income
% change on a year earlier

Source:OBR

1

FORECAST

8
6
4
2
0
-2
-4
1956 2620102000908070
Fiscal years starting April
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