The Econmist - USA (2021-10-30)

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TheEconomistOctober30th 2021 33
Britain

Fiscalpolicy


Farewell to austerity


W


ho is rishi sunak?  Listen  to  the
chancellor’s recent rhetoric, and you
could be forgiven for thinking he was cast
in the mould of a predecessor, George Os­
borne, who slashed the state in response to
the  global  financial  crisis.  In  a  speech  to
the Conservative Party faithful on October
4th Mr Sunak described borrowing as “im­
moral”,  and  emphasised  his  eagerness  to
restore order to the public finances. But the
budget  he  delivered  on  October  27th  con­
fused  the  picture.  Reeling  off  spending
measures, he refused to apologise for rais­
ing  taxes  and  lauded  the  spending  they
supported. “The Conservatives are the real
party of public services,” he trilled.
Mr  Sunak  displayed  rare  munificence.
Government  departments  will  get  real  in­
creases in their budget of 3% a year on aver­
age until 2024­25, an increase reminiscent
of  largesse  last  seen  consistently  in  the
2000s.  Even  more  eye­popping  are  the
chancellor’s plans for the size of the post­
pandemic  state.  According  to  forecasts  by
the Office for Budget Responsibility (obr),
a  watchdog,  spending  will  grow  from
39.8% of gdpbefore the pandemic to 41.6%


by 2026­27, the highestsustained share
sincethe1970s.Taxwillrisefrom33.5%of
gdpto36.2%,a levelnotseensincetheear­
ly1950s.Theannouncementsrecallednot
MrOsborne,buta verydifferentpredeces­
sor:Labour’sGordonBrown.
TheBrownitegiveawaywasprompted
bya surprisinglyperkyeconomy.InMarch
theobrprojectedgdpgrowthof4.1%this

year.Now, thanksto rosieremployment
figures,itpredicts6.5%.Inthesameper­
iod,medium­termdamageexpectedfrom
covid­19hasgonefroma gloomy3%ofgdp
toa cautious2%.Partofthisissimplythe
passageoftimerevealingthatinvestment
hasperformedbetter thanexpected.But
MrSunakisalsobenefitingfromhisadroit
handlingofthepandemic,whichlimited
thehittocorporatebalance­sheets.
AllofthismeansBritainisborrowing
less than expected. People are earning
more,whichincreasesthetaxtake.AndMr
Sunakhasraisedtaxes.InSeptemberhe
announcedahealthandsocialcarelevy,
whichwill bringinanetsumof£12bn
($16bn)by2024­25,andincreaseddividend
taxrates.Thisyearhasseenthebiggest
overalltaxrisesince1993—whichisnota
messagetheTorieswillputonleafletsat
thenextgeneralelection.
MrSunakdidoffersomeredmeatto
Conservative members.Therewas relief
forpayersofbusinessrates,a cuttocor­
porate­taxratesforbanksandthenowtra­
ditionalfuel­dutyfreeze(ashashappened
withoutfailforthepastdecade).Butnone
ofthesewillcostmorethan£2bna yearby
2024­25.MrSunakalso announcednew
fiscalrules:therewillbenoborrowingfor
day­to­dayspendinginthreeyears’time
anddebtwillfallasa shareofgdp. Oncur­
rentplans,hewillmeetthesetargets,but
hehasleftlessmarginforerrorthanhis
predecessorsdidwiththeirrules,whichall
wentunmet.
Bythenextelection,MrSunakplansto

Rishi Sunak’s budget marks a turn to big-stateConservatism


→Alsointhissection
34 Happyentrepreneurs
35 Britain’sbatterybonanza
35 Liftingtheminimumwage
38 A contentiouschicken
38 Takingonthetaxman
40 Bagehot:GreenBoris

The wartime state
Britain, tax as % of GDP

Source:OBR

1

38
36
34
32
30
28
26

2620102000908070601948
FiscalyearsbeginningApril

October202

March202

Actual

Forecasts made in:
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