Analysis
How bad
are Britain’s finances? Key questions and answers on the state of the economy
Phillip
Inman
Economics
Editor
Several
factors restrict the Labour government’s room for manoeuvre in its agenda for
growth
Sat 27 Jul
2024 18.44 BST
Labour will
say the economy is in a terrible state – are they right?
The economic
outlook is improving, but a recovery from last year’s recession will be long
and arduous without a boost to public investment.
As President
Biden has shown, businesses are reluctant to invest without government support
and this applies especially to the need for green investment. Since the Brexit
vote and the chaos and indecision it sparked inside Whitehall, businesses have
delayed or cancelled planned investments, leading to eight years of stagnation.
Skill
shortages and the prevalance of long Covid, which has prevented tens of
thousands of workers from returning to their jobs, has made it difficult for
employers to recruit, leading to higher than expected pay rises. Higher than
normal salary increases are one reason the Bank of England has delayed cuts to
interest rates.
Without a
cut in the cost of borrowing, many economists believe consumers will resist
spending and the economy will remain stuck on a low-growth path.
Why are
public finances so bad?
The UK
continues to borrow heavily to fund a shortfall in government spending.
Taxes have
risen since 2021, but spending has outpaced revenue to meet commitments on
health, defence, pensions and inflation-linked welfare payments.
Former
chancellor Jeremy Hunt made a bad situation worse when he sanctioned expensive
cuts to national insurance contributions and paid for them by slashing public
investment and freezing departmental budgets already hit by 14 years of
austerity.
Some experts
say we already knew the scale of the problem – are they right?
It’s not
true. The government’s independent forecaster, the Office for Budget
Responsibility, lays out each year the extent of the public spending shortfall
according to what it is told by the Treasury. But Hunt gave a false picture of
the government’s likely commitments, prompting the OBR boss Richard Hughes to
declare that the OBR assessment last year read like a work of fiction.
One instance
illustrates how departments are being asked to cope with unfunded commitments.
Public-sector pay review bodies have recommended teachers and some NHS staff
receive a 5.5% increase this year, well above the 3.2% inflation figure in
March and the current 2% rate of increase in the consumer prices index. An
across-the-board rise in public-sector pay would mean the salary bill rising by
up to £10bn.
A freeze on
the Home Office budget took no account of the need to revamp the border control
and asylum systems to cope with the extra number of people arriving in the UK.
Will
Labour’s plans briefed so far make a difference?
Gone are the
wild and unfunded promises of public investment during the Boris Johnson years
and the reckless tax cuts under Rishi Sunak. Labour’s approach will be based on
a sober understanding of what cash is needed to maintain the current
infrastructure – from mending crumbling hospitals to repairing leaky school
roofs – while also plotting improvements that are affordable.
The cash set
aside for a national wealth fund and GB Energy – a body to support the building
of wind farms and solar-panel arrays – is modest by international standards.
However, rushing to spend public funds quickly has always proved wasteful.
Is there
anything else they could do?
Rachel
Reeves has boxed herself in with two commitments. First she has promised to
recognise on the government balance sheet multi-billion-pound losses incurred
by the Bank of England (which the US Treasury ignores) and to adopt Hunt’s
budget rule that forces her to reduce the government debt as proportion of
national income in the fifth year of the official forecasts.
Ditching
both would free up large sums of money to spend on the key to driving growth –
public investment.
Phillip Inman is economics editor of the
Observer and an economics writer for the Guardian
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