UK Public Borrowing Overtakes Financial Crisis Peak

UK Public Borrowing Overtakes Financial Crisis Peak
A man crosses the road in the City of London financial district amid the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in London, on Sept. 23, 2020. (John Sibley/Reuters)
Reuters
9/25/2020
Updated:
9/25/2020

LONDON—British public borrowing surged again in August to a new record high, driven by huge outlays to combat the coronavirus pandemic, with the budget deficit so far this tax year overtaking its full-year peak during the global financial crisis.

The government has now borrowed 173.7 billion pounds ($221.8 billion) in the five months since the start of the financial year in April, outstripping the previous record of 157.7 billion pounds set in the 12 months ending March 2010.

Government budget forecasters have warned the deficit could hit 372 billion by the end of the tax year, raising borrowing as a share of gross domestic product to 18.9 percent, a level not seen since World War Two—and far above long-term sustainable rates.

Finance minister Rishi Sunak said on Thursday that now was the time to focus on restoring growth, not reducing borrowing, but tough decisions would be needed in the longer term.

Despite this, he has cut support for people whose work remains jeopardized by the pandemic.

Sunak said that from November the government would only subsidize “viable” jobs, where people were working at least a third of their normal hours, ending a program where the government had paid up to 80 percent of furloughed employees’ wages.

Many economists and trade unions fear this could lead to a big rise in unemployment for people in sectors such as hospitality, arts, and entertainment that continue to bear the brunt of government coronavirus restrictions.

Morgan Stanley economists said Sunak could need to reverse course and provide extra support.

“We think the risks to the deficit are to the upside, with the Chancellor likely to provide additional support if restrictions tighten further, or unemployment surprises,” Jacob Nell and Bruna Skarica wrote.

Borrowing in August alone jumped to 35.9 billion pounds—just below economists’ average forecast of 38 billion in a Reuters poll—while July’s figure was revised down by 11 billion pounds to 15.4 billion pounds.

Britain’s Office for National Statistics said the revisions partly reflected difficulties assigning government spending to specific months.

Public sector net debt in August reached 2.024 trillion pounds—or 101.9 percent of GDP, the highest as a share of the economy since the 1960-61 financial year.

Britain suffered the biggest economic hit of any G7 economy from the coronavirus during the second quarter of this year, with output collapsing by 20 percent, and the Bank of England estimates third-quarter output will be around 7 percent below pre-crisis levels.

Despite heavy borrowing, the British government’s interest costs on financial markets are near record lows, due to global gloom about the economic outlook and a long-term fall in interest rates.

($1 = 0.7833 pounds)

By David Milliken and Andy Bruce