Next year the Treasury will have to borrow a record 11pc of gross domestic product as it fights the crisis – equating to more than £150bn and far more than has ever been borrowed before in British history, according to a devastating new assessment by the Fund. The assessment coincided with the publication of official figures showing a further deterioration in the public finances during February as the recession ate further into tax revenues.
The IMF also confirmed, as had been leaked earlier this week, that it now expects the world economy to shrink this year for the first time since the Second World War. It also expects the UK to endure a more severe and longer-lasting contraction than almost any other major economy.
However, it is its analysis on the state of Britain's accounts that will cause the most consternation in Whitehall and beyond. The Fund predicted that the UK's government borrowing balance would reach 9.5pc of GDP this year, before rising to 11pc of GDP next year. This is greater even than the US, which is embarking on the biggest fiscal spending spree in history, despite the fact that Gordon Brown has been unable to carry out any major tax cuts or spending increases of his own, save for the temporary cut in VAT.
The parlous state of Britain's finances is due instead to the billions of pounds of taxes lost because of the collapse of the financial services industry, and to the extra costs associated with higher unemployment. The Treasury's figures showed that in February the budget deficit reached £9bn, taking the total deficit for the first 11 months of the fiscal year to a record £75.2bn – more than triple last year's total.
The IMF projections will further increase the resistance within the Treasury to prospective tax cuts which, it is thought, are being pushed for by Number 10. Moreover, they do not take into account losses associated with the various bail-outs of the financial system.
Shadow Chancellor George Osborne said: "These dreadful figures show how the Labour government has given us the worst public finances in the developed world.
"The figures also show Britain simply cannot afford a further discretionary fiscal stimulus – our automatic stabilisers are already amongst the biggest in the world."
Shadow Chancellor George Osborne said: "These dreadful figures show how the Labour government has given us the worst public finances in the developed world.
"The figures also show Britain simply cannot afford a further discretionary fiscal stimulus – our automatic stabilisers are already amongst the biggest in the world."
Updating its forecasts for world economic growth, the Fund said the global economy could shrink by as much as 1pc this year – the biggest contraction in more than 60 years. Britain's recession is expected to last until next year, in contrary to Alistair Darling's forecast that the economy will start to grow as soon as this summer.
Source: Edmund Conway, Telegraph
No comments:
Post a Comment