IFS - Benefit claims up and council tax revenues down most in London and deprived parts of England

5 Feb 2021 10:30 AM

The COVID-19 crisis has hit employment and incomes across the UK, which in turn has affected some households’ ability to pay major bills such as council tax. As a result, councils expect to collect £1.3 billion less council tax in 2020–21 than they forecast before the COVID-19 crisis. The government has agreed to cover just 75% of this shortfall.

Drawing on data from tax and benefit records, household and business surveys and the Money Dashboard app, a new IFS report shows that these impacts have been uneven geographically.

Greater London has seen larger-than-average impacts, both in terms of the labour market and councils’ tax collections:

Increases in benefit claims and falls in council tax collections have also been larger in other urban and more deprived parts of England:

Somewhat surprisingly, unemployment-related benefit claims have gone up by less in areas where a high share of jobs are in sectors that have been subject to the tightest restrictions and falls in demand – such as non-essential retail, hospitality, arts and entertainment, and transport services.

David Phillips, an Associate Director at IFS and a co-author of the report, said:

“The COVID-19 crisis has hit the whole of the UK hard, but a range of evidence suggests that London and other major cities have seen particularly big labour market impacts, potentially reflecting changes in commuting, shopping and tourism.

“Of course, prior to the crisis, there were concerns that London was pulling away from the rest of the country in terms of wealth and opportunities. And it remains the case that the areas with the lowest employment, wages and skills are concentrated in the cities of the North and Midlands, former industrial towns, and isolated rural and coastal areas. This means the COVID-19 crisis has not overturned the economic geography underlying the levelling-up agenda. But it has complicated it, with a particularly big increase in unemployment – likely concentrated among the young and lower earners – in the capital.”

Kate Ogden, a Research Economist at IFS and another co-author of the report, said:

“Households’ financial difficulties mean councils expect to collect £1.3 billion less council tax in 2020–21 than they forecast before the COVID-19 crisis. The government has agreed to cover 75% of this shortfall, and to provide £670 million to help fund means-tested discounts in 2021–22. However, if this support is then withdrawn, those councils seeing the biggest long-term impacts of the crisis on employment and household incomes may face particularly difficult trade-offs between cutting this means-tested support or cutting funding for at least some other services in 2022–23 and beyond.”

Employment, income and council tax during the COVID-19 crisis: a geographical analysis and implications for councils