IFS - Despite planning biggest tax rises in more than 25 years, and an historic increase in size of the state, the Chancellor is still likely to have little money for hard-pressed public

12 Oct 2021 09:19 AM

This year’s historic, and manifesto-breaking, announcements of tax rises will increase the UK’s tax take to its highest sustained level in peacetime. Spending will settle at 42% of national income, more than 2% above its pre-pandemic level and its highest level in ‘normal times’ since 1985. 

These are more the inevitable consequences of population ageing and pressures on health and care spending, than they are consequences of the pandemic. Tax rises that were always inevitable have been smuggled in under cover of the pandemic.

Even so, and despite improved economic forecasts, Rishi Sunak will have little room for manoeuvre in this month’s Budget and Spending Review. To meet his stated objective of achieving current budget balance, the Chancellor will have to increase spending on services other than health, defence, schools and aid by less than he was planning pre-pandemic, despite greater pressures across a range of areas. Indeed, to keep to currently planned totals, he may even have to implement cuts to some budgets over the next two years.

The good news for Mr Sunak is that government borrowing this year could be more than £50 billion lower than was forecast in the March Budget. But a slowing recovery thereafter – alongside rising costs of financing much-elevated debt – could limit the medium-term improvement in the public finances to less than half of that amount.

Looking at the wider economy, current imbalances and future uncertainties stand out. The key message from Citi’s assessment is that we should not be fooled by headlines of high-profile examples of labour shortages and supply disruptions into thinking the economy is overheating generally. In many sectors demand remains below pre-pandemic levels, the labour market is quite loose, and the outlook for wages remains rather weak. On balance, then, inflationary pressures should abate, and monetary and fiscal policy need, for now, to keep supporting the recovery. The key to understanding the economy at the moment is to recognise huge imbalances between sectors where supply is constrained, sectors where demand has grown, and much of the economy where demand remains weak.

These are among the headline findings of the 2021 IFS Green Budget, funded by the Nuffield Foundation and produced in association with Citi.

On the public finances and outlook for public spending, IFS analysis finds:

On the economy, analysis from Citi suggests:

Paul Johnson, IFS Director and an editor of the Green Budget, said:

‘Rishi Sunak, a Conservative Chancellor, is presiding over an increase in the tax burden to record levels in the UK and an increase in the size of the state (public spending as a fraction of national income) to levels not seen since the days of Mrs Thatcher. Yet the combined effects of ever-growing spending on the NHS and an economy smaller than projected pre-pandemic mean that he is still likely to be short of money to spend on many other public services. On central forecasts, there will be little or no scope to increase spending on things like local government, the justice system and further education, after a decade of sharp cuts. That said, he still faces huge uncertainty over the direction of the economy and hence over the state of the public finances. He will be hoping against hope that stronger-than-expected growth in revenues over the next few years will help to dig him out of what still looks like a fair-sized hole.’

Christian Schulz, Director of European Economics at Citi, said:

'The global economic outlook has improved compared to a year ago, but uneven pandemic control and a series of supply shocks create treacherous crosscurrents. For the UK, a deeper fall in 2020 has meant a larger rebound as the economy has reopened. However, output is still likely to remain over 4% short of its pre-pandemic trajectory at the end of 2021. The medium term recovery also remains far from secure.  Instead, an uneven rebound to date points to more profound Brexit and Covid related reconfiguration in the years ahead. Inflation is now likely to peak higher and later than we had previously expected. But with higher prices more likely to weigh on disposable income than add to wages, this suggests a further slowing of the recovery in 2022.'

Tim Gardam, Chief Executive of the Nuffield Foundation, said:

‘The IFS Green Budget secures the foundations for an evidence-based public conversation about the huge economic and social challenges currently facing the UK, including COVID-19 recovery, Brexit and the transition to net zero. In its framing of the economic outlook, the IFS shows that ultimately, the questions to be addressed by the Chancellor are about people’s well-being, both individually and collectively, in a time of economic uncertainty.’