Government posts record borrowing surplus in boost for Chancellor


Britain notched up a record Government borrowing surplus last month in a surprise boost for Chancellor Rachel Reeves ahead of the spring statement, according to official figures.

The rise was sparked by a jump in self-assessed tax payments and a fall in debt interest to the lowest level for almost six years.

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) said there was a public sector net borrowing surplus of ยฃ30.4 billion in January.

It is the highest borrowing surplus โ€“ when the Government receives more in tax and other revenues than it spends โ€“ for any month since records began in 1993.

The surplus was also ยฃ6.3 billion bigger than predicted by the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) and ยฃ15.9 billion higher than the same month a year ago.

It came after the Government received a record tax take for January.

Central government tax receipts increased by ยฃ13.3 billion to ยฃ109.7 billion, the ONS said.

The Government brought in more tax revenue via capital gains tax, rising by ยฃ7 billion to ยฃ17 billion for the month, surpassing forecasts.

This increase was linked to a rise in capital gains tax for most assets in the Labour Governmentโ€™s first autumn budget in 2024.

Fridayโ€™s data also showed that self-assessment income tax receipts lifted by ยฃ3.6 billion to ยฃ29.4 billion for January, again beating OBR forecasts.

Meanwhile, Government spending edged slight lower โ€“ by ยฃ0.6 billion โ€“ to ยฃ86.1 billion for the month.

This was supported by a drop in debt interest costs, with recent falls in interest rates helping to bring these payments down by ยฃ5 billion to ยฃ1.5 billion โ€“ the lowest level since March 2020.

ONS chief economist Grant Fitzner said: โ€œJanuary โ€“ which is traditionally a strong month for self-assessed tax receipts โ€“ saw the highest surplus since monthly records began.

โ€œRevenue was strongly up on the same time last year, while spending was little changed, due to lower debt interest payments largely offsetting higher costs on public services and benefits.

โ€œAcross the first 10 months of the current financial year, borrowing is lower than the same period a year ago.โ€

The latest figures point towards a strengthening of the state finances, in the final borrowing data before Ms Reeves reveals her spring statement on March 3.

Chief Secretary to the Treasury James Murray said: โ€œWe have the right plan to build a stronger, more secure economy.

โ€œWe have doubled our headroom, we are bringing inflation down, we are making sure that taxpayersโ€™ money is spent wisely, and borrowing this year is forecast to be the lowest since before the pandemic.โ€

Sir Mel Stride MP, shadow Chancellor, said: โ€œLabour have borrowed ยฃ112.1 billion so far this year โ€“ the fifth highest borrowing on record.

โ€œRecord high taxes and irresponsible spending have weakened the economy.โ€

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