Tuesday, 10 January 2012

Totally Mismanaged Expenditure

Just to put this all into perspective, according to the Public Sector Finances Databank (Excel, available here), total UK government revenues in 2012-13 are expected to be £594.4 billion (Tab C4), and total managed expenditure ('TME', which includes depreciation) for the year is pencilled in at £714.5 billion (Tab B1), a deficit of [£very large number].

Question: How far would we have to turn back the spending clock to reduce spending to the same level as current tax receipts, i.e. to put an end to deficit spending/bring the budget back into balance?

Click and highlight to reveal answer: Five years. In 2007-08, TME was £582.9 billion (Tab B1), not adjusted for inflation. Adjusted for average wage/price inflation of about 3% a year, we'd have to go back nine years to 2003-04, when TME was £455.5 billion nominal.

4 comments:

G Brown Esq said...

Government spending cannot be reduced. That is a basic rule that every politician understands. The problem is that tax revenues have not kept pace with the natural, inevitable growth of spending.

dearieme said...

"Government spending cannot be reduced": except in Canada, for some reason.

Mark Wadsworth said...

GB, yes, that is how you politicians think.

D, or in the UK in the 1920s. Seriously, there is so much non-frontline crap spending, we could easily get rid of £120 billion without the general public noticing.

Bayard said...

"we could easily get rid of £120 billion without the general public noticing."

Yes, but The People who Matter would notice, and notice very much.