Saturday, November 15, 2025

Low UK recovery risks inflating loan borrowing

New research published on Friday showed that the British government will continue to borrow vast sums of money five years from now if the economy takes its time to recover from the coronavirus fallout. 

The Institute for Fiscal Studies and the U.S. investment bank Citi said they thought it would take the economy “several years” to adjust to the pandemic, in contrast to scenarios from official forecasters showing a relatively swift rebound. 

This would point to a budget deficit of around 130 billion pounds ($162 billion) – or 5% of GDP – in five years’ time. Resulting in more than double the forecast published by the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) in March. 

Data due later Friday are likely to show Britain is on course for a record increase in borrowing this financial year, to reach the highest level as a share of the economy since World War Two. 

“Even so, with current low interest rates, additional borrowing now that boosts the economic recovery would still be worthwhile,” IFS economist Isabel Stockton said. “But once we are through the immediate crisis and the economy reaches a new normal, we will be left with elevated debt.” 

Futhermore, Stockton added that a mix of tax rises and an acceptance that higher debt will need to be managed carefully seemed to be the most likely outcomes. 

Britain’s emergency spending and tax cuts to soften the economic hit from the coronavirus crisis are likely to cost 132.5 billion pounds, the OBR said earlier this month. 

It estimated new borrowing in the current financial year could approach 300 billion pounds as normal tax revenues dry up. 

 

Reported by Andy Bruce 

Sourced Reuters 

For more Finance & Investment news follow i-invest Online. 

Latest

Use of in-house carbon reporting tools problematic for climate action

Firms prefer in-house carbon reporting tools, even if they...

The invisible shift in risk management

The smartest organisations are now managing risk through an...

SnapLogic eliminates legacy migration costs by up to 80% with new tool

SnapLogic Intelligent Moderniser clears the path to AI adoption...

Six business books to set you up for a successful 2026

Business 4.0 rounds up a selection of essential reads...

Subscribe To Our Content

Don't miss

Use of in-house carbon reporting tools problematic for climate action

Firms prefer in-house carbon reporting tools, even if they...

The invisible shift in risk management

The smartest organisations are now managing risk through an...

SnapLogic eliminates legacy migration costs by up to 80% with new tool

SnapLogic Intelligent Moderniser clears the path to AI adoption...

Six business books to set you up for a successful 2026

Business 4.0 rounds up a selection of essential reads...

Calling all top executives: A more dynamic and rewarding career path awaits

Corporate leadership expert Sara Daw reveals a win-win for...

Use of in-house carbon reporting tools problematic for climate action

Firms prefer in-house carbon reporting tools, even if they aren’t as accurate as standardised ones, say researchers, who recommend regulators strengthen laws Companies that...

The invisible shift in risk management

The smartest organisations are now managing risk through an adaptive governance model that’s appropriate for each scenario, and balances innovation with compliance, says Gordon...

SnapLogic eliminates legacy migration costs by up to 80% with new tool

SnapLogic Intelligent Moderniser clears the path to AI adoption by dramatically decreasing the cost, complexity, and time taken to modernise legacy workloads Agentic integration...

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here