Budget 2009

  • 2 Jul 2009

    Economic optimism from Gordon Brown

    Out and about with the Prime Minister on his round-England trip today and you are very struck, listening to him addressing a business breakfast this morning in Leeds, by a sense of economic optimism. Not just a sense that the Budget growth predictions could be right but that they could be exceeded. That would mean…

  • 27 Apr 2009

    Where next for Britain’s uncertain economy?

    Yet more indications today of Britain’s radically altered political landscape. Some irony that the Labour left’s long-desired aim to cancel a raft of multibillion pound defence contracts will, in all probability, be realised by a Conservative chancellor responding to the costs of a crisis in capitalism. I can’t get across enough how much this crisis…

  • 23 Apr 2009

    Budget: Brown and the ‘costs of failure’

    A measure of the new world we are entering. Between this financial year and next there is a cash increase of £30.2bn in public spending. Of that increase, fully £15.7bn is going on interest payments servicing our newly ballooning debt. The total interest payments of £43bn will be more than non-investment spending in the defence…

  • 22 Apr 2009

    Budget: counting the deficit

    In a nutshell: we have a £5bn tax cut right now. A boom, Then a £5bn tax rise. Massive deficits in the coming three years of half a trillion pounds. BUT even those rely on a remarkable boom in 2011. Look at the chart below to get an idea of the likely size of the…

  • 22 Apr 2009

    Budget day: what does a trillion look like?

    This is a day on which you will need to know what a trillion looks like. We are working on a physical representation of what a trillion pounds looks like. But just for guidance, go to YouTube (see below).

  • 22 Apr 2009

    What to watch out for in ‘hangover budget’

    “Building Britain’s Future” is the title of today’s budget, but it will be a document mired in the past. The figures released at lunchtime will make the wrong sort of long-term history, marking public debts and deficits never before seen in peacetime. But really this is a budget about recent history, about the calamitous carnage…

  • 21 Apr 2009

    Budget: no stimulus, but for how long?

    On a day when deflation becomes official on Britain’s most commonly watched price measure, when the IMF suggests the world’s financial system is barely a quarter of the way through dealing with $4.1tr of rotting toxic assets (and that doesn’t even include the infamous stockpile of uranium that Lehman owns), an enterprising economist might ask…

  • 21 Apr 2009

    IMF: UK faces £200bn bank bailout cost… or does it?

    UPDATE: The IMF retracted its claim. ORIGINAL POST: The IMF has hugely upgraded its projection for the likely total costs of the bank bailout. In today’s Global Financial Stability Report the costs of financial stabilisation are put at a whopping 13.4 per cent of GDP, or £200bn. This brings the IMF in to line with…

  • 20 Apr 2009

    2077: payback year for toxic asset scheme?

    The budget is less than 48 hours away, yet there may be as much left out of this document as put in. Certainly the single biggest budget decision made since November’s mini-budget may or may not score in the number crunching: a likely loss of tens of billions from the government insurance scheme for the…