BREXIT BUDGET. 30 billion of tax rises and spending cuts

Similar documents
Government tax, spending and debt a decade on from the financial crisis

Autumn 2017 Budget: Options for easing the squeeze

The end of deficit reduction? Thomas Pope

Economic and fiscal outlook

The Summer budget: Taxes up, borrowing up, departmental spending up

Commentary on the Public Sector Finances release: September 2018

The Autumn Statement. Implications for Scotland. November: 2016

The economic Impact of EU membership on the UK. David Bailey Aston Business

Budget OBR forecast for growth in %, up from +2.4% in the Autumn Statement, and the biggest revision between Budgets for 3 years.

Financial Scrutiny Unit Briefing The Economic Implications of Brexit

Spring Statement 2018: The lost decade

2. Public finances: risks on tax, bigger risks on spending?

THE EU REFERENDUM AND FISCAL IMPACT ON LOW INCOME HOUSEHOLDS. Angus Armstrong Katerina Lisenkova Simon P. Lloyd

UK public finances and the financial crisis

Government and Public Sector

Our inaugural Fiscal risks report. Robert Chote Chairman

2. Planning the public finances

Economics Update. Andrew Smith. February

Public Sector Finances: December 2018

Tariffs and employment. A report for Britain Stronger in Europe

End of year fiscal report. November 2008

9 A fiscal stress test

1 March 2015 Economic and fiscal outlook Executive summary

1 Executive summary. Overview

Spring Statement 2018: more difficult choices ahead

a labour market that has continued to exhibit strong growth in employment, but weak growth in earnings and productivity; and

1 Executive summary. Overview

How is Brexit Going to Affect European Financial Markets?

Economic aspects of Scottish independence: public spending and revenue

Briefing: Budget 2016 analysis

TUC Statement on the HM Treasury Spring Statement : Time for action

Forecast evaluation report October 2017 Robert Chote, Chairman, Office for Budget Responsibility

POLICY BRIEFING. ! Institute for Fiscal Studies 2015 Green Budget

Welsh budgetary trade offs to Ian Mitchell

The price of a drink

UK Budget 2012: A little give and take

In a Jam? Changes in the fiscal forecast

EU Referendum Briefing 26 May 2016

Housing market. Forecasts

Themes in bond investing June 2009

NIESR s latest research and quarterly forecasts on the UK and the EU Referendum

Summary. Chapter 1 Checking out the supply side of the economy. Chapter 2 The new fiscal framework: an assessment

Quarterly FX Forecast October - December 2016 GBP - USD

Highlights and key messages for business and public policy

1 Executive summary. Overview

4 Does trade hold the key to the UK services productivity puzzle? 1

SCOTLAND S ECONOMIC FUTURE POST-2014 SUBMISSION FROM PROFESSOR ANTON MUSCATELLI

Assessing the Economic Risks from a UK Exit from the EU - A Tale of Two Regimes

A rational approach to alcohol taxation

WHEN REBALANCING GOES BAD

Outlook for Scotland s Public Finances and the Opportunities of Independence. May 2014

The economic implications for Scotland and RUK from leaving the EU: A CGE simulation

Office for Budget Responsibility

Deficit Reduction and the Role of Taxes

BUDGET 2014 BUDGET 2014

Ending austerity? July 2017

Economic and Fiscal Assessment Update. Ottawa, Canada November 2,

The Economic and Social Review, Vol. 48, No. 3, Autumn, 2017, pp

The end of austerity? Ben Zaranko

CHALLENGES FOR THE SNP GROWTH COMMISSION

Designing fiscal targets for the UK

Maurice Obstfeld Economic Counsellor

The Rt Hon Philip Hammond MP Chancellor of the Exchequer HM Treasury 1 Horse Guards Road London SW1A2HQ 5 December 2018

1 Executive summary. Overview

November 2018 Budget. Overview. Economic Overview. 30 October 2018

Briefing for Members. Budget: March 2016

ECONOMIC IMPACT OF THE WITHDRAWAL AGREEMENT

Introduction to the UK Economy

2 M AINTAINING MACROECONOMIC STABILITY

Assessment of the Convergence Programme for. the United Kingdom

VC CATALYST. Request for Proposals

The referendum and prospects for public expenditure in. John McLaren, Centre for Public Policy for Regions

Not just a crash diet: Improving public finances through structural reform

" (Briefing Note - Immediate Release - 15th March 2017)

Convergence Programme for the United Kingdom: submitted in line with the Stability and Growth Pact

Legal services sector forecasts

Investment Update Retail Pension November 2018

L i s t o f a b b r e v i a t i o n s

IFS Green Budget Press Release

In January 2017 UK Public sector net debt is 1,682.8 billion equivalent to 85.3% of GDP

How to spend it BRIEFING. Autumn Budget 2018 response. October 2018

For review, comment and to spark conversations.version as at 01 September 2016

Excise Duty on beer and cider the consumer s view

Assessment of the 2017 convergence programme for. Bulgaria

2015 General Election Manifesto. icaew.com2

Financial Crisis and Global Recession: At a Turning Point?

Charter for Budget Responsibility: autumn 2016 update

PRESS RELEASE. Results of the EU-wide stress test French banks among the strongest in Europe

The outlook for the 2019 Spending Review

Counting the cost BRIEFING. UK living standards since the 2016 referendum. James Smith February 2019

Evaluating the government balance sheet: borrowing

Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics (PCBS) Press report of economic forecasts for 2018

Fixing the budget to fit the figures?

Forecast evaluation report October 2012

Removing fiscal illusions: National Accounting & Student Loans. Andrew McGettigan 5 November

Fiscal Assessment Report. April 2012

Guidance on BoE forward guidance

BUDGET 2013 HC 1033 March 2013

The outlook for the 2019 Spending Review

Brexit Deal or No Deal. Mark Zandi, Chief Economist Barbara Teixeira Araujo, U.K. and Europe Economist October 2018

Transcription:

BREXIT BUDGET 30 billion of tax rises and spending cuts

Executive Summary There is a consensus among economists that leaving the EU would damage Britain s economy, both in the short and long term. The Governor of the Bank of England, the IMF, the OECD and the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) have all said the British economy would be smaller if we left the EU. This would leave any Chancellor facing difficult decisions. This Budget outlines the sort of decisions that will be required. In the short-term the hit to the economy would be largely driven by economic uncertainty and volatility in financial markets, while over the long-term Britain would be poorer as a result of less trade and investment. These were the findings of the Treasury s two recent studies and are also reflected in every serious academic study that has been undertaken in the area. If the British economy is smaller then we will have less money to fund our public services. The IFS has looked at what impact a smaller economy will have on our public finances. They conclude that the hole in the public finances would be between 20-40 billion a year by the end of the decade. Analysis by HM Treasury makes similar findings. This Budget takes the mid-point of the IFS s estimates, 30 billion, as the likely deterioration in the public finances and shows the types of trade-offs involved in dealing with such a deficit in 2019-20. One plausible scenario shows that: Health spending would be cut by 2.5 billion, defence spending by 1.2 billion and education spending by a similar amount The basic rate of income tax would rise by 2 pence to 22p and the higher rate by 3 pence to 43p Capital spending would be reduced by 2.4 billion Fuel and alcohol duties would increase by 5% The balance between tax and spend would be up to the Government at the time. But there would be no easy way of dealing with this deterioration in the public finances. The Treasury s own analysis makes clear that the reduction in tax receipts would be largely structural. This means Britain would not be able to grow its way out of this problem instead the Chancellor would have to base decisions on the simple fact that Britain would be poorer and not just poorer in the short term but poorer in the long term too. Taxes would have to be higher and spending would have to be lower to ensure the public finances were on a sustainable path. None of the difficult decisions outlined in this document would be required if we vote to remain in the EU on 23 June. If we vote to remain the OBR forecasts Britain will go on creating jobs, wages will continue to rise and the economy will grow steadily. This is the choice before the British people on 23 June. Page 3

The IFS analysis The IFS is widely respected both in Britain and across the world for its impartiality and the quality of its analysis. On 25 May 2016 they published a document entitled Brexit and the UK s public finances. This focused on the two key components to work out the overall impact on the public finances: the mechanical effect and the national income effect. Their conclusion was that the mechanical effect of reduced EU budget contributions would be far outweighed by the national income effect. To reach this conclusion they examined more than a dozen studies on the GDP impact of a vote to leave. They concentrated on the estimates by the National Institute of Economic and Social Research, who forecast a GDP hit of between 2.1% and 3.5%, while also warning that most of the risk is on the downside that is to say the fall in GDP is more likely to be bigger than it is to be smaller. The IFS then looked at the relationship between national income and the public finances, and in particular the relationship between national income, tax receipts and spending. Using figures from the Great Recession they establish estimates of the extent to which changes in national income affect tax receipts, public spending and therefore public sector net borrowing. Table 1: The IFS illustrative impact on the public finances of a 1% reduction in national income Year 1 effect Additional year 2 effect Total effect Current receipts -0.1-0.1-0.2 Total managed expenditure +0.4 +0.1 +0.5 Public sector net borrowing +0.5 +0.2 +0.7 Source: Helgadottir et al. (2012); authors calculations Having looked at all these variables their central conclusion was: including the direct benefits of reduced budget contributions, these would lead to the public finances being between about 20 billion and 40 billion less healthy than in a scenario in which we did not leave the EU. Page 4

Table 2: estimates of the impact on GDP of a vote to leave examined by the IFS GDP change (%) Impact on borrowing (% of national income) Impact on borrowing ( bn 2016-17 terms) Impact on borrowing per household (, 2016-17 terms) Société Générale -6 +3.8 +74 +2,750 PwC/CBI -4.25 +2.6 +50 +1,850 Nomura -4 +2.4 +46 +1,700 Citi -4 +2.4 +46 +1,700 OECD -3.3 +1.9 +37 +1,350 NIESR (impacts for 2019) - WTO pessimistic -3.5 +2.0 +40 +1,450 - WTO optimistic -2.8 +1.5 +30 +1,100 - FTA pessimistic -2.5 +1.3 +26 +950 - FTA optimistic -2.2 +1.1 +22 +800 - EEA pessimistic -2.4 +1.5 +29 +1,050 - EEA optimistic -2.1 +1.3 +25 +900 Deutsche Bank -3 +1.7 +33 +1,200 Morgan Stanley -2 +1.0 +19 +700 Credit Suisse -1.5 +0.6 +12 +450 HSBC -1.25 +0.5 +9 +350 JP Morgan -1 +0.3 +6 +200 Mansfield +0.1-0.5-9 -350 Economists for Brexit +1.6-1.5-30 -1,100 Page 5

The Treasury s analysis In its analysis of the short-term impacts of leaving the EU, HM Treasury forecast that borrowing would increase by between 24 billion and 39 billion by 2017/18, while in its long-term analysis it forecast that tax receipts would be between 20 and 45 billion permanently lower if Britain was to leave the European Union. In a document entitled Cyclical Adjustment of Public Finance Modelling, the Treasury also examined the extent to which this deterioration in the public finances would be structural or cyclical and modelled the path of borrowing over the next five years. Table 3: Treasury estimates of the increase in PSNB across the Budget 2016 forecast horizon ( billion) 2016-17 2017-18 2018-19 2019-20 2020-21 Shock scenario PSNB 12 24 25 25 26 Structural PSNB 9 18 21 23 26 Cyclical PSNB 3 6 4 2 0 Severe shock scenario PSNB 19 39 37 36 35 Structural PSNB 13 25 28 32 35 Cyclical PSNB 6 13 9 4 0 These figures are in line with the IFS estimates, and show that by the end of the forecast period the deterioration in the public finances would be entirely structural. This means the increase in the deficit would remain even after the immediate impact of leaving the EU had dissipated. Any Government would either have to increase taxes or reduce spending to close this permanent gap in the public finances. Table 4: Treasury estimates of the increase in PSND ( billion) 2016-17 2017-18 2018-19 2019-20 2020-21 Shock scenario 12 36 61 86 112 Severe shock scenario 19 58 95 131 166 Page 6

Scorecard: 30 billion of tax rises and spending cuts The scorecard below gives an illustrative example of the sorts of difficult decisions that would be required to deal with a 30 billion deterioration in the public finances. The potential tax revenues have been calculated using HMRC ready reckoners. These are publicly available up to 2018-19. They are then up-rated to the target year 2019-20 by using the OBR s assessment of how public sector current receipts grow over time. Potential savings from reduced spending are calculated using the 2019-20 departmental budgets set out in the march budget. Table 5: 2019-20 ( million) Spending 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Resource spending (excluding Health, Education and Defence) Health Education Defence Capital spending - Including transport and major infrastructure Pensions Personal Tax Duties Basic rate, raise by 2 pence to 22p Higher rate, raise by 3 pence to 43p Inheritance tax: increase standard rate by 5 percentage points Alcohol (beer, cider, wine and spirits): increase duty by 5% Fuel: increase duties on petrol and diesel by 5% +5,750 +2,500 +1,150 +1,200 +2,400 +2,000 +9,700 +3,500 +600 +500 +1,400 TOTAL POLICY DECISIONS Total tax policy decisions Total spending policy decisions +30,700 +15,700 +15,000 Page 7

Promoted by Will Straw on behalf of Britain Stronger in Europe (The In Campaign Ltd), both at St Bride s House, Salisbury Square, London, EC4Y 8EH. Printed by St Ives, One Tudor Street, London, EC4Y 0AH.