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Sharp fall in government borrowing in April

It is a huge lift to George Osborne's deficit-cutting ambitions

Russell Lynch
Friday 22 May 2015 09:12 EDT
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VAT and income tax takings in April have swelled the Treasury's coffers by more than expected
VAT and income tax takings in April have swelled the Treasury's coffers by more than expected (AFP/Getty Images)

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The Chancellor received a huge lift to his deficit-cutting ambitions today as VAT and income tax takings in April swelled the Treasury's coffers by more than expected.

George Osborne is aiming for £75.3bn in borrowing for the current financial year, under the latest targets set by the Office for Budget Responsibility.

The official figures showed net borrowing of £6.8bn last month – a whopping £2.5bn lower than last year and the smallest deficit for the month since 2008.

April’s VAT tax take of £10.6bn was the best for the month since official records began in 1997 and the Treasury also enjoyed the highest April for corporation tax revenues since 2008. Ultra-low inflation is meanwhile lowering interest payments on inflation-linked debt, reducing government spending along with a departmental squeeze. Mr Osborne is aiming to wipe out the deficit by 2018/19 with a fresh round of cuts to welfare and departmental spending looming in July’s Budget.

Samuel Tombs, the senior UK economist at Capital Economics, said: “A major and painful re-intensification of the fiscal squeeze will still be required for the Government to obtain an overall budget surplus in this Parliament.”

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