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Recession leaves £25bn shortfall in welfare bill

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Published Date: 28 June 2009
THE state will pay £25 billion more in welfare than it raises in income tax this year, amid further evidence of the crushing effects of the recession.
The sums spent on unemployment and social protection will comfortably outweigh the tax paid on incomes, raising further fears about the long term sustainability of the government's coffers.

Only last year, income tax receipts outweighed benefits b
y £2bn, according to the analysis conducted by Schroder Investment Management.

But those figures have been dramatically overturned for 2009-10, with £140bn worth of income tax being dwarfed by the £164.7bn bill for social security benefits.

According to the analysis, this year is the first for a decade that benefits have cost more than income tax.

The governor of the Bank of England, Mervyn King, last week hit out the "truly extraordinary" deficits now being run up by the UK Government.

The International Monetary Fund has predicted that the UK's deficit is likely to hit £200bn. The total government debt has already exceeded £700bn, more than twice the figure it was in 1997.

Chancellor Alistair Darling is hoping tax receipts will climb as the country comes out of recession. But last week the OECD predicted the UK economy will shrink 4.3 per cent this year and stay flat in 2010.

On the massive rise of social security payouts, a Treasury spokesman said they would help the country see out the worst of the recession.

"The operation of automatic stabilisers in the social security system will help support the economy through the downturn. The government is committed to sustainable public finances and has announced plans to halve the deficit over four years," he said.





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  • Last Updated: 27 June 2009 9:11 PM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
  • Related Topics: Recession
 
1

fat lord prodder,

somewhere in alba 28/06/2009 00:49:08
a shortfall made by over clocking on the expense claim forms,by greedy odious and totally troughing MPs
they were at full stampede last week as they raided,their hiden nest eggs to pay back,to the over burdened tax payers,their greedily grasped loot
i heard that phone lines to swiss banks were in near melt down as mps gave back loads of loot
yet when a single parent does 1 days work on the side they use every thing at their disposal,to charge and convict them
mps should get the same treatment
2

Willie Mor,

28/06/2009 02:00:53
Why the comparison between income tax only.

What about VAT, national insurance, corporation tax, fuel duty, excise duty, insurance tax, landfill tax, mineral extraction tax, climate levy, inheritance tax, stamp duty, council tax, capital gains tax, prescription tax, special car tax, road licensing tax, and all the others.

Income tax is only a part of the overall taxation burden.

Mind you if the UK could cut social spending, then it will be better able to fund the Trident replacement and the ongoing wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
3

Observer,,

Glasgow 28/06/2009 12:32:37
I suppose the £1,3 trillion the Govt have loaned to the banks could have been quite handy eh. Still Gordon knows best......

 

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