My posts come out on a Tuesday and Budgets are on a Wednesday. Not great timing, which is why in the past I’ve often done special posts one or two days after the budget. But so much of last Wednesday’s budget had been pre-announced that it didn’t seem worth doing this last week. So the question is whether there is anything interesting to say a week later?
For the mainstream media the answer appears to be no. Rather than using time to take a longer view, some in the media seemed to have descended into trivial detail about process and come up with a question that just gets things completely wrong. As Stephen Bush says, the idea that the Chancellor can be accused of exaggerating the pessimism pre-budget is absurd.
If only to bring discussion back to reality, some basic points need to be made. The first is that in macroeconomic terms spending has not changed by much. Here are two charts, showing OBR projections for current public spending and receipts (mostly taxes) both before and after the budget.
In 2029/30, total spending is up 0.3% of GDP. Compare this to the previous budget, where there were much larger increases in spending compared to previous (nonsensical) plans.
I had expected spending as a share of GDP to rise further, because of the OBR’s downgrade to expected productivity and therefore real GDP, but this was largely offset by additional forecast inflation, meaning expected nominal GDP hardly changed. The declining share of spending in GDP over time remains unrealistic: not only does health spending tend to increase as a share of GDP, and defence spending is committed to increase, there are also known pressures that will become critical over the next few years. This is the main reason why claims of exaggerating pessimism are silly.
The increase in taxes is larger, at 0.6% of GDP by 2029/30, the difference being the additional headroom created on the current deficit target (going from 0.3% to 0.6% of GDP). As the second chart shows, taxes only go up at the end of the period, reflecting the decision not to increase future tax allowances with inflation.
Because taxes went up rather than spending being cut, this can be described as a left wing budget, as some in the media have. [1] However the reason why, in macroeconomic terms, this doesn’t feel like a left wing government can also be seen in the charts. Spending as a share of GDP is pretty well where it was at the end of the last Conservative government. This government had reversed the additional austerity the last government had pencilled in, but once you allow for trends in health spending and debt interest the substantial reduction in the level of public service provision that we saw under fourteen years of Tory rule has not and will not be significantly reversed.
The budget was also left wing in terms of the detailed tax increases imposed. Tax rates on interest income were raised. We had a form of wealth tax, where wealth is in the form of housing. Tax and spending changes were progressive, as this chart shows
This, and in particular getting rid of the child cap on benefits, is all good. Ian Dunt is absolutely right when he writes:
“Rachel Reeves did numerous admirable things in the Budget. People should bear this in mind the next time they claim there is no difference between the Conservatives and Labour. There is. You are mad if you claim otherwise.”
But the reason that those on the left are not dancing in the streets is that some of these changes were hard won. There is little more than a year between Labour MPs losing the whip because they voted to end the child benefit cap and Starmer or Reeves saying they weren't going to apologise for actually doing so.
What is missing from this budget, and is also missing from this government, is any sense that it has a long term plan and is putting in place the resources to achieve it. Yes Labour has its missions (or maybe not), but the whole point about successful missions is that you put substantial resources in place to achieve them. This government is either in denial that it needs to do this, or is too scared to do so. [1]
Fourteen years of Conservative government achieved two major economic goals: it crippled our public services in order to cut tax, and it crippled our economy by first macroeconomic mismanagement (austerity)) and then by leaving the EU. One key goal of this Labour government should be to reverse both. But this government has deliberately chosen to carry on starving the public sector of resources because it was too scared to tell middle-earning voters that their taxes had been comparatively low for too long and needed to rise. It has deliberately chosen to keep in place the essentials of Brexit, a policy that ensures that the standard of living for most UK voters has and will continue to stagnate, because it is too scared to tell some voters that they made a big mistake.
Undoing fourteen years of damage of course takes time. There is nothing wrong with saying we need to raise headline taxes gradually, or that we need to improve trade with the EU one step at a time. But you need to set out the roadmap. You need to tell voters where you want to go and how you are gradually going to get there.
A good example of this lack of ambition is the new mansion tax. It represents an ad hoc adjustment to a council tax system that is in urgent need of reform. Even with the new tax in place, those in less expensive houses still pay a much larger proportion of the value of the house than those in mansions. As a first step in a gradual process of updating and reform of the council tax system the mansion tax might represent a useful short term step, but there seems no appetite from the government to undertake such a reform.
Instead this government still seems to be operating in opposition mode, where every move it makes has to be measured not in terms of what the country needs but in terms of how it will play with the media and voters. How else can you explain the nonsense of leaks and briefings before the budget. This is doubly annoying because they are not very good at managing public opinion in the short term. The polls show that, but Reeves herself has made a large number of political mistakes in a relatively short amount of time.
To take one example, raising the income tax rate would have been more sensible than not indexing allowances, and it could have been done earlier. It wasn’t done because of the tax pledge, but not indexing allowances raises taxes on working people. Saying the pledge was about tax rates not only doesn’t wash with most voters, but it has allowed the media to spin out the discussion of taxation. In truth, saying you had to break the pledge because of events sounds way better politically than saying that technically we didn’t break the pledge because the wording in one part of the manifesto mattered more than the wording elsewhere.
I really wish Reeves and Starmer would stop thinking about how their policies will play with focus groups and instead start thinking about their legacies. Within a year and a half of becoming Chancellor, Gordon Brown had radically reformed how macroeconomic management was done by making the Bank independent, had introduced a new and very different set of fiscal rules (that lasted for 10 years), and set out the criteria by which the UK would eventually decide not to adopt the Euro. There are a host of economic or political projects that a Chancellor wanting to actually make a significant long term difference could choose. The only thing that approaches such a project that I can think of with Reeves is stability, but Chancellors who offer stability when public services are in perennial crisis and living standards are stagnanting will not be fondly remembered.
[1] It is possible that there is a long term reform plan for reform, but we are not being told about it, because saying what the plan is would incur political costs. For example, maybe there is a long term plan to phase out ISA’s for savings that don’t go into buying stocks and shares. It is, after all, not clear why such savings are subsidised. But if that is true, is the political cost best incurred now or nearer the election. The obvious answer suggests there is no hidden long term plan for reform.





