The challenges
In preparing the Budget Sunak has a number of considerations to balance:
- The very large and unsustainable budget deficit of the past 12 months resulting from the extraordinary measures put in place to counter the impact of the coronavirus and associated constraints on activity. For the year to end December 2020 the deficit was 12.3% of GDP.
- The need to provide ongoing support to individuals and businesses through the continued period of heightened uncertainty.
- A desire to create conditions supportive of future growth for when the coronavirus crisis has passed.
- The need to increase revenues and reduce spending as the economy recovers and uncertainty diminishes.
- The additional complications of Brexit which imply the Chancellor needs to ensure the UK remains an attractive place to do business.
Withdraw stimulus too early and the Chancellor risks plunging the economy back into recession, causing enormous social distress. Apply too much stimulus and he risks both losing market confidence as a result of being fiscally profligate and also the possibility of a surge in inflation, particularly given reduced supply side flexibility in the wake of Brexit. Furthermore, fiscal retrenchment is something that could damage both his personal reputation and the Conservative Party’s political prospects if handled badly. It is an unenviable task indeed.
Cyclicality
Much government expenditure is non-discretionary in the sense that it takes place automatically. For example, when unemployment rises, the amount the government spends on benefits increases. The government does have some discretion in changing the level of benefits but it has little direct control over the number of people receiving those benefits.