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º£½ÇÊÓÆµ government borrowing surges to £17.4bn in October amid inflation pressures

The government's borrowing - the difference between spending and income - hit £17.4bn in the last month, the Office for National Statistics said this morning

Borrowing rose in October(Image: PA Archive/PA Images)

The º£½ÇÊÓÆµ government borrowed £1.6bn more in October than a year earlier - the second-highest figure for the month in over three decades.

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) reported this morning that the government's borrowing - the difference between spending and income - reached £17.4bn last month.

The ONS also revealed that the government's current budget deficit, which is borrowing to fund day-to-day spending, was at £12.7bn last month. This is almost half-a-billion pounds up on the previous month, making it the second-highest October deficit since 1997.

This news follows the ONS's announcement yesterday that inflation had risen to 2.3 per cent, effectively extinguishing hopes of a Christmas interest rate cut.

The ONS further stated that the central government debt interest payable was £9.1bn, £0.5 billion more than in October 2023 and the highest figure for the month since records began, as reported by .

Jessica Barnaby, ONS Deputy Director for Public Sector Finances, said: "This month's borrowing was the second highest October figure since monthly records began in January 1993."

Despite a cut in the main rates of National Insurance earlier in 2024, total receipts rose on last year. However, with increased spending on public services, benefits and debt interest costs, expenditure rose faster than revenue overall.

In its report, the ONS also noted that borrowing in the financial year to October was £96.6bn, an increase of £1.1bn and the third highest financial year-to-October ever.