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Theresa May must be loving the media attacks on Labour. Because her party’s biggest promise just collapsed.

Steve Topple by Steve Topple
19 May 2020
in Trending, UK
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If you were wondering what the time was on the evening of Wednesday 28 March, it was around ‘our-national-debt-hitting-a-flabbergasting-milestone’ o’clock. Because one of the various UK national debt clocks tipped over the £2tn mark. Theresa May must be happy, though, as a promise George Osborne set as chancellor (which was already caving in) has now totally collapsed.

Tick, tock, tick, tock

As of 7:40am on Thursday 29 March, the figure on nationaldebtclock.co.uk read:

UK national debt clock one

If this one isn’t to your liking, there are other national debt clocks available. At the same time as above, nationaldebtclocks.org put the figure at over £1.7tn:

UK national debt clock two

Meanwhile, Wilson Field put it at £1.65tn:

UK national debt clock three

The Telegraph also got in on the act, saying UK national debt is currently £1.8tn:

UK national debt clock four

Another clock, debtbombshell.com, says £1.71tn. Debt clocks generally all show different amounts because they use slightly different measures. The amount of money going in and out of the government’s purse constantly fluctuates too.

So what does the government say the figure is?

UK national debt: which one?

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) has various measures of UK national debt. The first is public sector net debt (excluding public sector banks), which it said stood at £1.763tn as of February 2018:

UK national debt ONS one

Then it measures general government gross consolidated debt, as defined by the Maastricht Treaty. The ONS says this figure is £1.775tn:

UK national debt ONS two

The ONS also measures consolidated gross public sector debt, also sitting at £1.784tn as of February 2018:

UK national debt ONS three

Is your head spinning, yet? Because it’s plainly hard to tell which figure is the correct measure of UK national debt. Often what more accurately reflects our debt is the amount as a percentage of gross domestic product (GDP). The ONS says that, for 2016/17, general government gross debt (the second ONS chart above) was 86.7% of GDP, the second highest it’s been since 1994/95:

UK national debt GDP ONS

But why does this matter, politically?

Well, the Tories have a habit of blaming the ‘last Labour government’ for our mountain of debt. In October 2010, David Cameron warned that, if Labour were in power:

Not only would the national debt still be growing, it would be growing as a share of our national income [GDP].

Also, as The Canary previously reported, May even claimed in prime minister’s questions on Wednesday 28 March that the Conservatives had kept the debt down.

The graphs show that debt has actually rocketed under Conservative-led governments. When you look at it as a percentage adjusted for inflation, though, FullFact claims New Labour increased it more. This constituted a 125% increase by New Labour and 53% by the Conservatives as of May 2017 – although this was partially down to the 2007/08 financial crash. The Tories’ excuse for spiralling debt is unclear, as is their excuse for having the highest amount of debt as a percentage of GDP in the past three decades; something Osborne pledged would be falling by 2015/16, when it actually peaked.

He also “set a target of keep[ing] the level of national debt ‘on a declining path’,” The Telegraph reports.

Overall, considering even The Telegraph said that Osborne “made it his mission to reduce the size” of the debt, his party has failed. Miserably.

A ticking time bomb

So whatever figure you use, it can be said that UK national debt is a rather worrying amount. But if you want to see something truly terrifying, The Economist has a running global debt clock. As of 9am on Thursday 29 March, it stood at $58.39tn – or around £41tn:

Global Debt Clock

The Canary is unsure of exactly who the Earth owes £41tn to. Maybe it’s Jupiter. Or possibly Saturn…

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Featured image via debtbombshell.com – screengrab

Tags: Conservative PartyeconomicsLabour Party
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