The UK government made one of its largest interest payments on public debt ever last month, after inflation pushed borrowing costs to some of their highest levels on record.
Despite a cut in public sector borrowing, interest costs soared to £7.6bn in May, far above the £5.1bn predicted by the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR).
The spike follows a rise in retail price inflation, which is linked to much of the government’s debt payments.
The debt interest payments were the third-highest ever made by the UK government, and the highest payment made in May, according to the Office for National Statistics.
Read more:
National debt grows by £18.6bn in April
Inflation hits fresh 40-year high
Four charts that explain what’s happening with inflation
Government borrowing dropped last month to £14bn compared to £18bn a year earlier, while pandemic-related restrictions were still in place.
But despite being lower than last year, borrowing remains higher than pre-pandemic levels.
What the interest rate rise means for homeowners and buyers
Raising interest rate is like pushing the brakes, but Bank of England may regret it
Fifth consecutive hike as interest rate raised to 1.25% by Bank of England
The government has been forced to increase spending in response to the cost of living crisis.
Public sector net debt is currently 95.8% of gross domestic product, the highest ratio in more than 50 years.
And due to inflation, debt interest costs are higher this year than 2021.
The OBR forecasts that interest payments alone will cost the government a total of £87.2bn over the financial year ending in March 2023.
“Debt reduction this year remains a long shot,” said Michal Stelmach, senior economist at KPMG UK.
“We expect borrowing to overshoot the OBR’s March forecast by around £20bn this year, largely on account of higher spending and weaker economic growth.”
Chancellor Rishi Sunak said that rising inflation and increasing debt interest costs pose a challenge for the public finances, “as they do for family budgets”.
“Being responsible with the public finances now will mean future generations aren’t burdened with even higher debt repayments, and we can secure our economy for the long term,” Mr Sunak added.