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Budget Revenue Expenditure Deficit/(Surplus) Budget Report 2024, October: £1.229 trillion £1.276 trillion £47.2 billion 2024, March: 2023, March: 2022, November: 2022, September mini-budget: 2021, October: £929 billion £1.045 trillion £116 billion 2021, March: £819 billion £1.053 trillion £234 billion 2020, March: £873 billion £928 ...
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Average government spending per person is higher in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland than it is in England. In financial year 2021–22, spending per head in England was £15.2k, whereas in Scotland it was £17.7k, in Wales it was £16.9k and in Northern Ireland it was £17.5k. [4]
The date of the budget was confirmed by Hunt on 19 December 2022. At the same time he confirmed the budget would be accompanied by a full budget report from the Office for Budget Responsibility. The statement was presented as a budget for growth, with the objective of bringing about the conditions for long-term sustainable economic growth ...
A positive (+) number indicates that revenues exceeded expenditures (a budget surplus), while a negative (-) number indicates the reverse (a budget deficit). Normalizing the data, by dividing the budget balance by GDP, enables easy comparisons across countries and indicates whether a national government saves or borrows money.
The budget is the second under Boris Johnson's government, also the second to be delivered by Sunak and the second since Britain's withdrawal from the European Union. The budget was the first for government expenditure in the United Kingdom to exceed £1 trillion [ citation needed ] .
The 2020 United Kingdom budget, officially known as Budget 2020: Delivering on Our Promises to the British People, was a budget delivered by Rishi Sunak, ...
The following tables show the governmental budget of each country/territory/group divided by its total population, not adjusted to purchasing power parity, in current US dollars, based on data published by International Monetary Fund, [1] and World Bank. [2] [3] [4] [5]