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UK government borrowing jumps to £20.2bn in April; markets fall after weak US debt auction – business live | Business

Introduction: UK borrowing rises to £20.2bn in April

Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the eurozone.

It’s a new financial year, but the same old story for the UK government, as borrowing rises faster than expected.

The latest public finance figures, just released, show that the UK borrowed £20.2bn in April. That’s £1bn more than in April 2024 and the fourth-highest April borrowing since monthly records began in 1993.

City economists had forecast a deficit of around £18bn, so the new financial year has not gott off to a great start for Rachel Reeves, at a time when the chancellor is under pressure to raise taxes to avoid cuts to welfare payments.

The public finances report shows that central government’s current receipts rose by £5.1bn year-on-year, due to increased tax receipts – including £1.7 billion in Income Tax, £500m in Value Added Tax (VAT), £500m in tobacco duty, £400m in stamp duty (on land and property), and £200m in Corporation Tax receipts.

However, spending rose too – central government’s current expenditure increased by £4.2bn, as pay rises and inflation pushed up the cost of goods and services, and some benefits increased in line with inflation.

ONS deputy director for public sector finances Rob Doody says:

“At £1 billion higher than the same time last year, this April’s borrowing was the fourth highest for the start of the financial year since monthly records began more than 30 years ago.

“Receipts were up on last April, thanks partly to the higher rate of National Insurance contributions. However, this was outweighed by greater spending, due to rising public services’ running costs and increases in many benefits and state pensions.”

Happily, though, the interest payable on central government debt fell by £500m to £9.0bn, due to lower payments on inflation-linked bonds.

The agenda

  • 7am BST: UK public finances for April

  • 9am BST: Eurozone ‘flash’ PMI report for May

  • 9am BST: IFO survey of eurozone business confidence

  • 9.30am BST: UK ‘flash’ PMI report for May

  • 11am BST: CBI industrial trends

  • 1.30pm BST: US weekly jobless claims 1.30pm

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Key events

Eurozone business activity falls into contraction

Ouch. Private sector output across the eurozone has fallen for the first time in five months, as the sector slides into contraction.

The latest poll of purchasing managers across the euro area shows that new orders continued to decrease, led by a slump in output in the services sector.

Output in Germany, meaning Europe’s largest economy joined France in contraction territory. The rest of the euro area continued to outperform the largest two economies, although there was a slowdown here.

Data firm S&P Global also reports that business confidence in the eurozone fell to a 19-month low.

Its HCOB Flash Eurozone Composite PMI output index, which tracks activity, has fallen to a six-month low of 49.5 this month, down from 50.4 in April.

🚨 NEW MACRO DATA:

🇪🇺 May 22 04:00
• HCOB Eurozone Manufacturing PMI (May): 48.4 (vs 49.2; prev: 49.0)
• HCOB Eurozone Composite PMI (May): 49.5 (vs 50.7; prev: 50.4)
• HCOB Eurozone Services PMI (May): 48.9 (vs 50.4; prev: 50.1)

— MTS Insights (@MTSInsights) May 22, 2025

Dr. Cyrus de la Rubia, chief economist at Hamburg Commercial Bank, said:

“The eurozone economy just cannot seem to find its footing. Since January, the overall PMI has shown only the slightest hint of growth and in May, the private sector actually slipped into contraction.

Do not blame US tariffs for this one. In fact, efforts to get ahead of those tariffs might partly explain why manufacturing has held up a bit better lately. Manufacturers have now increased production for the third straight month, and for the first time since April 2022, new orders did not decline. On the flip side, service providers, who are generally less exposed to US trade policy, except in areas like international logistics, are seeing business activity shrink for the first time since November 2024.

While foreign demand for services is softening, it is the sluggish domestic demand that seems to be dragging the sector down.

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