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Andy Burnham told to tackle 20-year 'fiscal funk' as Britain losing £330billion a year

New Dispatch Published Jul 17, 2026 Reviewed Jul 18, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Since the 2007 financial crisis, UK tax receipts have fallen approximately £450 billion below where they would otherwise have been, according to the Resolution Foundation.
450000000000 GBP · tax receipts
The Resolution Foundation estimates the UK’s annual fiscal burden totals £330 billion, comprising £240 billion from stagnant private sector wages and associated public sector and welfare reductions, and £90 billion from demographic shifts and worsening health outcomes.
240000000000 GBP · fiscal burden from stagnant wages and public sector reductions90000000000 GBP · fiscal burden from demographic shifts and health deterioration
An ageing population alone has added £50 billion to the UK’s annual fiscal burden, according to the Resolution Foundation.
50000000000 GBP · fiscal burden from ageing population
The proportion of Britons in poor health has increased by four percentage points since 2007-08, with ageing responsible for just one-fifth of this increase, according to the Resolution Foundation.
4 percentage points · proportion of Britons in poor health
Day-to-day spending on UK public services is nearly £140 billion below pre-crisis levels, according to the Resolution Foundation.
140000000000 GBP · day-to-day public service spending
The UK’s tax-to-GDP ratio reached a 75-year peak in 2025-26, according to the Resolution Foundation.
1 ratio · tax-to-GDP ratio
Fuel Duty generated £24 billion in the last year (2025-26), according to the Resolution Foundation.
24000000000 GBP · Fuel Duty revenue
Middle East conflict reduced the Chancellor’s fiscal headroom from £23.6 billion at the Spring Forecast to £6 billion, according to the Resolution Foundation.
23600000000 GBP · fiscal headroom at Spring Forecast6000000000 GBP · current fiscal headroom
Simon Pittaway, senior economist at the Resolution Foundation, stated that Britain’s fiscal funk—driven by weak growth, rising ill-health, and an ageing population—costs £330 billion annually.
330000000000 GBP · annual fiscal cost from weak growth, ill-health, and ageing

Research from the Resolution Foundation is breaking down the fiscal black hole Andy Burnham will face when entering Number 10 Downing Street

Research from the Resolution Foundation is breaking down the fiscal black hole Andy Burnham will face when entering Number 10 Downing Street

Incoming Prime Minister Andy Burnham is being urged to tackle Britain's "fiscal funk" as the country continues to lose around £330billion a year, economists warn.

Analysts are sounding the alarm that the UK is grappling with a staggering annual fiscal burden stemming from two decades of sluggish economic performance, a growing elderly population and deteriorating public health.

New research from the Resolution Foundation is reminding whoever takes the keys to Downing Street to embrace an ambitious approach to managing the nation's finances or face increasingly difficult policy choices ahead.

Since the 2007 financial crisis, the country has been forced to offset these mounting pressures through what the Foundation describes as a damaging combination of elevated taxation, reduced spending on public services and increased government borrowing.

The economic slowdown since 2007 has proved catastrophic for government revenues, with tax receipts falling approximately £450 billion below where they would otherwise have been.

However, the net impact on public finances stands at roughly £240billion annually, as stagnant private sector wages have allowed corresponding reductions in public sector pay and welfare payments.

Demographic shifts and worsening health outcomes account for the remaining £90billion yearly cost.

An ageing population alone has added £50billion to the fiscal burden, while the proportion of Britons in poor health has climbed by four percentage points since 2007-08, with ageing responsible for just one-fifth of this increase.

Day-to-day spending on public services now sits nearly £140billion below pre-crisis levels, whilst Britain's tax-to-gross domestic product (GDP) ratio reached a 75-year peak in 2025-26.

This mechanism is already costing £12.6billion more in 2026-27 than a straightforward earnings-linked approach would, and should be replaced with a smoothed earnings formula.

Motoring taxation also requires urgent attention. Fuel Duty generated £24billion last year but faces erosion as drivers increasingly switch to electric vehicles, meaning last year's Budget reforms will need strengthening to compensate for declining receipts.

Perhaps most concerning for the new occupants of Number 10 and Number 11, the Foundation warns that fiscal headroom has collapsed dramatically.

Middle East conflict has likely slashed the Chancellor's room for manoeuvre from £23.6billion at the Spring Forecast to a mere £6billion, meaning any fresh spending pledges must be fully funded.

Simon Pittaway, a senior economist at the Resolution Foundation, said: "Britain has been hit by a triple whammy of weak growth, rising ill-health and an ageing population over the past 20 years.

"Collectively these three hits are costing £330billion a year and are being paid for by more borrowing, the highest tax burden in 75 years, and huge cuts to public services."

He added: "Britain needs to break out of its fiscal funk and get the public finances back on a sustainable path. Otherwise the choices over which taxes to raise, which public services to ration and how much more we spend on servicing our debt will get even more painful."

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