
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In a time of sluggish economic growth, the favourite way of squaring the circle of spending more but not increasing taxes is to borrow - and we have.
Keeping everybody’s lights on during the pandemic and homes heated after the Russian invasion of Ukraine has helped send our national debt up from £1.8 trillion to £2.8 trillion in recent years.
But the question for the chancellor Rachel Reeves is how much more debt we can afford - and how much more debt do the markets think we can afford?
So what’s the answer to that?
Guests:
Duncan Weldon, economist and author of 'Two Hundred Years of Muddling Through'
Producers: Ben Carter, Kirsteen Knight and Sally Abrahams
By BBC Radio 44.8
5353 ratings
In a time of sluggish economic growth, the favourite way of squaring the circle of spending more but not increasing taxes is to borrow - and we have.
Keeping everybody’s lights on during the pandemic and homes heated after the Russian invasion of Ukraine has helped send our national debt up from £1.8 trillion to £2.8 trillion in recent years.
But the question for the chancellor Rachel Reeves is how much more debt we can afford - and how much more debt do the markets think we can afford?
So what’s the answer to that?
Guests:
Duncan Weldon, economist and author of 'Two Hundred Years of Muddling Through'
Producers: Ben Carter, Kirsteen Knight and Sally Abrahams

7,639 Listeners

1,080 Listeners

375 Listeners

876 Listeners

1,046 Listeners

5,520 Listeners

1,799 Listeners

1,763 Listeners

1,920 Listeners

43 Listeners

393 Listeners

61 Listeners

158 Listeners

731 Listeners

140 Listeners

114 Listeners

3,177 Listeners

21 Listeners

720 Listeners

1,002 Listeners

3,336 Listeners

797 Listeners

39 Listeners

45 Listeners