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Although the absolute size of Northern Ireland's deficit has fallen slightly from £9.7 billion in 2016–17 to £9.4 billion in 2018–19, proportional to the size of the economy, the deficit was higher during the 2018–19 fiscal year than any year from 1970 to 2000.
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.
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[2] The UK government has spent more than it has raised in taxation since financial year 2001-02, [3] creating a budget deficit and leading to growing debt interest payments. Average government spending per person is higher in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland than it is in England.
The unique exposure of Ireland's low-tax business model to the United States could place its public finances at significant risk under a Donald Trump presidency - if he follows through on pre ...
Employment in Northern Ireland is at a record high but growth is levelling off, new official figures suggest. The Quarterly Employment Survey (QES) suggests there were 831,780 employee jobs in ...
3.2 Jun 2023 quarterly Estonia: −1.7 Jun 2023 quarterly European Union: −3.3 2022 yearly Finland: −1.5 Jun 2023 quarterly France: −5.0 Jun 2023 quarterly Georgia: −2.0 Jun 2023 quarterly Germany: −3.4 Jun 2023 quarterly Greece: −1.3 Dec 2018 monthly Hungary: −8.2 Jun 2023 quarterly Iceland: −1.5 Jun 2023 quarterly Ireland: 2.2
The administration's final accounting of the 2020 budget year shows that revenues fell by 1.2% to $3.42 trillion, while government spending surged 47.3% to $6.55 trillion.