- THE WEIGHT OF PROMISES — UK DEBT IN STRUCTURAL PERSPECTIVE
The chart is striking. From a near-zero base in the mid-1970s, UK public sector debt has climbed in three distinct lurches to reach £3,513.7 billion - more than three and a half trillion pounds. It is the kind of graph that prompts strong reactions: alarm, outrage, or, from certain quarters, dark talk of civilisational decline and wipeout. To understand what it actually shows, and what it doesn't, requires separating structural arithmetic from historical analogy.
Glossary
Structural debt – accumulated borrowing that persists across cycles rather than being temporary.
Public sector debt – total outstanding borrowing by government and related public bodies.
Civilisational decline – broad historical interpretation linking economic indicators to societal contraction.
—
- THE ARITHMETIC FIRST - WHY DEBT BECOMES STRUCTURAL
The UK has gradually evolved into a state that promises more than its economy can sustainably finance. This is not a partisan observation. Successive governments of all parties have faced the same underlying numbers.
An ageing population means rising pension, NHS healthcare, and social care costs year after year. Economic growth has slowed markedly since the 1970s, constraining the expansion of the tax base. Voters resist both higher taxes and cuts to visible public services. And politicians, operating on four- or five-year electoral cycles, have little structural incentive to address debt that accumulates over decades.
For example, the per capita monthly cost of the NHS:
Low estimate:
£2,685 ÷ 12 ≈ £224 per month
High estimate:
£2,985 ÷ 12 ≈ £249 per month
Reasonable working range: £220–£250 per man woman and child per month.
On top of this chronic mismatch, major shocks deliver step-changes. The early 1990s recession, the 2008 global financial crisis, and the 2020 Covid response each produced a permanent upward shift in debt. After each crisis, spending commitments remained elevated while growth recovery lagged.
The result is a structural deficit - a gap between spending and revenue that persists even in normal economic conditions.
Glossary
Ageing population – rising proportion of elderly citizens relative to working-age groups.
Structural deficit – persistent fiscal shortfall across the economic cycle.
Fiscal shock – sudden event that increases government spending or reduces revenue.
—
- WHY EVERY GOVERNMENT MAKES IT WORSE - POLITICAL EQUILIBRIUM
Debt accumulation is not primarily a partisan outcome. It is an institutional equilibrium.
Conservative administrations tend to prioritise lower taxation, defence spending, and protection of pensions and healthcare. Labour administrations tend to prioritise public investment and welfare expansion, while also protecting core services. Both therefore avoid confronting the largest structural spending areas.
Three underlying drivers explain persistence.
First, demographics. In 1950, around seven workers supported each pensioner. Today it is closer to three, and the ratio continues to deteriorate.
Second, deindustrialisation. Manufacturing has fallen from around 30% of GDP in the 1970s to roughly 10%, narrowing the tax base.
Third, weak productivity☆ growth since 2008, limiting wage growth and tax revenue expansion.
In combination, these forces produce a system in which spending commitments rise faster than the willingness or ability to fund them.
Glossary
Dependency ratio – ratio of non-working to working-age population.
Deindustrialisation – long-term decline in manufacturing share of the economy.
Productivity growth – increase in output per unit of labour input.
☆ Why weak productivity growth since 2008? See footnote
—
- THE IMPERIAL ANALOGY — WHERE IT HAS TRACTION
Historical parallels are often invoked because the long-run shape of debt accumulation resembles earlier imperial cycles.
Late Rome experienced shrinking fiscal capacity and currency debasement. The Spanish Empire repeatedly defaulted despite inflows of silver. The Ottoman Empire lost fiscal autonomy through foreign debt administration in the 19th century. Britain itself shifted from creditor to debtor after 1918.
The common pattern is rising structural costs, weakening revenue bases, and increasing fiscal rigidity.
In the UK context, similar features are visible. A growing share of spending is absorbed by pensions, healthcare, and debt interest before discretionary policy begins. This creates what can be described as fiscal sclerosis - increasing rigidity in public finances. Relative economic weight has also declined in manufacturing and global GDP share.
The analogy is useful as it highlights constraint, rigidity, and long-run relative decline.
Glossary
Fiscal sclerosis – progressive rigidity in government spending due to fixed obligations.
Debt interest – cost of servicing accumulated government borrowing.
Relative economic decline – fall in share of global output rather than absolute contraction.
—
- WHERE THE ANALOGY BREAKS — MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY AND MODERN FINANCE
Despite its rhetorical appeal, the imperial analogy has what you might call "structural limits".
Historical empires often lost monetary control. Rome debased currency under fiscal stress. Spain defaulted in foreign-denominated obligations. The Ottoman Empire borrowed in external currencies and lost fiscal autonomy.
The UK does not operate in that framework.
First, it is a sovereign currency issuer. Debt is denominated in sterling, and the Bank of England supports liquidity in the system.
Second, gilts are a deep global asset class held by domestic institutions and international investors. There is no immediate shortage of demand for UK debt.
Third, sterling retains reserve-currency "adjacency", giving it financial flexibility absent in most historical empires.
Additionally, modern defence commitments are heavy, but not structurally comparable to expansionist imperial militaries☆☆. NATO membership and nuclear deterrence limit fiscal exposure.
The constraint is therefore not insolvency risk in the classical sense of default or "going bust", but the rising cost of servicing debt within a low-growth economy, threatening increasing poverty and social fragmentation.
Glossary
Monetary sovereignty – ability of a state to issue and control its own currency.
Gilts – UK government bonds.
Reserve currency – widely held global currency used in trade and finance and reserves.
—
- THE REAL QUESTION - ADJUSTMENT, NOT COLLAPSE
The relevant framework is not collapse but adjustment.
Three broad paths exist.
Fiscal tightening would involve higher taxation or reduced spending, but faces political resistance.
Growth-led stabilisation would require productivity improvement through education & technology dev. and rollout, more investment in the real including infrastructure, and institutional reform and de-regulation.
Financial repression would involve maintaining low real interest rates relative to inflation, gradually burning off debt burdens in real terms.
The UK appears to be mixing all three, with limited success in each.
The key point is that none of these paths imply systemic failure, the failure of the system as a whole. They imply distributional choices over time ie who bears the cost of adjustment - taxpayers, savers, or future service users?
Glossary
Financial repression – suppression of real interest rates below inflation.
Real interest rates – nominal rates adjusted for inflation.
Fiscal adjustment – policy changes to restore balance between spending and revenue.
—
- ON BALANCE - STRUCTURAL STRAIN WITHOUT TERMINAL COLLAPSE
The UK exhibits features consistent with late-cycle fiscal systems: slow growth, ageing demographics, and increasing entitlement burdens.
However, it does not exhibit classical end-of-empire failure modes such as loss of monetary control, external fiscal domination, or inability to refinance debt in domestic currency.
The outcome is more consistent with long-term fiscal compression than abrupt crisis. Living standards and fiscal flexibility may erode gradually, but within a framework of institutional continuity.
The £3.5 trillion debt is therefore best seen as a constraint on the future policy space rather than a precursor to systemic collapse.
The key issue is not whether the system breaks, but how the adjustment burden is distributed across time and social groups, if a fourth turning is to be headed off before collapse.
Glossary
Fiscal compression – long-term tightening of available public spending space.
Policy space – range of feasible government fiscal options.
Institutional continuity – persistence of core state structures despite economic change.
—
Footnotes
☆ Why weak productivity growth since 2008?
The 2008 crisis triggered a prolonged period of cheap credit that kept "zombie" firms alive - businesses too weak to invest or innovate but able to service debt at near-zero rates, dragging down economy-wide productivity.
At the same time, the UK's particular mix of post-crisis austerity and weak business investment starved the economy of the capital deepening - esp. better machinery, technology, infrastructure - that normally drives output per worker higher.
Underlying this was a structural shift: an economy increasingly weighted toward low-productivity services, retail, and hospitality rather than high-value manufacturing or R&D-intensive industries.
So the UK became a financialised economy ie consumption-lead, debt-driven economy, rather than a real economy ie production and investment economy.
This is precisely the financialisation thesis at the heart of this blog's core argument.
When an economy prioritises consumption, property, and financial services over production and capital investment, it generates wealth on paper but hollows out the real productive base that sustains long-run growth, wages and tax revenues. The UK became, in effect, a leveraged consumer - borrowing against rising house prices to fund living standards that the underlying economy could no longer organically support.
This is why the debt chart and the productivity chart are really the same story told twice. And why a possible solution to the financialisation debt trap would reverse this - fiscal prudence, real wage increases, and investment for reshoring and growth of the real economy... is it too late?
☆☆ Modern defence commitments are heavy, but not structurally comparable to expansionist imperial militaries
The data supports the point clearly. UK defence spending stood at 3.3% of GDP in 1990-91 and has since fallen to around 2.3% (Institute for Fiscal Studies) - despite current pressures to rebuild. Compare that to the Roman or Spanish imperial military burden, which routinely consumed 50–70% of state revenues.
Current UK spending is around 2.4% of GDP, with commitments to reach 3.5% by 2035 (House of Commons Library) - significant, but a managed collective obligation shared across NATO allies, not the open-ended unilateral cost of empire.
And America?
America is the exception that proves the rule - and arguably the last empire still paying the full unilateral cost.
US defence spending runs at around 3.5% of GDP, but that figure understates the true burden when you add veterans' benefits, intelligence agencies, foreign military aid, and the nuclear arsenal maintenance. More structurally, the US maintains approximately 750 military bases in 80 countries - a global garrison posture with no historical peacetime parallel. The fiscal consequence is visible: US defence spending is the single largest discretionary item in the federal budget, and cumulative post-9/11 war costs have been estimated by Brown University's Costs of War project at over $8 trillion.
The irony is that NATO, from a European perspective, has been a mechanism for offloading precisely this imperial overhead onto American taxpayers - which is the real grievance behind Trump's burden-sharing complaints, whatever you may think of his manner of expressing it.









