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Mapping Britain’s public finances
By
Louise McGough
,
Paul Swinney
| 6 July 2015
Mapping Britain’s public finances
By
Louise McGough
,
Paul Swinney
| 6 July 2015
Select Chapter
Executive Summary
Introduction
Figure The relationship between tax and spend across Britain
Figure Box 1: Methodology overview
A fiscal map of Britain
Figure Nationally
Figure Figure 1: Composition of total British tax revenue, 2013/14
Figure Local authority basis
Figure Figure 2: ‘Economy’ taxes generated in local authorities, 2013/14
Figure Figure 3: ‘Economy’ taxes generated in local authorities per worker, 2013-14
Figure Political geographies
Figure Figure 4: ‘Economy’ taxes generated in combined authorities and LEPs, 2013-14
Figure Box 2: Combined Authorities and LEPs
A public expenditure map of Britain
Figure Nationally
Figure Figure 6: Composition of total British public expenditure, 2013/14
Figure Box 3: Categorisation of public expenditure
Figure Local authority basis
Figure Figure 7: Total Government expenditure in local authorities, 2013/14
Figure Figure 8: Total Government expenditure in local authorities per resident, 2013/14
Figure Figure 9: Differences between the local authorities with the lowest and highest levels of economy taxes raised per worker and spend per capita
Figure Political geographies
Figure Figure 10: Total Government expenditure in combined authorities and LEPs, 2013/14
Figure Figure 11: Total Government expenditure in combined authorities and LEPs per resident, 2013/14
Figure Summary
How tax and spend plays out across city-regions
Figure Mapping tax across city-regions
Figure Figure 12: Tax raised across Greater Manchester, Greater London and Greater Birmingham city-regions
Figure Figure 13: Share of taxes raised across city-regions
Figure Figure 14: Where property taxes are raised
Figure Box 4: The role of property taxes
Figure Mapping public expenditure across city-regions
Figure Figure 16: Public expenditure across city-regions
Figure Figure 17: Share of public expenditure across city-regions
Figure Summary
Implications
Appendix 1: Methodology
Figure Drawing the fiscal map of Britain
Figure Table 1: Full breakdown of methodology for apportioning taxes
Figure Drawing the public expenditure map of Britain
Appendix 2: Political Geographies
Figure Figure 18: Coverage of 37 political geographies
Figure Table 2: Coverage of 37 political geographies
Figure Table 3: Designating of local authorities in instances where they are a member of more than one political geography
Appendix 3: Tax and Spend Data Tables
Figure Total economy taxes generated, 2013/14
Figure Economy taxes generated per worker, 2013-14
Figure Total public expenditure, 2013/14
Figure Public expenditure per resident, 2013-14
04
5: ‘Economy’ taxes generated in combined authorities and LEPs per worker, 2013-14
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