Britain’s growing welfare state bill is costing the average taxpayer £2,000-a-year, Telegraph analysis reveals.
The nation’s benefits bill was £298.7bn in 2021-22 – up from £168.7bn in 2017-18. Old age benefits such as the state pension now account for 14pc of income tax and national insurance paid – equivalent to £882 a year for someone on the average salary.
It comes as the Conservative triple lock pledge is estimated to cost £2bn more than previously expected at the time of the Spring Budget, thanks to high wage growth potentially putting the state pension on course to surpass £11,000 in April.
The policy guarantees to increase the state pension by the highest of either inflation, wages or 2.5pc. But the soaring cost has prompted fears the Government will be forced to either accelerate rises in the state pension age, or scrap the triple lock entirely.
Britain is also grappling with an economic productivity crisis and more than 7.6 million people are now on NHS waiting lists in England, up from 4.4 million before the pandemic.
With the calculator below, Telegraph Money can now reveal how much of your salary now goes towards the welfare state.
Despite Rishi Sunak’s insistence that he is a “low tax conservative” who wants to “bring people’s taxes down”, his Chancellor, Jeremy Hunt, has implemented a combination of frozen thresholds, removed investment incentives, and increased corporation tax – all while keeping welfare spending close to £300bn a year.
As a result, the nation’s tax burden is set to hit its highest point since the Second World War. Economists now predict it will be decades before the tax burden returns to pre-pandemic levels.
It comes as the Centre for Social Justice last month revealed that of the 5.2 million people claiming out-of-work benefits, roughly 3.7 million have been granted indefinite exemptions from finding a job, following a rise in claims of mental health issues and joint pain during the pandemic.
The Institute of Fiscal Studies says taxpayers face a bill of £26bn this year to fund these benefits, £6bn more than before Covid after adjusting for inflation. Mel Stride has suggested the shift to remote working could be key to getting some of those with long-term health conditions into work.
Welfare spending was the single biggest component of public sector expenditure in the financial year 2021-22, at £298.7bn out of a total of £952.3bn. For the typical taxpayer, this amounts to close to a third of their annual tax bill of £6,500 paid directly towards benefits.
Using the latest public spending data, our analysis shows someone with the average UK salary of £33,000 sees £2,000 a year spent on welfare.
Yet off this, Unemployment Benefit accounts for just 0.1pc, equivalent to £8 a year.
It comes as the first three months of 2023 saw productivity in the UK decline by 0.6pc compared to a year ago, and 1.4pc when compared to the end of 2022, according to the Office for National Statistics.
However, while public spending has increased across the board by £200bn over the past five years, the relative share of welfare has fallen, from 36pc in 2017-18 to 31pc in 2021-22.
Many high earners are now paying relatively more towards the welfare state because of the lowering of the 45p tax threshold in 2023-24, which now stands at £125,000, down from £150,000 before.
Telegraph analysis shows 6pc of the average salary goes towards paying for benefits, compared to 13pc of a high earner’s salary.
Someone earning £150,000, five times the average salary, contributes close to £19,000 towards the welfare state – more than nine times the contribution of someone on the average salary.
Sickness and disability benefits, such as Personal Independence Payments, account for 6.4pc of welfare taxation – making them the second highest share of the tax bill.
Relative spending on health has grown over the same period, from 20pc to 23pc. Health funding now amounts to approximately £1,500 a year for the typical taxpayer.
Spending on economic affairs is also up in the past five years, from 7pc to 10pc, driven by relative increases in spending on fuel and energy as well as transport. In total, this accounts for £660 of the typical tax bill.
Education spending has seen a slight relative fall since 2017-18, from 12pc to 11pc, meaning it now accounts for roughly £700 of the typical tax bill.
A Government spokesman said: “We are leaving no stone unturned to get more people working and we are making progress, with inactivity falling by nearly 300,000 since the middle of last year, including by 156,000 in the last quarter.
“Supporting people who are not working for health reasons is a key priority for this government, with £3.5 billion of additional investment at the last Budget to get more people into work, including £2 billion targeted at those who are sick and disabled.”
This article was first published on June 12 2023 and has since been updated.