You can display a maximum of five data series at once.
Spending Units: By default, public spending is displayed in billions of pounds. By using a dropdown control in the table heading you can select £ bln (2003), and percent of GDP.
Chart Title: You can create a title for your chart. Use the title text box to enter a title and click the button to the right of the text field.
UK or Country: By default, the chart shows overall United Kingdom government spending. But you can select spending for individual countries by selecting the country dropdown control in the table heading.
View: There are two ways to view the spending data. The default view breaks down spending into functions. There is also a COFOG view that categorizes spending using the UN standard methodology.
Line/Bar: By default, the data series are displayed as line charts. But you can also select a bar chart.
Data Stack: By default, the data series are stacked when displayed on the chart. But you can change the setting to un stack the data series.
Chart Size: By default, the chart is displayed at medium size. But you can use the dropdown control to change the size.
Color: By default charts are displayed with color data lines and fill. You can change this to grayscale if you want.
HM PESA Year: By default, the chart displays planned spending in the current HM Treasury Budget as published in the current Public Expenditure Statistical Analyaes. But you can look at previous budgeted numbers using the dropdown control.
Data Range
Start Year: You can select any start year you want using the dropdown control in the table heading. At the top and bottom of the dropdown only years ending in 0 are shown. Select a start year to get close, then select the start year you want.
End Year: You can select any end year you want using the dropdown control in the table heading. At the top and bottom of the dropdown only years ending in 0 are shown. Select an end year to get close, then select the end year you want.
Category
Sub-category
Central Gov.
Gen. Gov.
Local Auth.
Total
Data Series: You can select up to five data series to display on your chart. Click on a checkbox to add or delete a data series from the chart. Once you get to five data series you will have to delete a series before you can add one. Click a [+] expand control to drill down to more detailed data series.
If youd like to create your own custom chart of spending data you should
use the table above to make your selections.
Select the year range: Select the start year and the end year you want by selecting the years you want
in the two year dropdown boxes.
Select spending items: Just click the checkbox for the spending item (up to 5 allowed at once) you want to display and view the chart.
Click the checkbox to unselect spending items you dont want.
Select units: You can select the display in billions of nominal (i.e. inflated) pounds sterling, billions of real (i.e. year 2003) pounds, or as percent of GDP.
Copy and Paste: Here is the dataset you have just charted. The table also includes
nominal or chained GDP for each year charted. If youd like
the data for analysis, just copy
the tab-delimited text in the textbox below (click cursor in text box, then
press ctrl-A then press ctrl-C) and paste
it into your spreadsheet.
Spending for 2008-09 is now "outturn"; spending for 2009-10 is now "estimated outturn". Central government spending
for 2010-11 is "plans", as estimated by HM Treasury. Local authority spending for 2010-11 is "guesstimated" by UkPublicSpending.co.uk by projecting the change between 2008-09 and 2009-10 forward to 2010-11.
Note: HM Treasury has not released spending estimates at the subfunction level for years after the current fiscal year 2010-11.
Three dynamic and converging systems functioning as one: a democratic polity, an economy based on markets
and incentives, and a moral-cultural system which is plural and, in the largest sense, liberal.
Michael Novak, The Spirit of Democratic Capitalism