Household debt: statistics and impact on economy
This briefing provides statistics and forecasts for household debt, guidance on how to interpret debt statistics and analysis on how debt effects the economy.

The focus of this Bill is to set up a new framework for financial regulation in the United Kingdom
Financial Services Bill [Bill 278 of 2010-12] (1,017 KB , PDF)
The focus of this Bill is to set up a new framework for financial regulation in the United Kingdom. Many reasons have been put forward for why the financial crisis which started in 2008 happened. The Coalition Government believes that regulatory failure played some part. The Bill puts the Bank of England back at the centre of the supervisory system; establishes institutions for ‘macro-prudential regulation’ and two new regulators which concentrate on the prudential regulation of large institutions and business conduct respectively.
The Bill is subject to a Sewell Convention which means that the Government is seeking consent from the Scottish Parliament to legislate on those aspects which touch on devolved matters.
The Bill was subject to a carry-over motion from the 2010-12 session and reappeared in 2012-13 as Bill 2 of that session.
Financial Services Bill [Bill 278 of 2010-12] (1,017 KB , PDF)
This briefing provides statistics and forecasts for household debt, guidance on how to interpret debt statistics and analysis on how debt effects the economy.
Since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the UK has applied sanctions and changed rules around visas and corporate transparency to counter Russian influence.
The Bank of England has tools to manage the failure of banks. This bill, which has its second reading in the Commons on 22 January 2025, would introduce a new tool to manage the failure of smaller banks.