Interest payments on government borrowing last month hit a record high for December as surging inflation increased the cost of debt.
The Office for National Statistics (ONS) said interest on government debt hit £8.1bn last month – up from £2.7bn a year earlier.
The increase came as soaring energy costs sent inflation to a 30-year high.
Official borrowing – the gap between spending and tax receipts – last month was a lower-than-forecast £16.8bn.
The figure was down £7.6bn from the same month a year earlier, with the Treasury’s coffers bolstered by more income from housing stamp duty and fuel taxes.
But public debt interest payments are linked to the Retail Prices Index of inflation, which hit 7.5% last month, the highest rate since March 1991.
Chancellor Rishi Sunak, under pressure to relax planned tax rises in April, underlined the impact of rising debt repayments in a statement after the figures were released.
He said: “We are supporting the British people as we recover from the pandemic through our Plan for Jobs and business grants, loans and tax reliefs.
“Risks to the public finances, including from inflation, make it even more important that we avoid burdening future generations with high debt repayments.
“Our fiscal rules mean we will reduce our debt burden while continuing to invest in the future of the UK.”