HL Deb 19 February 1987 vol 484 c1335WA
Baroness Cox

asked Her Majesty's Government:

What protection they provide for lenders and other creditors in the event of default by a local authority.

The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department of the Environment (Lord Skelmersdale):

A local authority's debt and its creditworthiness have always been its own responsibility. The Government do not stand behind local authority debt. The great majority of local authorities understand the importance of maintaining their creditworthiness and behave in accordance with the rules of financial good practice.

All loan debt is a statutory charge on all the revenues of an authority. If a local authority were to default, creditors—including those who have provided finance for authorities under arrangements such as deferred purchase schemes which do not legally constitute borrowing—might have to take action in the courts to recover their money. The Public Works Loan Board could not lend to an authority which chose to act illegally or which appeared unable to service and repay the debt, even under its lender of last resort facility.