General government gross debt was £1,821.3 billion at the end of the financial year ending March 2019, equivalent to 85.2% of gross domestic product (GDP) and 25.2 percentage points above the reference value of 60% set out in the Protocol on the Excessive Deficit Procedure.
General government gross debt first exceeded the 60% Maastricht reference value at the end of the financial year ending March 2010, when it was 69.6% of GDP.
General government deficit (or net borrowing) was £25.5 billion in the financial year ending March 2019, equivalent to 1.2% of GDP and 1.8 percentage points below the reference value of 3.0% set out in the Protocol on the Excessive Deficit Procedure.
This is the third consecutive financial year in which general government deficit has been below the 3.0% Maastricht reference value.
For comparison to Labour see this
https://fullfact.org/media/uploads/uk_government_debt_in_cash.png
The debt from 2010 was in many ways a legacy hangover from the Blain/Brown years - remember the Treasury comments when Labour left power.....
But then look at the national deficit and how this has abated.....