Borrowing for the month was £14.2bn, up by £1.3bn compared with November 2014.
The Offfice for National Statistics (ONS) said last November's figure was boosted by a one-off gain of £1.1bn in fines for foreign exchange rigging.
Total borrowing for the financial year to date is now £66.9bn, down £6.6bn from the same point last year.
The
independent Office of Budget Responsibility (OBR) estimates that
borrowing for the whole of the financial year 2015-16 will be £68.9bn -
excluding support for public sector banks, and also excluding new
changes to the treatment of housing associations.
That is below last year's £90.1bn, which would mean Chancellor George Osborne would have achieved his aim of cutting government borrowing.
Mr Osborne's overall plan is to eliminate the annual gap between government spending and revenue by the end of this decade.
The ONS said total public sector debt had risen to £1,536.4bn, equivalent to 80.5% of the UK's annual economic output.
Consultants
EY said that in order to make the OBR forecast, borrowing "would have
to average a mere £0.7bn per month from December to March if the OBR's
2015-16 projection is to be met, compared to an average of £4bn in the
same months last year".
'No festive cheer'
A Treasury spokesperson said borrowing was higher because of a number of one-off factors that were likely to unwind next month.
"Beyond
these factors, we can see that our plan is working, with government
receipts growing - stronger income tax, VAT and on-shore corporation tax
- showing the benefits of a growing economy with record employment
levels," the Treasury said.
January is typically a good month for government finances as a large number of tax bills are paid then.
But both October and November's monthly borrowing figures have been worse than
expected, leading some economists to doubt that the chancellor will be
able to meet the OBR's forecast for the current financial year.
"There
was no festive cheer for the chancellor in November's UK public
finances figures," said Paul Hollingsworth, UK economist at Capital
Economics,
"Indeed, it now looks almost impossible for Mr Osborne to meet the OBR's forecast for the fiscal year as a whole.
"If
we assume that the trend seen so far this year continues, then
borrowing for 2015-16 as a whole would come in at around £81bn."
That
view was echoed by Howard Archer, chief economist at IHS Global
Insight: "The chancellor now faces a massive task to meet his fiscal
targets for 2015-16 and it is frankly hard to see how he can make it -
even allowing for the fact that public finances can be volatile from
month to month."
David Kern, the chief economist at the British
Chambers of Commerce, said: "The public finances are likely to be better
this year than in the previous financial year, but... the underlying
message remains that our budget deficit is still too high and greater
efforts are needed, through reducing current public spending and
generating sufficient tax receipts."
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