Spending Review 2019
Spring Review 2019
5th September 2019
George Evans-Jones presents a brief overview of the main points coming out of yesterday’s Spending Review.
Health
- Increase NHS spending by £6.2 billion next year
- £210 million for ‘frontline’ NHS staff
- Invest more in training and professional development for doctors and nurses (not figure attached)
- £2 billion of new capital funding – upgrading 20 hospitals this year
- £250 million for new AI tech
Local Authorities
- £1.5 billion for social care next year
- 2% council tax precept to raise £500 million
- £54 million to address homelessness and rough sleeping
- HM Government claim this is largest increase in local government spending since 2010
Brexit
- £2 billion for Brexit delivery next year
- Will work with Bank of England to coordinate fiscal and monetary response for UK economy
Defence
- £2.2 billion for defence, 2.6% increase
- Increases shared of GDP being spent on defence
- £7 million to fund Normandy Memorial Trust
- Confirms Office for Veterans’ Affairs with £5 million funding
Spending
- HM Government says day-to-day spending will increase by £13.8 billion
- £1.7 billion will be added to capital spending
- HM Government say this increase is the fastest, accounting for inflation, in 15 years
Policing and criminal justice
- HM Government claim there will be a 6.3% increase in real-term Home Office spending – £750 million to recruit the 20,000 new police officers
- Additional £45 million for immediate recruitment – aim to get 2000 in place by end of March 2020
- 5% real-terms increase in resources budget for the MoJ (although their budget has decreased 40% from 2010)
- £80 million for the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS)
Education
- School spending will increase over 3 years to £7.1 billion
- Every secondary school will be allocated a minimum of £5,000 per pupil (not indication of what % increase or decrease that is on current per-pupil spending)
- Each primary school will get at least £3,750 to be increase to £4,000 by 2020
- Teachers’ starting salaries will rise to £30,000 by 2022-23
- £400 million increase in FE funding next year
Transport
- £200 million to ‘transform’ bus services across the country, specifically funding low-emission buses and trailing on-demand services
George Evans-Jones is a Programme Manager at DGMI, with great experience in central government relocation