يحاول ذهب - حر

Spending cuts What did Reeves set out and what happens next?

July 30, 2024

|

The Guardian

Rachel Reeves unveiled a series of spending cuts yesterday, with the prospect of tax rises to come in the autumn, after telling MPs about what she called £22bn in unfunded spending commitments for this financial year due to Conservative neglect.

- Peter Walker & Richard Partington

Spending cuts What did Reeves set out and what happens next?

How do the sums add up?

The official Treasury table for the shortfall is slightly complex and is made up of two main sections: £35.3bn of what is called "total departmental gross pressure" - ie the presumed overspend for the 2024-25 financial year - minus £16.3bn of presumed reserves and underspends, with another £2.9bn then added for assumed shortfallsalready calculated by the Office for Budget Responsibility. This gets to £21.9bn, rounded up by Reeves to £22bn.

The £35.3bn total excess comes from: agreeing to public sector pay awards (£9.4bn); "overhang" from earlier pay awards (£2.2bn); extra health spending beyond pay (£1.5bn); asylum and migration overspend (£6.4bn); various "new policy commitments" (£2.6bn); extra costs on rail (£2.9bn); unfunded support for Ukraine (£1.7bn); and what is called "normal reserve claims" - unforeseen spending and adjustments totalling £8.6bn.

imageOf the less technical elements, the main ones are:

Public sector pay

Reeves announced ministers would accept the recommendations of pay review bodies for a series of pay rises for public sector workers, which are largely around 5% and so above inflation. There has also been agreement to try to end a dispute with junior doctors by giving them a 22.3% pay rise over two years.

While Reeves argued that there was an economic cost of not meeting pay claims, as her predecessor, Jeremy Hunt, pointed out for the Conservatives, this is a choice.

Asylum

Reeves said this was in part the extra costs of the Tories' Rwanda deportation scheme, and the money spent accommodating asylum seekers whose cases were not being processed as they remained in limbo pending the presumed start of flights to Rwanda. Much of this does appear to be a genuine surprise.

Rail

المزيد من القصص من The Guardian

The Guardian

Garnacho saves sorry Chelsea from shock defeat by Qarabag

Chelsea’s precision is nowhere to be seen when Enzo Maresca rings the changes.

time to read

3 mins

November 06, 2025

The Guardian

The Guardian

Lights, camera, tax break The producer churning out flops funded by Treasury

Only the geekiest film buffs will have heard of Alan Latham, but he is one of the UK's most prolific movie producers.

time to read

4 mins

November 06, 2025

The Guardian

Academics tell of 'heavy pressure' from China

UK academics whose research is critical of China say they have been targeted and their universities subjected to “extremely heavy” pressure from Beijing, prompting calls for a fresh look at the sector’s dependence on tuition fee income from Chinese students.

time to read

3 mins

November 06, 2025

The Guardian

Lammy's luck is facing an opponent who can't count and has lost track of his gotcha moment

He had one job.

time to read

2 mins

November 06, 2025

The Guardian

"The money you get in football means the parasites come'

The former West Ham, Chelsea and England footballer, a gifted maverick who always felt a man out of time, playing a game years ahead of most of his contemporaries, smiles when I ask how old he feels now: \"Forty-four. I'm 44 [this Saturday].

time to read

6 mins

November 06, 2025

The Guardian

'A true champion' Hope overflows in New York as the outsider candidate claims victory

Zohran Mamdani's election downtown night party in Brooklyn on Tuesday night saw hundreds of his supporters erupt in applause as the democratic socialist from Queens was elected the next mayor of New York City.

time to read

4 mins

November 06, 2025

The Guardian

Confusion at the gates Why system can't keep track of inmates

The mistaken release of a second foreign prisoner has forced ministers to once again revaluate their security and release procedures, and will once again shine a spotlight on the well-documented problems at HMP Wandsworth.

time to read

2 mins

November 06, 2025

The Guardian

Lammy under pressure after two more prisoners mistakenly freed

David Lammy is under mounting pressure after two more prisoners, including a convicted foreign sex offender, were mistakenly freed days after the justice secretary introduced stringent checks for jails.

time to read

4 mins

November 06, 2025

The Guardian

The Guardian

High-speed rail network could cover Europe by 2040, says EU

Breakfast in Berlin, lunch in Copenhagen, with a fast and easy train journey to pass the morning?

time to read

2 mins

November 06, 2025

The Guardian

The Guardian

Tale of two city mayors Mamdani joins Khan on divided world stage

While the soon-to-be first Muslim mayor of New York, Zohran Mamdani, was in the final throes of his mayoral campaign on a brisk day in New York, Sadiq Khan, the first Muslim mayor of London, was wrapping up a two-day climate summit in a steamy if overcast Rio de Janeiro.

time to read

4 mins

November 06, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size