Richard Partington and Peter Walker 

Spending review 2020: Rishi Sunak’s key points at a glance

The chancellor has delivered the spending review – here are the main points, with political analysis
  
  


Sunak’s opening remarks

Rishi Sunak says the spending review comes as the coronavirus health emergency is not over and the economic emergency has only just begun. Saying he will prioritise jobs, businesses and public services, the chancellor says the government is spending £280bn to get the country through Covid-19.

Next year, the government will allocate an initial £18bn in response. There will be £3bn for the NHS, £2bn for keeping transport running, £3bn to local councils, and extra £250m to end rough sleeping. Total funding to tackle coronavirus will be £55bn, he says.

Peter Walker, political correspondent: An inevitably downbeat opening by the chancellor, who says that while the Covid-19 health emergency continues, “our economic emergency has only just begun”. Yes, he says, there is spending coming, but the immediate message is clear: it’s time for the tough chancellor.

Growth

  • The chancellor says forecasts from the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) show the economy will contract by 11.3% this year, the biggest decline in three centuries.

  • Sunak says it will take until the end of 2022 for the economy to return to its pre-pandemic size.

  • GDP will grow by 5.5% next year, 6.6% in 2022, 2.3% in 2023, 1.7% in 2024 and 1.8% in 2025.

  • In July, the OBR said its “central scenario” was for a 12.4% plunge in gross domestic product (GDP) this year.

  • This compares with estimates made at the start of November from the Bank of England for an 11% fall in 2020.

PW: There’s no easy way to deliver this news, and Sunak doesn’t sugar-coat it. There will be “long-term scarring” as late as 2025, he says. No chancellor would relish handing out forecasts like this – but it does give Sunak significant political cover for any tough spending decisions to come.

Borrowing

  • Sunak says the budget deficit will be £394bn this year, or 19% of GDP – the highest level in peacetime.

  • Borrowing will remain at £164bn next year and remains at about £100bn for the remainder of the forecast.

  • In July, the OBR estimated a budget deficit – the gap between spending and tax income – of £322bn for 2020-21.

  • The OBR had previously estimated the national debt – the sum total of every budget deficit – of £2.2tn in 2020-21, or 104.1% of GDP.

PW: It’s not exactly natural ground for a Conservative chancellor to defend this level of borrowing and Sunak takes a politely defensive tone, stressing that this was “an economic emergency”, and that to not act would have caused significantly more damage.

Public sector pay

  • Pay rises for the public sector will be paused next year, with an exemption for more than 1 million nurses and doctors in the NHS.

  • 2.1 million public sector workers who earn below the median wage of £24,000 will be guaranteed a pay rise of at least £250.

  • Sunak says he cannot justify a significant across-the-board pay increase for public sector workers, to protect public sector jobs and ensure fairness between the public and private sectors.

  • The chancellor says the national living wage will be increased to £8.91 an hour, and extended to over-21s.

  • Overall unemployment is forecast to peak next year at 7.5%.

PW: A public sector pay freeze for all but medical NHS staff had been long trailed, and critics will inevitably contrast this with the lockdown applause for key workers. Sunak couches this as an issue of fairness against the private sector – and pulls out the surprise of some possible pay rises for the lowest-paid. A hurdle dodged? The details will be crucial.

Departmental spending

  • Sunak says day-to-day departmental spending will rise in real terms by 3.8%, the fastest growth rate in 15 years.

  • He says in cash terms, this will be an increase of £14.8bn on current levels.

  • The government will match EU funding for regional development after Brexit, he says. Funding for communities to pilot programmes will be made next year.

  • The core health budget will grow by £6.6bn. The chancellor says this will help to hire 50,000 new nurses.

  • The schools budget will increase by £2.2bn.

PW: Sunak, usually a fairly pithy chancellor, spends quite some time labouring the point that overall spending will rise. Why? To try to see off accusations of a return to austerity, an idea the government has promised to banish, and which is now seen as politically toxic. Again, not natural Conservative territory, but coronavirus (among other factors) means the usual party rules don’t apply.

Overseas aid

  • Sunak says the government will cut the overseas aid budget to 0.5% in 2021, allocating £10bn at this spending review.

  • The intention is to return to 0.7% “when the fiscal situation allows”.

  • The chancellor says during a “domestic fiscal emergency” sticking rigidly to spending the international commitment of 0.7% on overseas aid is difficult to justify to the British people.

PW: Sunak’s announcement on aid sees Dominic Raab, the foreign secretary, nod furiously on the benches next to Suak, but is heard in virtual silence by the Commons. This is a very politically tricky moment, as shown by the amount of time Sunak uses justifying it. A lot of Tory MPs are angry. The change potentially requires a Commons vote, and there is no guarantee the government will win. This one, as they say, could run and run.

Infrastructure and levelling up

  • Sunak says investment in infrastructure will total £100bn next year, with plans to deliver the highest levels of sustained investment in 40 years.

  • He confirms plans to launch a new infrastructure bank, to be headquartered in the north of England.

  • The chancellor announces a new £4bn fund for “levelling up”, to which any local area can bid for the funding of local projects.

PW: Sunak’s “levelling-up fund” is clearly intended as the good news at the end of a difficult statement and is likely to prove popular – as well as very on-message. But councils might say that in the context of a decade-plus of underspending on local government, £4bn might prove to be not that much. Expect Labour to keep an eye on whether, as with the earlier towns fund, a mysteriously high proportion of the money ends up going to marginal Conservative seats.






 

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