Rachel Reeves defends spending review as she admits latest growth figures ‘disappointing’ – UK politics live | Politics


Rachel Reeves gives interviews after delivering spending review on Wednesday

Good morning. Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, got a good reception from MPs when she addressed them yesterday after delivering her spending review. But she cannot avoid questions about whether taxes might have to rise in the autumn, and growth figures for April out this morning undermine the claim that the economy is turning round.

Reeves is giving interviews this morning. Commenting on the growth figures, she said they were “clearly disappointing”.

Our number one mission is delivering growth to put more money in people’s pockets through our Plan for Change, and while these numbers are clearly disappointing, I’m determined to deliver on that mission.

In yesterday’s spending review we set out how we’ll deliver jobs and growth – whether that’s improving city region transport, a record investment in affordable homes or funding Sizewell C nuclear power station. We’re investing in Britain’s renewal to make working people better off.

Here is the agenda for the day.

Morning: Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, is doing a morning interview round. She is on the Today programme at 8.10am.

9am: The Resolution Foundation publishes its spending review analaysis.

10.30am: The Institute for Fiscal Studies publishes its spending review analysis.

10.50am: Kemi Badenoch gives a speech at the Peel Hunt FTSE250 conference in London.

11.30am: Downing Street holds a lobby briefing.

Noon: John Swinney, Scotland’s first minister, takes questions from MSPs.

1pm: Wes Streeting, the health secretary, gives a speech at the NHS Confederation conference in Manchester.

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UK turning into ‘national health state’ because NHS will take half of day-to-day spending by 2029, thinktank says

The Resolution Foundation is holding a briefing about its spending review analysis. There is a live feed here.

Here is a summary of the analysis.

And here are the main points.

  • Britain is morphing into a “national health state”, because health will take up half of day-to-day public spending by the end of the decade, the thinktank says.

Yesterday’s NHS-dominated settlement continues a pattern of recent Spending Reviews, which has led to a major reshaping of the state. By the end of the decade (2028-29), the health service will account for half (49 per cent) of all day-to-day public service spending controlled by Westminster – up from a third (34 per cent) in 2009-10.

While real, per-person funding for health has increased by 36 per cent between 2009-10 and 2028-29, it has fallen by 16 per cent for Justice, 31 per cent for Work and Pensions, and 50 per cent for Housing, Communities and Local Government over the same period.

And Ruth Curtice, chief executive of the thinktank, said:

Health accounted for 90 per cent of the extra public service spending, continuing a trend that is seeing the British state morph into a National Health State, with half of public service spending set to be on health by the end of the decade.

  • The 2020s will see day-to-day public spending rising by much more than in the 2010s, but by much less than in the 2000s, the thinktank says.

Real day-to-day spending is now rising again in the 2020s (2019-20 to 2028-29) by 2.2 per cent a year, following a 0.5 per cent fall per year in the 2010s (2009-10 to 2019-20). In the decade prior to that, spending rose by 4.3 on average each year (2001-02 to 2009-10).

The extra funding for hospitals, schools and the police relative to plans set out by the previous government will deliver important benefits-in-kind to families. The foundation estimates that a middle-income household will gain £1,400 on average for extra public service provision (in 2028-29), rising to £1,7000 for the poorest fifth of families.

This is why the Treasury was able to publish figures yesterday suggesting that, overall, its record on tax, benefits and public spending has been highly progressive.

The large increase in public spending has been funded in large part by the £39.7 billion of tax rises (in 2028-29) announced in the Budget last Autumn and £3.6 billion of benefit cuts (in 2028-29) announced in the Spring Statement – equivalent to £1,550 for every family in Britain. But the combination of a weaker economic outlook, an unfunded spending commitment on winter fuel payments, and just £9.9 billion of headroom against the chancellor’s fiscal rules, mean further tax rises are likely to be needed this autumn.

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