Rachel Reeves was accused of ‘spend now, tax later’ as she splashed the
cash on the NHS and Net Zero today but with no clear sense of where the
money was coming from. The Mail has more.
Unveiling the Spending Review in the Commons, the Chancellor claimed she is “renewing Britain”.
She
is allocating huge sums to departments up to the end of the decade,
after loosening the Government’s borrowing rules at the last Budget.
Ms
Reeves boasted that her new approach means Labour can spend a
staggering £300 billion more over the next five years than the Tories
planned. That includes a 3% real-terms increase in day-to-day budgets
for the NHS to 2029, worth £29 billion a year.
But Shadow
Chancellor Mel Stride branded it the “spend now, tax later” review,
warning the proposals are “fantasy” because Labour does not know where
the money is coming from.
The generous fiscal envelope set last
Autumn has been put under massive pressure by the economy slowing down
and Donald Trump’s trade war.
There are demands to pump far more
cash into defence, while Ms Reeves has already made an humiliating
U-turn on winter fuel allowance cuts and is facing a Labour revolts on
other benefits curbs.
That has led analysts and political rivals
to argue that more tax increases are “inevitable” – although the
funding gap will not crystalise until the next fiscal package.
Ms
Reeves fuelled the speculation by telling MPs that there would be no
change to her fiscal rules, and day-to-day spending must be covered by
“tax receipts”. Doubts have also been raised about whether nearly £14
billion of ‘efficiencies’ pencilled into the plans will come to pass.
At
PMQs before the Chancellor took to her feet, Keir Starmer dodged ruling
out more tax rises – even though the Budget last year imposed the
biggest increase for a single fiscal event in record.
The
splurge was also not enough for some Labour figures, as the health
service has sucked up so much of the available funding. London Mayor
Sadiq Khan warned that Ms Reeves risked “levelling down” the capital by
failing to sign off infrastructure projects, and said the funding
settlement for police could mean fewer Met officers.
The
backdrop to the decisions has been looking increasingly grim, with
Labour trailing in the polls behind Reform – whom Ms Reeves repeatedly
attacked from the despatch box.
Figures yesterday showed unemployment rising, and a survey found just 12% of Brits believe Ms Reeves is doing a good job.
Ministers
have described the spending plans – equal to an extra £8,100 for every
taxpayer in Britain – as “the end of austerity”....<<<Read More>>>....
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