Costa Blanca News

Sajid Javid ' turns the page on austerity as election looms

- By David Hughes, PA

SAJID Javid promised he was ' turning the page on austerity' as he embarked on a preelectio­n spending spree, promising cash for health, schools and the police.

With Boris Johnson calling for a snap election, the Chancellor set out plans to increase current and capital spending by £ 13.4 billion in 202021 focused on the ' people's priorities'.

But shadow chancellor John McDonnell branded the statement a piece of ' grubby electionee­ring' and accused the Government of ' pretending to end austerity when they do nothing of the sort'.

The spending plan for a single year was fasttracke­d to clear the decks ahead of Brexit, with the normal multiyear settlement planned for next year.

In his statement, Mr Javid told MPs: "We are turning the page on austerity and beginning a new decade of renewal.

"A new economic era needs a new economic plan and today we lay the foundation­s with the fastest increase in daytoday spending in 15 years."

The plan would add £ 13.4 billion to total public spending including £ 1.7 billion for capital spending.

"These extra funds take the real increase in daytoday spending to £ 13.8 billion, or 4.1%," he said.

Measures announced by the Chancellor included:

A promise that no Whitehall department will be cut next year, with all ministries having their budget for daytoday spending increased at least in line with inflation

Councils will have access to an additional £ 1.5 billion to fund social care next year

A 6.3% real terms increase in Home Office spending, including £ 750 million for the already announced plan to recruit 20,000 police officers

A 5% realterms increase for the Ministry of Justice resource budget

Funding to tackle homelessne­ss will rise by 13%, an extra £ 54 million.

A £ 6.2 billion increase in NHS funding.

£ 2.2 billion for the Ministry of Defence.

£ 700 million to support children and young people with special educationa­l needs.

£ 200 million to ' transform bus services'.

£ 160 million for Scottish farmers who lost out under the allocation of Common Agricultur­al Policy funding.

£ 90 million for 1,000 diplomats and overseas staff and upgraded missions to help ' seize the opportunit­ies of Brexit' around the world.

Despite the increased spending, Mr Javid insisted ' we won't be writing blank cheques'.

"We won't be able to afford everything and we'll need to prioritise investment in policies that deliver real productivi­ty gains and boost economic growth in the longterm," he said.

"We'll still need to make difficult choices about our national priorities within a clear set of rules to anchor our fiscal policy and keep control of our national debt."

But he said the fiscal framework would be reviewed at the Budget later this year ' to ensure it meets the economic priorities of today, not of a decade ago'.

The Chancellor's first major statement was repeatedly criticised by Commons Speaker John Bercow for deviating from the topic of the spending round, straying into comments on Brexit and attacks on Labour.

In his response, Mr McDonnell condemned the ' pathetic sums' offered to Whitehall department­s that were ' on their knees' after almost a decade of austerity.

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