Spending review 2025
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Rachel Reeves announced cash injections in the NHS, schools and social housing, while vowing to end the use of asylum hotels by the end of the current Parliament
From the Ministry of Defence, the Department for Transport and the Home Office, here are the main announcements from Chancellor Rachel Reeves.
To learn more about the how announcements made in the chancellor's Spending Review will effect you, click here.
LIVE: Rachel Reeves sets out spending plans as Chancellor admits voters 'yet to feel benefits' of Labour government - Chancellor is laying out the Labour government’s day-to-day and capital spending p
The DfE’s overall budget, including capital, will increase by an average 0.8 per cent a year in real terms by the end of the spending review period, from £100.9 billion in 2025-26 to £109.2 billion in 2028-29. Ofsted will get a £20 million funding boost to help staff inspections under its new report card plans.
The UK Government has said its Spending Review plans will deliver £52bn for Scotland in the coming years. Chancellor Rachel Reeves set out plans for increased spending in Scotland on defence, computing and the development of carbon capture technology.
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MoneyWeek on MSNWhat did Rachel Reeves announce in the Spending Review?Chancellor Rachel Reeves announced budget increases for some departments, including a £29 billion annual injection for the NHS, but others will see cuts. What was announced in the Labour Spending Review,
The government is eager to shout about its investment in transport infrastructure and nuclear projects in this review. Reeves has committed £113 billion in extra capital spending, including £15 billion on transport outside London and £14.2 billion on the Sizewell C nuclear power plant, part of an £86 billion fund to "boost science and technology".
The government is to make a financial contribution of £50m towards the redevelopment of Casement Park. The move comes as part of the chancellor's Spending Review, which allocates money to day-to-day public services for the next three years.
Hi there, it’s Helen Chandler-Wilde , a UK journalist and editor of The Readout. Hope you enjoy today’s newsletter.