
Spending review in six charts: Where Rachel Reeves cuts and pay boosts will land
Chancellor Rachel Reeves unveiled the government 's 2025 spending review, laying out government and departmental spending over the next four years.
Overall, budgets will grow by 2.3 per cent a year - a more modest sum compared to 3.8 per cent annually at the 2021 spending review under Boris Johnson's Conservative government.
There was a record boost for the NHS, amounting to an extra £29 bn a year, as well as extra funds for policing and prisons.
But budgets were squeezed elsewhere. Here, the Independent looks at the headline figures from the chancellor's speech.
Which departments will benefit?
Most departments will see their budgets rise, to varying degrees.
The biggest percentage increase was for the Department of Energy Security and Net Zero, which will see a 16 per cent real-terms boost to its budget each year, doubling from £5.6bn this year to £11.4bn in 2025/6.
Ed Miliband's department will also see £14.2bn for the new Sizewell C nuclear power station over the next five years. The Suffolk plant will power around six million homes, will be completed in the next decade.
The Business and Trade, MHCLG Local Government, and Law Officers' departments will also see more moderate real-terms growth in their budgets.
Over £3bn for the Department of Business and trade will be for advanced manufacturing in the net-zero transition, such as zero-emission vehicles and aircraft.
The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) will also receive record levels of funding at £1bn in 2028/9, increasing capacity for prosecuting criminal cases.
In real terms, the Health and Social Care budget, which already represents the biggest proportion of government spending, will increase the most, with £58.2bn more in 2028/9 compared to 2023/4.
The defence budget, which is protected and cannot be cut, will grow £19.6bn larger by 2028/9, to £73.5bn. This is part of Sir Keir Starmer's commitment to boost defence spending to 2.7 per cent of GDP from 2027, and 3 per cent by the next parliament, following pressure from Donald Trump and Nato to ramp up spending in response to global threats, such as Russia.
However, the uplift has led to the foreign aid budget being slashed. As a result, the Foreign Office will see the sharpest drop in funding - with a 5 per cent real-terms cut per year.
The Home Office will also see a 2.2 per cent shrinkage in real-terms growth, while the Culture, Media and Sport, Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, and the Cabinet Office will see real-terms depreciation.
Most of these real-terms losses are due to inflation, meaning that budgets are growing at a slower pace than costs are rising, if at all.
Several departments whose funding is not protected from cuts are set to see their budgets shrink.
£20m for selected regions
The government also announced 25 new 'trailblazer neighbourhoods' which will receive long-term investment over the next decade.
The majority of these are in England, with five across Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland.
Each area will receive up to £20 million over the next decade, in locations including Brinnington (Stockport) and Birkenhead Central (Wirral).
Police and prisons clampdown
Law enforcement was also a key focus in the spending review.
The chancellor announced that police spending power would increase by 2.3 per cent per year on average, as part of the government's commitment to add 13,000 police officers and staff to neighbourhood policing.
But police chiefs hit out, saying the increase was a 'huge blow' that would leave forces struggling to meet their pledges, including halving violence against women and girls and fulfilling their recruitment targets.
Ms Reeves also committed £7bn over the next five years to build 14,000 new prison places, alongside investment in the probation system.
Prisons across England and Wales are currently 98.9 per cent full, according to government figures; with jails dangerously close to their overall 89,000 capacity.
The investment follows an open letter from senior police and security chiefs, warning that plans to release prisoners early could cause 'net detriment to public safety' without further spending to bolster police forces.
The increase comes after fraught talks with Home Secretary Yvette Cooper, who was the last minister to agree a spending deal with the Treasury. In the end, Ms Reeves imposed a settlement on the department, with a Whitehall sources telling The Times 'Yvette pushed very hard but was told that there simply isn't the money for it.'
NHS digitisation and repairs
The NHS will receive a £29bn real-terms increase in annual day-to-day spending, from 2023/4 to 2028/9.
Ms Reeves said that the government would invest £10bn to further digitise the NHS, with a focus on the NHS app; in addition to £30bn over the next five years for maintenance and repair across NHS buildings.
Ms Reeves claimed that significant progress had been made in the NHS since the Labour government came into power last summer.
In that time, the NHS has recruited 1,700 new GPs and cut waiting lists by over 200,000, to 7.4 million, she said.
But there are concerns that the increase will also need to fund pay rises for doctors - who are threatening strike action if they don't get a 29 per cent rise.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
28 minutes ago
- The Sun
Historic Brit clothes shop beloved by the Royal Family which supplied Europe's top fashion houses is forced to close
A HISTORIC British clothing store once beloved by the Royal Family and known for supplying Europe's top fashion houses has shut down for good—leaving 28 people out of work. Otterburn Mills, based in Otterburn, Northumberland, with a second store in Rothbury, has gone into liquidation following a series of financial blows. 4 The 18th-century mill-turned-retail business struggled to recover after the Covid pandemic, with shop visitor numbers failing to return to pre-2020 levels. The business was further hit by the sudden loss of a key supplier, soaring operating costs, and a shift in consumer shopping habits away from the high street. The company, which famously made a pram rug for Queen Elizabeth II in 1926, had recently been put up for sale. However, no buyer could be found, and business recovery experts FRP were brought in to oversee the winding down of operations. FRP confirmed that the company has ceased trading and 28 employees have been made redundant. Those affected are now being supported with access to the Redundancy Payments Service. Antonya Allison, joint liquidator and director at FRP, said: 'Otterburn Mills was a well-known and respected local business that had built a loyal customer base over many years. Unfortunately, the retailer was faced with an array of challenging headwinds that many high-street brands will recognise and, despite our best efforts to identify it has not been possible to find a viable way forward for the business. Our focus is now on supporting those affected and working to ensure the best possible outcome for creditors through the liquidation process.' The business also had debts owed to HMRC. We live next to a Sainsbury's where 'defeaning' building work is ruining our lives – we haven't slept for a week FRP added that it is 'working with all stakeholders to ensure an orderly wind down of the business and to maximise returns for creditors.' Otterburn Mills rose to prominence under William Waddell, the son of a Borders wool manufacturer, and built a reputation for its tweeds and woven fabrics. These high-quality materials were once used by major European fashion houses including Dior and Balmain. The site was transformed into a retail clothing store in the 1990s by Euan Pringle, who preserved much of the original mill machinery as part of the shop's heritage display. The closure adds to a growing list of British retail losses in recent months. The Original Factory Shop has begun closing down sales at several branches across Worcestershire, Dorset, Durham and other parts of the UK, as part of its wider restructuring. Poundland, recently sold to a US-based firm for just £1, is facing the potential closure of around 100 of its 800 UK shops, with job losses expected. House of Fraser is also shutting down its Worcester city centre store, where a 20 per cent off closing down sale has already begun ahead of its final trading day in September. Meanwhile, fashion chain River Island is drawing up a radical rescue plan to avoid collapse, which includes shutting some stores. Its Banbury branch is set to close at the end of June, and more may follow as the retailer attempts to recover from a £33.2 million loss last year. Industry experts say these closures reflect broader trends, including rising energy bills, business rates, and staffing costs. Many shoppers have moved online or prefer to visit large retail parks over traditional town centres. The Centre for Retail Research has warned that more than 17,000 UK stores could shut their doors in 2025, putting up to 202,000 retail jobs at risk. The loss of Otterburn Mills, a once-thriving symbol of British textile heritage, underlines the deepening crisis for both independent shops and national retail chains across the UK. Without meaningful support or change in consumer habits, more historic names could be lost from the high street for good. RETAIL PAIN IN 2025 The British Retail Consortium predicted that the Treasury's hike to employer NICs would cost the retail sector £2.3billion. Research published by the British Chambers of Commerce earlier this year shows that more than half of companies planned to raise prices by early April. Separately, the Centre for Retail Research (CRR) has also warned that around 17,350 retail sites are expected to shut down this year. It comes on the back of a tough 2024 when 13,000 shops closed their doors for good, already a 28% increase on the previous year. Professor Joshua Bamfield, director of the CRR said: "The results for 2024 show that although the outcomes for store closures overall were not as poor as in either 2020 or 2022, they are still disconcerting, with worse set to come in 2025." Professor Bamfield has also warned of a bleak outlook for 2025, predicting that as many as 202,000 jobs could be lost in the sector. "By increasing both the costs of running stores and the costs on each consumer's household it is highly likely that we will see retail job losses eclipse the height of the pandemic in 2020." 4 4


The Sun
28 minutes ago
- The Sun
Thousands of Thames Water customers are stuck on unfair 30-year-old tariffs
THOUSANDS of Thames Water customers are stuck on unfair 30-year-old tariffs, The Sun can reveal. Many without water meters have seen bills soar because they are calculated using their property's rateable value — set way back in the 1990s. 1 One Sun reader told us his monthly payment was up by a huge 671 per cent, from £21 to £162. Thames, which is trying to negotiate a multi-billion pound rescue deal, had said bills would rise by 31 per cent from April. But many are up by more than 40 per cent. Customers in homes unsuited to water meters — such as many flats — say they have been hit with higher hikes over the years. Their bills are calculated by their historic rateable value, which can depend on size and location — so they will often vary for homes in the same street. The Sun has been told that huge numbers of properties are unsuitable for water meters — including about 70 per cent in London. It means many people are struggling on unfair tariffs — and we have delivered a dossier of cases to Thames asking it to investigate. Consumer expert Martyn James said affordability was 'deeply concerning'. Industry regulator Ofwat said some customers may see their payments increase by more than average. Thames said: 'We offer comprehensive support for customers struggling to pay their bill.' TESCO SALES UP TESCO has revealed stronger sales over the latest quarter despite an 'intensely competitive' grocery market. The UK's largest supermarket chain said it has increased its market share further after investing more in pricing to lure customers. Group sales grew by 4.6 per cent to £16.4billion for the 13 weeks to May 24. Food sales rose by 5.9 per cent while non-food sales, excluding toys, rose by 6.2 per cent. £500 YOB FINES DISRUPTIVE Ryanair passengers who are removed from planes will be fined £500. The carrier said this will be the 'minimum' penalty and it will continue to pursue offenders for civil damages. It hopes the policy will 'act as a deterrent to eliminate this unacceptable behaviour'. The airline is suing one passenger for £12,600 after a Dublin-Lanzarote flight had to divert to Porto last year. EX-WILKO STAFF COMPO ABOUT 10,000 former Wilko workers will share a £2million payout following a legal case, it was announced yesterday. The GMB union said an employment tribunal judgment ruled that the retailer had failed to properly consult with workers before going bust in 2023. It means about 9,000 who worked in a store with 20 or more people will get four days' pay. And roughly 1,100 who worked in a distribution centre or support centre role will receive 13 days' pay. GMB rep David Bartlett said it was 'the very least Wilko workers deserve'.


The Sun
39 minutes ago
- The Sun
Tory leader Kemi Badenoch to call for windfall taxes on oil and gas firms to be scrapped to avoid ‘killing' the industry
TORY leader Kemi Badenoch due to call for windfall taxes on oil and gas firms to be scrapped to avoid 'killing' the industry. She was also set to demand fresh drilling licences in the North Sea in a blast against Energy Secretary Ed Miliband's decision to ban them in the name of Net Zero. The Energy Profits Levy was first introduced by the Conservatives to tax companies revelling in record revenues while families struggled with soaring bills. At the last Budget Rachel Reeves increased the tax by three points to 38 per cent of profits for the next five years. But Ms Badenoch will today warn these massive profits have 'long gone' and the longer the tax remains 'the more damaging it becomes'. She will tell the Scottish Tory conference: 'Labour have extended and increased this tax. They are killing this industry. 'And frankly if it is allowed to remain in place until 2030, as is Labour's current plan, there will be no industry left to tax. 'Thousands will have been made unemployed and all while we import more gas from overseas – from the very same basin in which we are banned from drilling.' Mr Miliband is pledging £500million to invest in hydrogen, claiming it will create thousands of jobs in the transition to 'clean energy'. He says it will cushion the blow from sectors like iron, steel, glass, chemicals and ceramics whose factories are exposed to higher energy costs. The Energy Secretary said: 'By building hydrogen networks, we are securing homegrown energy that will power British industry for generations to come.' Kemi Badenoch pleads for Tories to give her more time just like Margaret Thatcher was given 2