Spending Review: George Osborne scraps cuts to tax credits

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-34915218

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George Osborne has scrapped planned cuts to tax credits altogether - rather than just ease their impact - in his Spending Review.

The chancellor had been expected to raid other budgets to cover the £4.4bn cost but he said that was not now needed because of higher tax receipts.

He also pledged real terms increases to police funding - after speculation it would be cut.

Labour said he had "betrayed" voters by failing to eliminate the deficit.

The tax credit announcement means millions of low paid workers will not now have their benefits cut in April, as Mr Osborne had originally planned before he was forced to think again by the House of Lords.

Rather than phasing the cuts in, Mr Osborne said he said he had decided the "simplest thing" was "to avoid them altogether", even though it would mean missing his own target for overall welfare spending in the early years of this Parliament.

SNP Treasury spokesman Stuart Hosie said Mr Osborne's "complete and humiliating U-turn on tax credit cuts shows that we were right to keep the pressure up to the last minute" for the cuts to be scrapped.

But Paul Johnson of the Institute for Fiscal Studies, said the move would change nothing in the long run because the cuts will still feature in the new Universal Credit system, which is due to replace tax credits by 2018.

For Labour, John McDonnell said Mr Osborne's handling of tax credits had been a "fiasco" and cuts being transferred to Universal Credit meant "this is not the full and fair reversal that we pleaded for".

Mr Osborne used his Autumn Statement and Spending Review to detail £20bn in budget cuts, with transport, energy and climate change, justice, business among the departments faced with double digit cuts to their day-to-day spending.

He also pushed ahead with the expected £12bn in welfare cuts, including a fresh squeeze on housing benefit.

Other announcements include:

Mr Osborne told MPs the Spending Review was designed to make Britain "the most prosperous and secure of all the major nations of the world" and that "economic and national security" were at the heart of his plans.

The surprise decision to protect police funding was welcomed by the Police Federation - Mr Osborne has faced warnings that further reductions in police numbers could harm Britain's ability to respond to a Paris-style terror attack.

With higher tax receipts and lower interest rates predicted, Mr Osborne was able to announce that he would hit his target for running a budget surplus by 2020 - there had been speculation he would be forced to move the target back.

The chancellor told MPs solving the housing "crisis" was his top priority.

In a shift away from free market solutions, Mr Osborne announced plans to hand £2.3bn directly to developers to build "starter homes" for first-time buyers, in a fresh attempt to reverse the long-term decline in house building.

He will also pump £4bn into shared ownership schemes to provide more properties for households earning less than £80,000 (or £90,000 in London) who want to get on the housing ladder.

The Treasury is calling it "the biggest affordable house-building programme since the 1970s" but Labour dismissed it as more rhetoric, saying: "If hot air built homes, then Conservative ministers would have our housing crisis sorted."

The Treasury has already announced that front-line NHS services in England will get a £3.8bn, above-inflation, cash injection next year, as part of an £8bn real terms increase over the course of the Parliament.

Defence spending is to be increased, as set out in Monday's Strategic Defence and Security Review. International aid will also escape cuts.

Special report: Full in-depth coverage of the Spending Review and Autumn Statement

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