I am writing in response to the Opposition Day Debate on
‘Reductions in Local Government Funding’ of 28 March and
the resolution of the House made that day. This Government
recognises the vital role of local government in delivering
the front-line services which communities across the
country rely on. I am writing to the House to confirm the
support this Government is providing to ensure Councils
have the resources they need to deliver vital local
services.
In February, the 2018/19 Local Government Finance
Settlement set out the resources available to councils in
England. This is the third year of a four year offer which
was approved by Parliament, as was the case in both
preceding years. The multi-year settlement was also
overwhelmingly accepted by Councils, 97 per cent of whom
took up the offer in return for publishing efficiency
plans. It has provided greater certainty, allowing Councils
to plan ahead and secure value for money.
Through the settlement, Local Government has been given
access to £45.1 billion in 2018-19 and £45.6 billion in
2019-20. This is an overall increase since 17-18 of £1.3
billion. This recognises both the growing pressure on local
government’s services and higher-than-expected inflation
levels. For adult social care in particular, a further £150
million was provided for 2018/19, which we expect will help
support sustainable local care markets, in addition to the
£2 billion announced at Spring Budget 2017. With this, and
other measures, the Government has given councils access to
£9.4 billion dedicated funding for adult social care over
three years.
Informed by the representations received from Councils,
organisations and members of the public, we are ensuring
that the sector is equipped to drive economic growth, to
think and act creatively and to deliver for their
residents. We are clear that is about more than just the
funding. Through additional flexibilities and
responsibilities, we are responding to the sector’s request
for more control over the money they raise as well as the
tools to make this money go further.
Local authorities already have a strong incentive to grow
their economies through 50 per cent business rates
retention and benefit from the additional income that
growth in their business rates brings. Over 150 local
authorities in sixteen pilot areas are incentivised further
by retaining 100 per cent of their growth in business
rates.
We are also looking towards the future. We are undertaking
a review of local authorities’ relative needs and resources
to address concerns about the fairness of current funding
distributions. The consultation has now closed and my
Department is carefully assessing over 300 responses from a
wide range of stakeholders. We have sought the views of
councils, representative associations and others to capture
the key factors which should be included in a new funding
formula and we will continue to collaborate with local
government on this. We aim to implement its findings in
2020-21.
Local government also has a vital role to play in helping
the broken housing market. The recent allocation of £866
million from the Housing Infrastructure Fund for 133 local
authority projects will help to deliver some 200,000
additional homes, and we have also announced an additional
£1 billion of borrowing headroom to enable local
authorities in the highest value areas to build more homes
for social and affordable rent.
We further announced last month the 45 areas across England
we are working with to develop Forward Funding
infrastructure projects, with up to £4.1 billion of funding
available to unlock a potential 400,000 homes. These are
strategic, long term projects which will deliver housing
not just for now, but for generations to come - creating
new settlements, growing places and supporting local
authority ambition for growth and regeneration.
This Government remains firmly committed to ensuring local
government has the support and resource it needs to deliver
its services effectively and efficiently, whilst protecting
hard-working taxpayers from excessive council tax rises.