Home Office (HO)
Table 2.4: Home Office
|
£ billion
|
|
2019-20
|
2020-21
|
RDEL excluding
depreciation
|
11.9
|
12.9
|
The Home Office settlement includes:
-
a 6.3% increase in real terms to the department’s resource
budget from 2019-20 to 2020-21. This is the largest planned
annual growth rate in at least 15 years;
-
an extra £750 million for policing to begin delivery of the
government’s commitment to recruit 20,000 additional officers
by 2023 (up to 6,000 officers are to be in place by the end
of 2020-21), providing them with the resources they need to
tackle serious violence, and make the UK’s streets safer. In addition, the
government is spending £45 million in 2019-20 to kick start
recruitment, bringing in up to 2,000 additional officers this
year. The Home Office will provide further detail on how
these officers will be allocated between territorial police
forces, counter-terrorism policing, and serious organised
crime in due course;
-
an additional £30 million to safeguard children from child
sexual exploitation and abuse. Increasing funding for
cutting-edge technology and the best intelligence and law
enforcement capabilities will enable police officers to
continue to target the worst and most sophisticated
offenders;
-
increasing the budget for counter-terrorism policing in line
with inflation, including continuing the additional £160
million announced at Budget 2018, which maintains current
counter-terrorism capability and protects officer numbers;
-
£110 million additional funding, plus £65 million of Official
Development Assistance (ODA), for the asylum
system and continuing £150 million funding for the Global
Resettlement Programme, to support and protect the most
vulnerable refugees; and
-
maintaining £480 million of Brexit funding in real terms,
including continued funding for Border Force capability and
delivery of the EU Settlement Scheme.
The government is committed to tackling crime and keeping
the UK’s streets safe.
The UK needs a
system fit for the modern world in order to combat the highest
harm crimes and the organised criminals who feel they can operate
with impunity. The additional 20,000 police officers will give
police forces more capacity to tackle this threat. However, given
the scale and complexity of the threat, it is important to
understand the best way for the government to respond.
The government will therefore undertake a formal review of the
powers, capabilities, governance and funding needed across the
policing and law enforcement landscape, including the National
Crime Agency and the wider justice system, to enable it to
improve its response to serious and organised crime in all its
forms. This will report in advance of Spending Review 2020. The
terms of reference for the review will be agreed
between HMT and HO and announced in due course.