Just over 10% of promised funds actually spent and making a
difference on the ground
PAC warns of lack of transparency and waste of public
resources in funding approach
The Government is unable to provide any compelling examples of
what Levelling Up funding has delivered so far. In a report
published today, the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) warns
thatcouncils have been able to spend just a fraction of the
Government’s promised Levelling Up funding, with only just over
10% of the funds provided to reduce inequality under the
Levelling Up agenda actually spent and making a difference on the
ground.
The PAC’s report finds that, of £10.47bn in total funding from
central government, which must be spent between 2020-21 and
2025-26, local authorities have been able to spend only £1.24bn
from the Government’s three funds as of Sept 2023. Furthermore,
only £3.7bn had been given to local authorities out of the total
allocation by the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and
Communities (DLUHC) by December 2023.
In evidence to the PAC, DLUHC cited project-specific issues and
the impact of the pandemic and inflation for a
lower-than-anticipated level of spending to date. The PAC is
calling for six-monthly updates from DLUHC, both on the amount of
money released to and spent by councils, and on the progress of
projects themselves.
The report finds that more impactful bids to funding lost out due
to optimism bias in favour of so-called ‘shovel-ready’ projects.
Yet, the report raises concerns that not enough was done by DLUHC
to understand the readiness of schemes and the challenges facing
local authorities before funds were awarded. This also means that
DLUHC has had to extend the deadline for successful bidders for
earlier funds to spend their money. Round 1 of Levelling Up
Funding was awarded to ‘shovel-ready’ projects that were supposed
to be completed and delivering for local people by March 2024 –
but 60 out of 71 of these projects have had to extend to 2024-25,
with further delays in other schemes likely.
The PAC’s inquiry also found a worrying lack of transparency in
DLUHC’s approach to awarding funds, with rules for accessing
funding changing while bids were still being assessed, which was
also not communicated in advance to councils. 55 local
authorities therefore bid under changed rules with no chance of
being successful in Round 2, with an average bid for grants like
Levelling Up costing around £30k. This approach wasted scarce
public resources, and the report calls on DLUHC to set out the
principles it will apply and the decision-making process for
awarding future Levelling Up funds.
, Chair of the Committee, said: “The
levels of delay that our report finds in one of Government’s
flagship policy platforms is absolutely astonishing. The vast
majority of Levelling Up projects that were successful in early
rounds of funding are now being delivered late, with further
delays likely baked in. DLUHC appears to have been blinded by
optimism in funding projects that were clearly anything but
‘shovel-ready’, at the expense of projects that could have made a
real difference. We are further concerned, and surprised given
the generational ambition of this agenda, that there appears to
be no plan to evaluate success in the long-term.
“Our Committee is here to scrutinise value for money in the
delivery of Government policy. But in the case of Levelling Up,
our report finds that the Government is struggling to even get
the money out of the door to begin with. Government has not
helped the situation by changing the rules for funding
mid-process, wasting time and money and hindering transparency.
We will now be seeking to keep a close eye on DLUHC’s progress in
unclogging the funding system. Citizens deserve to begin to see
the results of delivery on the ground.”
PAC report conclusions and
recommendations
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Local authorities have been able to spend only £1.24
billion, just over 10%, of the promised £10.47 billion from the
government’s three Levelling Up funds (as of September 2023).
Furthermore, By December 2023, the Department had given £3.70
billion to local authorities out of the total
allocation. The Department knows that many projects
are struggling so it has provided flexibility to local
authorities to extend the deadlines to complete projects under
the Levelling Up Fund Rounds 1 and 2 and the Future High
Streets Fund. The Department told us that in December 2023 it
had written to all Levelling Up Fund Round 1 and 2 projects
asking for a status update, as well as to Future High Streets
Fund projects where it had concerns the projects may be at risk
of missing the programme deadline of September 2024. We are
concerned these extensions are masking problems and backloading
expenditure. The National Audit Office (NAO) reported the
majority of projects were ‘underway’. But the Department
confirmed that this does not necessarily mean construction work
has started on site. We were also concerned to hear that out of
the 185 projects that had commenced under the Future High
Streets Fund, 19 (just over 10%) had been paused and so risk
not being completed at all/on time.
Recommendation 1: In its Treasury Minute response, and
then by letter once every three months to this Committee, the
Department should set out:
- the latest position on the amount of money that has been
released to and spent by local authorities across the three
funds; and
- provide an update on the progress of projects broken down by
fund and project status.
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We are concerned the Department did not do enough to
understand the readiness of project proposals and the
challenges facing local authorities before it awarded
funds. As we have found before, optimism bias has put
impactful bids to the Levelling Up Fund at risk of missing out
at the expense of so-called ‘shovel-ready’ projects. The
Department gave many reasons why projects are delayed and how
it needed to balance deliverability against requiring local
authorities to have everything in place to start building as
soon as they are awarded funds. But this optimism has meant the
Department has had to allow local authorities to extend the
deadline to spend their money for all projects in the Levelling
Up Fund Rounds 1 and 2 and the Future High Streets Fund. So
far, the vast majority (60 out of the 71) of Levelling Up Fund
Round 1 projects which were due to have spent their government
funds by the end of 2023-24 have reprofiled their spend into
2024-25 and the Department expects some of the remining 11 to
do so as well. We found this astonishing given Round 1 of the
Levelling Up Fund was awarded to ‘shovel-ready’ projects that
were supposed to be completed and delivering for local people
by March 2024. As Round 3 of the Levelling Up Fund has been
allocated to those unsuccessful bids made under Round 2, the
Department could not assure us these same delays would not be
repeated. Furthermore, the Department could have been much more
inquisitive about the realistic delivery timetable of each
project it funded, for example in regard to obtaining planning
permission and acquisition.
Recommendation 2: In its Treasury Minute response, the
Department should set out what it has learnt to ensure proposals
have the best chance of timely success, and how it will ensure
this learning is applied to future funds. It should also set out
how it is sharing its experiences with the Levelling Up programme
both within the Department and across government to reduce the
risk of similar mistakes being repeated in other programmes and
projects.
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The Department changed the rules for applying for the
Levelling Up Fund during the application process, wasting
scarce public resources, disadvantaging some local authorities
and hindering transparency. The Levelling Up programme was
sub-optimal in this respect and it is important that lessons
are learnt. There is a worrying lack of transparency
in the Department’s approach to awarding funds with the
Department changing the rules for the Levelling Up Fund as it
went along. Having seen how many bids were submitted, the
Department decided that local authorities that were successful
in Round 1 would not be awarded any funds in Round 2. On
average, local authorities have historically spent £30,000
pursuing each competitive grant, such as Levelling Up grants,
yet we now know that 55 local authorities who had received
funding in Round 1 and then bid in Round 2 had no chance of
being successful in Round 2. The Department also changed the
rules for Round 3, deciding it would not run a new competition
but instead restrict the allocation of Round 3 funding to
unsuccessful Round 2 bids, meaning those waiting to bid in
Round 3 missed out. The Department said that, on balance, this
was the best approach to remove the significant effort of
bidding. But the downside is that local authorities that did
not bid under Round 2 (for example, because they were not
ready) did not get a chance to fund their projects. In
addition, only around 25% of bids across Rounds 1 and 2 of the
Levelling Up Fund were successful: the Department should have
better anticipated the expected demand for funding and, given
the available funding, set sufficiently stringent criteria to
help avoid local authorities investing in bids that had little
chance of success.
Recommendation 3: In its Treasury Minute response the
Department should set out the principles it will apply and the
decision-making process for awarding future Levelling Up
funds for reducing regional inequality.
The Department should carefully construct the criteria for all
funding programmes before launching them – setting out any
flexibilities and possible alternative options (and the
circumstances in which these would be triggered) at the outset –
and must not change the rules once they are published barring
exceptional circumstances. We would trust that the rest of
government also heeds this advice.
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We welcome the intentions to simplify the funding
system, but the Department has more to do to implement its
plans. The Department published its plans for funding
simplification in Summer 2023. This plan covers the whole of
government and aims to simplify the approach to, and number of,
funding streams available to local authorities. The plan
includes, giving local authorities more flexibility in managing
their projects and reducing the burden of data collection on
local authorities. Currently, the Department collects over 400
indicators across 13 funds but recognises this is too much. It
has established what it calls ‘pathfinder simplification
pilots’ that allow ten local authorities who are receiving
money from multiple funds to pool these funds so they can
manage their individual projects as one. However, it is yet to
draw any conclusions from this initiative.
Recommendation 4: In its Treasury Minute response, the
Department should update us on the progress with simplification
including its work with other government departments and progress
with the ten simplification pilots. In the future, it should
update the Committee by letter once every six months of further
developments in this regard, along with the costs and benefits
(both to the Department and local authorities) arising from
greater simplification.
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The Department is providing focused support to some
local authorities with project delivery, but it remains to be
seen how the Department will use any learning from these
activities to support all local authorities. In
addition to the flexibilities introduced in the pathfinder
simplification pilots (see above), the Department is providing
focused support to local authorities to help them unblock and
deliver their projects. This includes area teams that work with
local authorities and departmental experts that it is deploying
into 25 local authorities to help them unblock delivery. The
Department also has an additional £65 million to provide
additional funding to local authorities who received funds
under the Levelling Up Fund and to provide external experts to
build capacity and capability in local authorities. But the
Department’s focused support is available to only a small
number of local authorities. It remains to be seen how the
Department is going to disseminate these lessons to support all
local authorities and how they will use these lessons to
improve their approach in the future.
Recommendation 5: The Department should set out in its
Treasury Minute response the lessons it is learning from its
local support work and how it will disseminate the lessons to all
local authorities.
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We recognise the Department's plans to evaluate these
funds in the short-term, but we are concerned it has no
long-term plans to measure the impacts. The Department
is playing catch up in its efforts to carry out robust
evaluation. Having previously not considered evaluation well
enough, it is now putting in place plans to carry out
evaluation of the funds. Evaluating the impact and added value
of levelling-up funds will be complex and will require a wider
range of information than that used to award funds in the first
place. It may be challenging to show clearly what outcomes can
be convincingly attributed to the funding awarded. The
Department expects findings from the evaluations to start
becoming available from 2025. We are however concerned about
how the Department will ensure robust data over the long-term
and surprised that the Department has no long-term plans to
know if these funds worked, for example, by reviewing over
five, ten, and 15 years to find out how people have benefitted
from the investments.
Recommendation 6: In its Treasury Minute response, the
Department should:
- update us on its progress with evaluation and provide us with
regular updates thereafter; and
- update us on how it will ensure it has the right data and how
it will carry out evaluation over the long-term to assess whether
the investments have led to sustained improvement.