In a new report, funded by the
Economic and Social Research Council, IFS researchers find that
English councils’ finances held up much better during the first
year of the COVID-19 pandemic, 2020–21, than previously thought.
This finding has important implications for local government
funding policy in the coming year, and for how the government
should respond if councils face another extreme adverse shock in
future.
Since the pandemic started, the government has been surveying
councils about its financial impact. In the latest available
survey – from April 2021 – councils reported that the COVID-19
pandemic had increased their net spending on non-education
services during 2020–21 by approximately £7.8 billion. However,
official expenditure and income data published last month suggest
that net spending increased by only £4.1 billion more than we
would have expected in the absence of the pandemic – a much
smaller, although still sizeable, increase.
This does not mean councils were purposefully overestimating the
costs of the COVID-19 pandemic in their survey responses. The
survey asked for areas where spending was higher and income lower
as a result of the pandemic – and not areas where spending was
lower, for example due to temporary closures of services or
reductions in demand. But given the surveys were used to inform
how much funding the government provided to local government,
councils did have an incentive to err on the higher side when
estimating the likely financial impacts.
This link between survey-based estimates and the funding provided
to local government also means that overall English councils
received billions more in funding than their net expenditure
actually increased by. Thus while some councils had to draw down
their reserves and seven had to ask for special temporary
borrowing powers from the government in 2020–21, councils as a
whole were able to pay substantially more into their reserves
last year than had been anticipated prior to the pandemic.
The report highlights two key implications of these
findings.
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First, English local
government as a whole started the current financial year in a
financially more resilient position than is typically
appreciated. The fact that councils’ spending increased by less
than expected and they were therefore able to pay into reserves
in 2020–21 may explain why the government has so far been
unwilling to fully fund councils’ reported financial pressures
this year. The government may not see councils’ survey
responses as a reliable guide to the net spending pressures
being faced. And it may feel that they could draw down the
additional reserves accumulated in 2020–21 to meet any unmet
pressures that do exist.
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Second, the government may
want to respond differently if another extreme adverse shock
affects councils in future. For example, it would almost
certainly find it useful to survey councils again about
financial impacts but should ask about areas where spending was
lower (or income higher) as well as about costs. Rather than
provide up-front funding, the government could also relax
borrowing rules and compensate councils after the event, using
vetted financial information to do so.
The report also looks at how
the financial impact of the COVID-19 pandemic varied across
services and across councils. Relative to what may have been
expected in the absence of the pandemic, central and other
services (+£1.3 billion), adult social care services (+£0.9
billion) and highways and transport (+£0.8 billion) saw the
biggest increases in net expenditure – although in the last case
this was the result of a fall in the contribution of parking
income to costs.
Changes in gross expenditure, income from sales, fees and
charges, and hence net expenditure varied substantially across
councils – and especially smaller shire district councils. For
example, while just over one-in-ten shire districts saw their
reported net spending fall, one-in-four saw it increase by 40% or
more. These differences in impacts, together with differences in
assets and liabilities going into the pandemic, help explain why
some councils have faced particular financial difficulties at a
time the sector as a whole appears to have been more financially
robust than expected.
In addition, the data suggest that unlike their larger
counterparts with responsibility for social care services,
smaller shire district councils were not significantly
‘over-compensated’ for the in-year financial impacts of the
COVID-19 pandemic in 2020–21. This reflects the fact that a much
larger share of the impact faced by them consisted of falls in
sales, fees and charges income – which were only partially
compensated for.
David Phillips, an Associate
Director at IFS and an author of the report, said:
‘The COVID-19 pandemic has had a significant financial impact on
English councils – pushing up their net spending on non-education
services by approximately £4.1 billion in its first year,
2020–21. However, this is much less than councils’ own previous
estimates suggested, and means that English local government as a
whole saw its funding from central government increase by
substantially more than its costs last year.’
Kate Ogden, a Research Economist at
IFS and another author, said:
‘The fact councils as a whole were able to build up reserves in
2020–21 means that the sector’s financial position was not quite
as precarious going into this year as is sometimes claimed. And
it means the government’s decision not to meet this year’s
reported financial pressures in full is not unreasonable.
‘But this approach may not work for all councils – some have been
particularly hard hit and faced real financial difficulties. And
the government shouldn’t be too sanguine about the longer-run
picture for council funding. As our previous work has shown, with
rising demands and costs for adults’ and children’s social care
in particular, councils will struggle to raise enough themselves
via council tax in the coming years, especially in poorer parts
of the country.’
ENDS
Notes to
editors
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The report forms the final
stage of a programme of work funded by the Economic and Social
Research Council (ESRC), as part of UK Research and
Innovation’s rapid response to COVID-19, under the grant
‘COVID-19 and councils’ finances: understanding risks and
impacts and improving policy’ (ES/V005073/1). Co-funding from
the ESRC Centre for the Microeconomic Analysis of Public Policy
at IFS (grant number ES/T014334/1) is also gratefully
acknowledged.