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Finance ministers warn UK Government over spending cuts

The Palace of Westminster and Houses of Parliament, London, as there are 100 days to the general election and the parties wheeled out their big guns for a campaign which appears to be shaping up as "wealth versus health". PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Picture date: Tuesday January 27, 2015. David Cameron promised he would act "within the first few days" of forming a new government to cut the annual benefits cap introduced by the coalition from £26,000 to £23,000 per household, using the £135 million savings generated to help fund three million apprenticeships by 2020. See PA story POLITICS Election. Photo credit should read: Jonathan Brady/PA Wire
The Palace of Westminster and Houses of Parliament, London, as there are 100 days to the general election and the parties wheeled out their big guns for a campaign which appears to be shaping up as "wealth versus health". PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Picture date: Tuesday January 27, 2015. David Cameron promised he would act "within the first few days" of forming a new government to cut the annual benefits cap introduced by the coalition from £26,000 to £23,000 per household, using the £135 million savings generated to help fund three million apprenticeships by 2020. See PA story POLITICS Election. Photo credit should read: Jonathan Brady/PA Wire

The finance ministers of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland have united to warn that UK Government spending cuts are moving “too fast and too far”.

Scotland’s Deputy First Minister John Swinney, Arlene Foster of the Northern Ireland Executive and Jane Hutt of the Welsh Government have issued a joint statement raising concerns that continuing austerity measures pose a risk to public services.

In a letter to Chief Secretary to the Treasury Greg Hands, they call for an urgent meeting in advance of the Government’s forthcoming spending review.

The letter said: “The three devolved administrations share the view that the UK Government’s ongoing austerity plans, reflected in both the in-year spending reductions announced on June 4 and in the Summer Budget, continue to reduce public spending in the UK too fast and too far, and present unnecessary risks to our public services.

“We also share the view that the UK Government’s plans were developed and communicated in an unsatisfactory way, with neither advance notice nor apparent consideration of the implications for the devolved administrations.”

They also raise concerns about the timing of the spending review expected in the autumn.

“The planned announcement date of November 25 leaves very little time for setting our own budgets before the beginning of 2016-17, presenting us with significant operational challenges and potentially constraining the time available for respective parliamentary and assembly processes,” the letter states.

“There will in addition be considerable difficulties for our delivery bodies and stakeholders who will have little notice of their future allocations.”

Mr Swinney said: “The UK Government’s broken austerity programme is reducing household income, damaging economic confidence and weakening public finances. That represents a clear threat to our public services.

“The recent Budget was misguided and deeply unfair, with disproportionate cuts falling on the poorest and most vulnerable sections of society while giving tax breaks to the better-off.

“The three devolved administrations agree that ongoing austerity presents unnecessary risks to our public services.”