WBG full response to Autumn Statement 2023
Women's Budget Group full response to the Autumn Statement 2023
Press Release
The WBG argues that the Autumn Statement is a missed opportunity to build a country and economy 'that works for everyone'
Theresa May became Prime Minister in the wake of the EU referendum which had revealed a deeply divided country. She pledged to build a country and economy that ‘works for everyone’, and the Chancellor affirmed those aspirations in his Autumn Statement address.
Publishing its comprehensive assessment of the Autumn Statement today, the Women’s Budget Group argues that the Autumn Statement is a missed opportunity to begin that task:
Dr Eva Neitzert, Director of the Women’s Budget Group, commented:
“The Chancellor’s welcome commitment to spending on infrastructure could have provided an opening for addressing both the country’s stretched social infrastructure – our schools, health service and care system – and its productivity challenge. His decision to direct investment at physical infrastructure and continue to privilege tax giveaways for the better off over restoring essential benefits to the poorest is at odds with the promise to build a country that ‘works for everyone’.
This is nowhere more evident than with the universally acknowledged crisis in social care. There are now an estimated 1.86m people over the age of 50 in England with unmet care needs. Yet the Autumn Statement provided no additional funding to a sector that is at breaking point. Worryingly, since the Autumn Statement, there have been suggestions that the funding shortfall could be plugged with further rises in council tax. Yet this risks entrenching inequalities further as the poorest areas, which also have the highest care needs, will need to raise additional monies from a local population that can least afford it. Women, who are more likely to be in need of care and the providers of paid and unpaid care, will continue to be hit hard while the government ignores this urgent crisis.
We are also disappointed that the Chancellor and HM Treasury have again failed to provide systematic evidence of how different groups in society are impacted by the measures that were announced. This is despite the requirements of the Public Sector Equality Duty and a report last month by the Women and Equalities Select Committee which called on the government to be more transparent in its reporting of equality impacts.
Our analysis shows that such an analysis is both technically possible and vitally important. Women and those on low incomes, particularly BME women, continue to shoulder the greatest burden of tax and benefit changes and cuts to public services since 2010. If the government is serious about building ‘a country that works for everyone’, then they must commit to making visible the impacts on different groups and redressing any adverse disproportionate effects, particularly on those who can least afford them.”
A summary of the WBG cumulative analysis is Available at: https://wbg.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/AFS2016_Briefing_WBG.pdf
Women's Budget Group full response to the Autumn Statement 2023
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