
Department for education's settlement at the spending review 2015
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Press release DEPARTMENT FOR EDUCATION'S SETTLEMENT AT THE SPENDING REVIEW 2015 The Chancellor has published the results of the spending review, including details of the Department for
Education’s budget over the course of this Parliament. This was published under the 2015 to 2016 Cameron Conservative government The Spending Review and Autumn Statement delivers on the
government’s priority to provide security to working people at every stage of their lives. It sets out a 4 year plan to fix the public finances, return the country to surplus and run a
healthy economy that starts to pay down the debt. By ensuring Britain’s long term economic security, the government is able to spend £4 trillion on its priorities over the next 4 years. For
the Department for Educations this means: * doubling free childcare from 15 hours to 30 hours a week for working families of 3- and 4-year-olds, worth up to £5,000 per child per year from
September 2017, and investing over £1 billion more a year by 2019 to 2020 on free childcare places for 2-, 3- and 4-year-olds * protecting the schools budget in real terms, enabling a per
pupil protection for the dedicated schools grant and the pupil premium * making around £600 million savings from the education services grant (ESG) and supporting schools to realise
efficiencies * £23 billion capital investment over the Parliament to open 500 free schools, provide over 600,000 additional school places, rebuild and refurbish over 500 schools and address
essential maintenance needs DEPARTMENT FOR EDUCATION 2015 TO 2016 BASELINE 2016 TO 2017 PLANS 2017 TO 2018 PLANS 2018 TO 2019 PLANS 2019 TO 2020 PLANS 2020 TO 2021 PLANS (2) RESOURCE DEL
(1) £53.6 billion £54.4 billion £55.5 billion £56.4 billion £57.1 billion * CAPITAL DEL £4.6 billion £5.2 billion £4.6 billion £4.4 billion £4.4 billion £4.6 billion TOTAL DEL £58.2 billion
£59.6 billion £60.1 billion £60.8 billion £61.6 billion * (1) In this table, resource DEL excludes depreciation (2) 2020 to 2021 resource DEL departmental budgets have only been set for some
departments. For the rest, these budgets will be set in full at the next spending review. SECURITY Investing in education and skills will help deliver economic security. In addition to
providing 600,000 additional school places, funding for universal infant free school meals will be maintained, supporting healthy eating and saving families around £400 for every infant each
year. LONG TERM INVESTMENT The government will invest over £1 billion more a year by 2019 to 2020 in free childcare places for 2-, 3- and 4-year-olds. To enable the doubling of free
childcare for 3- and 4-year-olds with working parents, the government will invest at least £50 million of capital funding to create additional places in nurseries and over £300 million a
year to increase the average hourly rate paid to childcare providers. From 2019 to 2020 the government will spend a record £6 billion a year supporting parents with their childcare costs -
this includes tax-free childcare and Universal Credit. The government will support 800 more national leaders of education to continue driving up performance in schools, while increasing
funding for teacher training and recruitment to deliver the English Baccalaureate and more specialist STEM teaching. The current national base rate per student for 16- to 19-year-olds in
England will be protected in cash terms over the Parliament and the government will deliver 3 million high-quality apprenticeship starts by 2020. Some targeted savings will be made from 16
to 19 funding, including from declining demographics and funding outside the national base rate per student. EFFICIENCY AND REFORM To focus support where it is most needed and improve work
incentives, the government will apply an upper income limit per parent of £100,000, and a minimum weekly income level per parent equivalent to 16 hours (worked at the national living wage)
to the additional 15 hours of free childcare offered to 3- and 4-year-olds in working families from September 2017, and make the same changes in tax free childcare. This will save £215
million by 2020. The government will protect the department’s central children’s services budget at over £300 million per year to help drive up social care workforce standards to improve
support for vulnerable children. The government will introduce the first ever national funding formula for schools, high needs and early years. This will end the unfair system where a child
from a disadvantaged background in one school attracts half as much funding as a child in identical circumstances in another school, simply because of where they live. There will be a
transitional phase to help smooth the implementation of the new schools formula. The government will launch a detailed consultation in 2016 and will implement the new formulae from 2017 to
2018. Savings of around £600 million will be made on the ESG, including phasing out the additional funding schools receive through the ESG. The government will reduce the local authority
role in running schools and remove a number of statutory duties. The government will consult on policy and funding proposals in 2016. The government will help schools to make savings on
procurement, including by exploiting economies of scale. In 2016 the government will publish a set of specific actions to support school leaders target over £1 billion a year in procurement
savings by the end of the parliament through benchmarking, guidance and improved framework contracts. As part of the government’s one-off restructuring of post-16 education and training,
sixth-form colleges in England will be given the opportunity to become academies, allowing them to recover their non-business VAT costs. They will have the option of joining a multi-academy
trust if they choose to, which will help drive up standards and improve efficiency of 16 to 19 education by enabling further collaboration between schools and sixth-form colleges. The
department will deliver 20% core administrative savings through greater efficiency. Secretary of State for the Department for Education, Nicky Morgan, said: > Providing educational
excellence everywhere is at the heart of this > government’s drive to extend opportunity and deliver real social > justice, which is why we are protecting per pupil funding in the >
dedicated schools grant and pupil premium rates for the duration of > this parliament. > > We want every child to have the opportunity to fulfil their > potential, no matter
where they live, so we have taken the historic > step of introducing a new national funding formula, to end the > unfair school funding by postcode. We are also investing £23 >
billion in the school estate to rebuild schools, open hundreds of > new ones and create hundreds of thousands more school places. > > But we know that education doesn’t start, or
stop, at the school > gates. We will invest a record £1 billion extra in free childcare > each year by the end of this Parliament - more than any government > has invested before.
And we have protected core 16 to 19 funding, to > ensure all young people leave education with the skills they need to > thrive in modern Britain. DfE media enquiries Central newsdesk
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Published 25 November 2015