IFG - Labour's missions need a reformed spending review process

2 Aug 2024 12:18 PM

The approach taken in recent spending reviews is not up to the job of achieving Labour’s missions, warns a new Institute for Government report

The report, How to run the next multi-year spending review, shows how the existing process fails to align government spending with strategic priorities and long-term value for money.

The report – which looks at spending reviews dating back to 1997 – says the process has been undermined by the variability in its frequency and timing, the poor use of evidence to guide decisions, and a failure to reflect government priorities in Whitehall department budgets – for example with the inadequately defined ‘levelling up’ aim going into the 2020 and 2021 spending reviews.

To give the government a better chance of delivering its missions and tackling the complex challenges it has inherited, the report recommends that Rachel Reeves reset its approach to spending reviews and introduce more effective ways of managing public spending.

The IfG welcomes Reeves' plan to establish a regular cycle of spending reviews, and set out the process in the Charter for Budget Responsibility. This new IfG report calls on the chancellor to go further, running a more in-depth spending review that sets cross-departmental spending plans for each government mission, as well as each department.

The report’s recommendations to improve the spending review process also include:

Olly Bartrum, Senior Economist and report author said:

“Past spending reviews have been effective at helping the government meet short-term fiscal targets but not at aligning spending with priorities or delivering improvements in long term public service productivity. The transition to a new government provides an opportunity to reset how the process works.”