On October 20, Chancellor of the Exchequer, George Osborne, announced the outcome of the Comprehensive Spending Review in the House of Commons.The decisions taken by himself, the Prime Minister, the Deputy Prime Minister and the Chief Secretary to the Treasury would, he said, bring Britain “back from the brink”.
He announced public spending cuts totalling £83 billion over the next five years, starting with £23 billion in 2011 which he hopes, if coupled with a strong economic recovery, will completely eradicate the defecit by the end of the current Parliament.
Given the scale of cuts in welfare (£18 billion) in total since the Election, policing and defence, sports minister Hugh Robertson had already told CCPR that our sector would have to shoulder some of the burden. Although it will take a while to deliver a full analysis of the spreadsheets and navigate our way through the politics to the real detail, we now know the broad departmental funding reductions and can offer some initial anaylsis.
While considering DCMS cuts, it is worth noting that they will in part by offset by the return of the National Lottery to its original pillars.That will restore sport's 20% share, bringing in an extra £50million a year.
Department for Culture, Media and Sport
The DCMS has enjoyed a budget of £1.6 billion .Around £160 million goes directly to sport.The Chancellor announced the following:
Hugh Robertson has said he would rather do fewer things very well than top slice all of the Department's activities. Some peripheral programmes will therefore be cancelled, as we have already seen with free swimming, but as yet we are not in a position to know exactly what else is at risk.
Sport England:
UK Sport:
Department for Education
Funding for schools and teachers has been protected, but savings will have to be found by the Department for Education and ring fencing has been removed. This means that the £125-130million that the department sets aside for school sport will no longer be targeted. The likely impact of this is that the five hour offer will be reduced to two.
In addition, it is expected that all 400 sports colleges will lose their specialist status and as well as targeted funding for sport, worth £130,000 per school or £129 per child.
Individual schools will be expected to fund sport from their ordinary budgets, and it is likely that the only additional funding for school sport will be the School Olympics, which will come from the Lottery.
Department of Health
It is less clear than in any other department where exactly the pain will be felt. Health spending has been protected, with real terms increases in funding for hospitals, and the public health budget has been ring-fenced.
At face value, this is encouraging as sport and recreation are such important weapons in the fight against obesity. However, the current signs are not so good given that Department of Health funding for County Sports Partnerships has already been withdrawn and Primary Care Trusts are being abolished.
We will have a clearer sense of where physical activity fits with the Government's health agenda in December when the Public Health White Paper is published. CCPR is, of course, feeding into that process.
Department for Communities and Local Government
The biggest threat to a thriving sport and recreation sector lies in local government reforms. Councils spend £1.5billion a year on sport and physical activity infrastructure and programmes.
The Chancellor announced a 28% budget cut for communities and local government over the next four years, with the possibility of a further 7% cut in year five. If shared evenly across the Department, that means £500 million less for sport in communities all over the country. But experience tells us that sport will take more than its fair share of cuts.
Councils will have more discretion on what they spend their money on, but there remain a number of things they have to do. Policing and fire-fighting needs local spend, houses have to be built and benefits administered, bins have to be emptied and social care has to be provided. So they are required to do the same for much less, disproportionately squeezing discretionary spend - such as that on sport.
Then we factor in the landscape within the voluntary sector at a local level, the arena of discretionary spend, where there is a major change in culture as well as politics. The Big Society means that the voluntary sector will have to step in where the state withdraws - rehabilitating prisoners and supporting carers, for example. Sport and recreation may slip further down the pecking order.
How do we respond?
It will do sport and recreation no good if any objection we voice to these measures is not constructive. Whether we like it or not, these significant cuts are happening. There are three basic principles that we can share:
In the telling of that story lies an opportunity to really state sport's place in society. The love of sport is a national characteristic and 2012, the Rugby League and Rugby Union World Cups in 2013 and 2015, and hopefully the Football World Cup in 2018 gives us the platform to hammer that message home.
The key thing is that sport must work together. CCPR will provide further analysis as the information is digested in the coming days and weeks, and will be working with members to make sure that sport and recreation speak with one voice.
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