In line with the Government’s commitment to protect health spending, overall NHS spending will increase by 0.4% in real terms over the course of the Spending Review period. This includes a 1.3% increase in the resource budget, and a 17% decrease in capital spending. The administration budget will be reduced by 33%, and reinvested to support the delivery of NHS services.
| £ billion | baseline 2010-11 | 2011-12 | 2012-13 | 2013-14 | 2014-15 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Resource DEL (1) | 98.7 | 101.5 | 104.0 | 106.9 | 109.8 |
| Capital DEL | 5.1 | 4.4 | 4.4 | 4.4 | 4.6 |
| Total DEL | 103.8 | 105.9 | 108.4 | 111.4 | 114.4 |
(1) In this table, Resource DEL excludes depreciation
The settlement will allow the NHS to maintain the quality of services to patients. The health settlement also includes:
Some programmes announced by the previous Government but not yet implemented will not be taken forward at this stage, including:
To meet the rising costs of healthcare and increasing demand on its services, the NHS will release up to £20 billion of annual efficiency savings over the next four years, all of which will be reinvested to meet rising levels of demand and to support improvements in quality and outcomes. This will include, for example:
In addition to the above, the Department will be adopting the following ideas, suggested by the public through the Spending Challenge process:
Alongside these efficiency improvements, the Government is seeking to introduce reforms as set out in the White Paper, “Equity and Excellence: Liberating the NHS”. The proposals will create a long term sustainable NHS by cutting bureaucracy and waste, putting decision-making into the hands of patients and clinicians and building a patient-centred NHS.
Health Secretary Andrew Lansley said:
“The Spending Review reinforces our historic commitment to protect health spending and means that funding for the NHS will increase in real terms in every year of this Parliament. Due to the deficit and the increasing demands on NHS and care services we have had to make difficult decisions about where this money is spent and we have to make every penny count.”
“That is why we have chosen to invest in supporting social care and reablement – honouring our commitment to protect the most vulnerable in our society. And ultimately a better integrated health and care system will mean a more efficient system that delivers savings in the longer term – as more people live independently and are discharged from hospitals sooner.”
“NHS organisations have already started a wide-ranging efficiency drive to make savings that can be redirected into patient care. And we also want to see a 33 per cent real terms cut in the administration budget, saving around £1.9 billion. But that is not enough. The NHS budget will have to stretch further than ever before in these difficult times – and so reform isn't an option, it's a necessity in order to sustain and improve our NHS. The proposals I set out this summer will cut waste and bureaucracy and put patients and doctors in control to build a high quality health service.”
Notes for Editors
Enquiries relating specifically to the Department of Health’s settlement should be addressed to the Department of Health press office on 020 7210 5221.
Media enquiries relating to overall Spending Review should be directed to the Treasury Press office on 0207 270 5238
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