Reeves urged to reassure MPs over public finances amid £6bn-a-year Send costs

A picture


Rachel Reeves is under pressure to reassure MPs over the state of the UK’s public finances, amid concerns that the rising cost of special educational needs and disabilities (Send) could leave a significant hole in the government’s financial buffer,Meg Hillier, the chair of the all-party House of Commons Treasury committee, said the chancellor should make clear her long-term plans for the £6bn-a-year Send bill as uncertainty grows over how it will be accounted for at the end of the decade,Reeves, who is due to appear before the committee next month, said in a letterto MPs that she plans to delay a decision until next year,City analysts said financial market investors would be concerned if some or all of the £6bn Send annual cost was deducted from the budget surplus, which the chancellor more than doubled in last November’s budget to £22bn to cushion the UK against volatile government bond markets,The spat between MPs and the Treasury comes after the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) said the £6bn Send bill was unaccounted for at the budget and expected increases to the bill over the next decade posed a risk to the public finances.

The government said this week that it would cover up to 90% of historical debts related to spending by English councils on Send services,Ministers said they will clear about £5bn of the debt up to 31 March this year, although councils must agree to revise how they offer Send services under plans expected to be outlined in an imminent white paper,It is unclear how billions of pounds of expected Send overspends between April 2026 and April 2028 will be handled,Ministers said they would “continue to take an appropriate and proportionate approach, though it will not be unlimited”,English councils have seen the cost of providing Send services rise as the number of pupils that qualify for extra help has increased, and the mainly private providers have raised charges.

The excess costs have been rolled over with the Treasury’s blessing as debts at arm’s length, or off balance sheet, to protect spending on other services,Successive chancellors have delayed allocating the costs since 2014 in a manoeuvre known as a “statutory override”,In the November budget, Reeves said that from 2028-29 the cost of Send services would be taken over by Whitehall, but refused to say which department would account for the spending,Hillier said: “It’s extremely important that we can trust that the Treasury is being transparent on its spending plans,As the OBR has identified, this is an obvious risk to the headroom the chancellor created for herself at the budget.

“The chancellor will be appearing in front of the committee in March and we will continue to seek answers,”The OBR estimated that the backlog of historical spending on Send, mostly paid for from borrowed funds by local authorities, will reach £18bn by 2028-29,The chancellor said in a written response to Hillier: “From 2028-29, once the statutory override ends, future funding implications for Send will be managed within the government’s overall departmental spending limits,Specific department budgets from 2028-29 onwards will be confirmed at the 2027 spending review,”The education secretary, Bridget Phillipson, is due to show how the government plans to make Send services more effective.

However, critics say she is planning to ration access by pupils, allowing the OBR to revise down its projections at the next budget.Luke Sibieta, a research fellow at the Institute for Fiscal Studies, said the government might be able to reduce annual spending, but this would probably be at the margins.He said: “To fill the £6bn gap, the government has three main options.First, it could slow the growth in Send spending through reforms to the system.“Second, it could top up the overall schools budget by finding the money elsewhere in the government’s budget.

“Third, it could reduce mainstream school funding to pay for high needs funding.To illustrate the impact of these choices, £6bn is equivalent to about 9% of the overall schools budget in 2028-29, or about 11% of the mainstream schools budget in that year.”A fourth option would be to increase borrowing, reducing the government’s financial buffer.Ruth Gregory, the deputy chief UK economist at the consultancy Capital Economics, said the Send budget posed a “clear risk to the projections for public spending”.She said heavy commitments to increase spending across a range of Whitehall departments meant there was a growing risk of the government “eating up its headroom” more broadly, not least from a pledge to increase defence spending.

Philip Shaw, a senior analyst at Investec, said: “I don’t think the markets would panic if a large proportion of the £6bn could not be saved and is added to borrowing.But investors would be very concerned.”The Treasury declined to comment.
sportSee all
A picture

Curling’s uncle: 54-year-old lawyer who called out ICE becomes oldest US Winter Olympian

The stakes were low – and the time ripe – for a 54-year-old personal injury lawyer and six-time winner of “Minnesota Attorney of the Year” to make Olympic history.It was the end of the US men’s curling match against Switzerland on Thursday and they were down 8-2.The team called a substitution. Rich Ruohonen, from Brooklyn Park, Minnesota, stepped on to the ice. He hurled the corner guard and watched his stone, biting his lip until it arrived safely at the left flank of the house

A picture

‘It’s ridiculous’: Maro Itoje dismisses Sir Jim Ratcliffe’s ‘colonisation’ comments

The England captain Maro Itoje has piled into the ruck surrounding Sir Jim Ratcliffe’s comments about immigration, dismissing the Manchester United co-owner’s views as “ridiculous”. Itoje, whose parents both came to Britain from Nigeria, has criticised the phrasing and accuracy of Ratcliffe’s remarks.Itoje, who recently missed the start of England’s pre-Six Nations training camp to attend his mother’s funeral in Nigeria, did not hold back when asked about Ratcliffe’s opinion on the eve of his side’s Calcutta Cup showdown at Murrayfield. “Obviously I don’t condone the language he used,” said Itoje.“I was born in this country of Nigerian descent and I think it’s ridiculous to say Great Britain has been colonised by immigrants because that is so far from the truth

A picture

Dolomites diary: lederhosen, late buses and the anatomy of an Olympic ski jumper

Covering the first week of events at Milano Cortina 2026 has been enlightening but not straightforwardIt’s a seven-hour trip from one end of the opening ceremony to the other. I leave Milan at midday and arrive in Cortina just as the athletes are making their parade around the town square. Cortina’s a one-street town, and it’s been closed down, but everyone’s hanging off the balconies. I see three men in lederhosen, five in identical Wayne Gretzky jerseys, and more people than I can count in luxurious furs. The first person I talk to is a member of the Qatari police force, who is working here as part of a security agreement between the two countries

A picture

Love in a cold climate: Winter Olympic village runs out of condoms after three days

Free condoms for competitors at the Winter Olympics have run out within a record-breaking three days, according to La Stampa.“The supplies ran out in just three days,” an anonymous athlete told the Italian newspaper. “They promised us more will arrive, but who knows when.”It blamed the Olympic organisers, saying they had not been “particularly generous with the numbers”. “In Paris the athletes received 300,000 condoms — two per day each— but the numbers for these Winter Games were significantly lower: not even 10,000,” La Stampa’s report states

A picture

Hats off to Borthwick for swapping England’s hookers to weather early Scottish storm | Ugo Monye

The Six Nations is a cruel mistress. Two days before the tournament started for Scotland, Gregor Townsend said this was the strongest playing group of his tenure. Two days later, one bad half of rugby, some abysmal weather and he is facing calls for his head. If you take your eye off the ball in this competition for half an hour on the field your campaign can be over for another 12 months.England will know that heading to Murrayfield

A picture

Penisgate 2: Italian Olympic coverage takes Leonardo da Vinci’s genitals away

Italy’s state broadcaster, Rai, has been accused of censorship after using an image of Leonardo da Vinci’s Vitruvian Man with the genitals missing in the opening credits for its Winter Olympics coverage.The image of the 500-year-old drawing appears at the start of the clip before transforming into the bodies of ice skaters, skiers and other winter sports athletes.The imperfection was first picked up by Corriere della Sera, which asked: “What happened to the Vitruvian Man’s genitals?”The newspaper noted that all the other attributes of the Vitruvian Man’s body appeared to have been faithfully reproduced, “except for that one detail”, which appeared to have been “redacted”.Backlash from the Italian opposition, which often accuses Giorgia Meloni’s far-right government of dominating the public broadcaster, was swift.Deputies from the centre-left Democratic party have raised questions over the matter in parliament, urging the culture minister, Alessandro Giuli, to “shed full light on the use of the image of Leonardo da Vinci’s Vitruvian Man in the Olympics opening credit broadcast by Rai”