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         News
        
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         Spring Statement
        
Government spending announcements
    
National security
Reductions in the  Official Development Assistance budget (overseas aid) will support an increase  in NATO-qualifying defence spending to 2.5% of GDP by April 2027, with an  ambition to increase to 3% in the next Parliament as economic and fiscal  conditions allow. The Spring Statement accelerates towards this by providing an  additional £2.2 billion of funding for the Ministry of Defence next year.
Reform
As announced by the Secretary of  State for Work and Pensions, the government wants to create a more pro-work  welfare system for those who can work and to protect those who cannot. These  reforms are projected to save £4.8 billion from the welfare budget in 2029/30  and welfare spending will fall as a share of GDP in the medium term.
This will include:
    - The  Universal Credit health element will be frozen for existing claimants until  2029/30. For new claims, the Universal Credit health element will be reduced to  £50 a week in 2026/27 and then frozen until 2029/30.
- The  government will increase the Universal Credit standard allowance for new and  existing claims above inflation from April 2026, reaching CPI + 5% from April  2029.
- The  government will increase checks on potential Universal Credit claimants by  introducing more ways to verify the amount of savings they hold, as well as  their earnings and expenses.
The government is also looking for  efficiencies from the state, including by bringing NHS England back into the  Department of Health and Social Care. The Spring Statement announces a £3.25  billion Transformation Fund to drive efficiencies across government.
Growth
According to the government,  growth is their central mission.
The government will set out  capital spending plans for the Parliament at the Spending Review in June. Ahead  of that, the government has announced an additional £2 billion for social and  affordable housing for 2026/27, as part of the government's ambition to build  1.5 million homes in England in this Parliament, supported by reforms in the  Planning and Infrastructure Bill.
To ensure the construction  industry has the capacity to deliver this government's plan to get Britain  building, the government has committed to a £625 million package for skills in  construction, expected to provide up to 60,000 more skilled workers this Parliament.