English | Cymraeg Tel: 029 2076 5760 Connect: Twitter

Minister calls on Westminster to replace ‘missing £1 billion’

Wales will be almost £1 billion worse off by 2024 as a result of the UK Government’s failure to honour its commitment to match European funding in full after Breixt, says economy minister Vaughan Gething.

The Leave campaign promised during the referendum that Wales would be ‘not a penny’ worse off. However, speaking ahead of the UK Government’s Levelling Up White Paper, which is due to be published on Wednesday, the minister is calling on the UK Government to respect devolution and replace Wales’ missing £1 billion.

He said the ‘drift and indecision’ that has characterised UK Government Levelling Up plans is now costing Wales jobs and development projects.

Vaughan Gething, said: ‘More than two years on from the grand promises made by the Prime Minister, it is now clear that Wales is being left with less say, over less money.

‘Drift and indecision in Whitehall is costing our least well off communities jobs and projects at the worst possible time. Last year’s Spending Review confirmed that the UK Government has broken its promise to replace EU funding for Wales in full and there is no sign that the White Paper will change this.

‘If the UK Government had kept its promise, Wales would have been receiving £375 million in new money each year from January 2021. Instead Wales‘ share of post EU funds stands at just £46.8 million in 2021/22. Our own analysis shows that the Welsh budget will be £1 billion worse off by 2024. This is not “levelling up”, it’s levelling down.’

At the Spending Review in November, the UK Government confirmed that the Shared Prosperity Fund (SPF) that will replace EU funding would ‘over time’ amount to £1.5 billion per year UK-wide.

However, in 2022/23, the SPF will be worth only £400 million UK-wide. Welsh Government says that if Wales and the UK remained in the EU Wales would be set to receive at least £375 million a year. In 2021/22, Wales has received just £46.8 million from the pilot Shared Prosperity Fund, the Community Renewal Fund (CRF), for 165 projects.

Welsh Government analysis shows that the UK Government’s approach to replacing EU funds means Wales will lose around £750 million over three years (2021-22 to 2023-24) for the Structural Funds.

Taken together with the loss to farm funding of £242 million, it means since the UK Government took over allocating replacement EU funds, to the end of this spending round period in 2023-24, the UK Government will have netted-off or otherwise not replaced close to £1 billion of EU funding for Wales.

Vaughan Gething added: ‘Any plan worthy of credibility would have been published last year with clear priorities for stronger local economies in a rebalanced UK economy. In its place we have half baked, incoherent funding pots hatched in isolation in Whitehall.

‘Difficult decisions have already been taken here to protect priorities like our commitment to deliver 125,000 apprenticeships in this Parliament. Filling a hole left by lost EU funds promised to Wales restricts our ability to support strong proposals that would bolster our economic strengths.

‘The unconstitutional Internal Market Act is being used to override democratic devolution by stopping decisions about Wales being taken in Wales.

‘My message to UK Ministers is clear, respect devolution and restore the missing £1 billion promised for Wales. It is not too late for the Secretary of State, Michael Gove, to offer a way forward based on co-design and co-decision making. It is not too late to compromise in good faith.’

 


Sign up to our email newsletter

Every two months we'll email you a summary of the latest news & articles on the WHQ website. Better still, if you're a fully paid up magazine subscriber, you'll get access to the latest members-only articles as well.

Sign up for the email newsletter »

Looking to advertise in our magazine?

Advertising and sponsored features are a great way to raise your profile with our readership of housing and regeneration decision makers in Wales.

Find out more »