UK Councils Forced to Secure Massive 50-Year Loans at Skyrocketing Rates Due to Truss Budget Crisis

UK Councils Forced to Secure Massive 50-Year Loans at Skyrocketing Rates Due to Truss Budget Crisis

Cash-strapped local authorities across the UK took out long-term loans ​at high interest‌ rates ⁤following Liz Truss’s disastrous mini-budget, ‍according​ to official figures that reveal the ‌long-term financial impact of her‌ 49 days ‌in office.

Government data from the Debt Management Office⁢ shows that after the budget on 23 ​September, 2022, announced by Truss’s chancellor ⁢Kwasi Kwarteng, 24 50-year ⁣loans of between £590,000 and £40m were taken out by councils at⁢ interest⁤ rates of up to⁢ 4.77 ‌%, ‍over the rest ‍of that year.

During 2023, while ⁢rates remained ‍high, a further 29 50-year ​loans, ​including one of £80m by Lambeth council at an interest rate of more⁣ than 5%, were taken out as local authorities remained⁣ under severe financial pressure.

The way ⁣councils have been‌ pressured by successive Tory governments to ⁣take on more debt and to adopt risky strategies to get by will be highlighted this week in ⁤a speech by shadow levelling ⁤up secretary Angela Rayner.

Rayner will argue that the Truss/Kwarteng budget saw councils locked into high interest loans ​that people will be paying back for decades ⁢to come, and ⁢that this was symptomatic​ of a disregard for ‌local authority finance that⁢ goes ⁤back to the launch of George Osborne’s austerity drive in 2010.

Since then,⁤ local authorities have seen real-terms spending ⁤power cuts of more⁤ than 50%, meaning huge reductions‌ in services, and leaving many now facing bankruptcy.

Last week‍ Rishi ⁢Sunak criticised local authorities for putting ‌up council tax⁣ too sharply, by⁤ more than 5%,⁢ even as some have been left on the brink of financial ruin.

Council leaders ⁣looking ‍to raise tax by more⁤ than the 5% cap either have to be ​granted permission by central government or hold a local referendum on ⁣doing⁣ so. Bedfordshire is the only council to have ⁣held a vote, in 2015, ⁣which it lost.

Rayner will argue that Tory ministers have not only slashed funding ⁣but have failed to supervise it,⁢ ending oversight of local council spending and scrapping the Audit​ Commission.

In a speech ‍to the​ Labour Local Government⁤ Conference in Warwick she ⁤will call for a “new partnership” between Labour and councils ‍with a fresh‌ system of “long-term ⁢funding settlements”, while warning that ‌the crisis ⁢facing local government finance is so deep ‌it⁣ will require‍ “a ⁣long slog, not a magic wand”.

Rayner’s‌ plan is likely to mean two-year⁤ deals for councils,⁤ as opposed to one-year settlements. She will also pledge to restore a functioning system for auditing local government finances, ⁣after ⁣it was revealed that‌ 99% ⁤of English councils had​ not had financial accounts approved on time this year.

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She will also pledge to give local leaders more control over housing and planning, skills, energy and transport, as part of Labour’s‍ devolution agenda.

Rayner ‍told the Observer: “The Tories have left working people…

2024-02-10​ 09:21:01
Original from www.theguardian.com

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