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Economic Development

The story of the Welsh Government the Treasury 's £155m budget clawback and what happened in Scotland

But what did the Treasury clawback from the Scottish Government?

(Image: Matthew Horwood)


The Welsh Government clearly signalled in advance of its draft budget that it simply didn’t have the financial resources to feed so many legitimate and competing hungry mouths.

For its 2024-25 financial year, it is facing a significant real terms cut to its budget, when factoring the corroding impact of inflation and trying to protect its biggest budgetary commitment in health.

Even with a Labour administration in Westminster next year, or possibly at the start of 2025, there will be further financial pain again in 2025-26 with shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves taking a prudent fiscal position with her party’s rapprochement with the City of London and business.


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If the Welsh Government, as should be the case, was given the freedom to move capital into revenue without Treasury approval - it can without limitation in reverse - it would hardly mark an arrival at destination ‘sunlit uplands’, but merely a ‘robbing Peter to feed Paul’ scenario.

Capital investment is urgently required to help upgrade and enhance Wales’ infrastructure, from rail to broadband, and creating an environment to help firm investment, create jobs and become more productive.

The mistake of George Osborne’s austerity era, which impacted the Welsh Government’s block grant, was the short-sightedness of turning off the capital spending tap at a time when inflation was more benign and government borrowing cheaper. The implications of under investment in infrastructure across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ are being acutely felt today.