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Economic Development

Welsh Government secures an extra £190m for its 2024-25 budget

Finance Minister Rebecca Evans said the amount the Welsh Government is allowed borrow and carry over to its next financial year ends to be increased by the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government

Finance minister Rebecca Evans(Image: Chris Fairweather/Huw Evans Agency)

The Welsh Government has secured an additional £190m of funding for its next financial year budget, including £40m for the NHS and a £20m capital fund designed to back SMEs in the hard-pressed hospitality, leisure and retail sectors.

Having set out a £23bn draft budget for its 2024/25 financial year in December, Finance Minister Rebecca Evans said the additional money for its final budget settlement starting in April has come as result of Barnett Formula consequentials from spending by the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government in departments where responsibilities are devolved to Wales.

It is also adding £66.5m to its financial transactions capital, a funding mechanism from the Treasury which the Welsh Government doesn’t pay interest on, but has to repay the capital back over the long-term. It uses the facility to provide capital investment and to partly fund the lending activities of the Development Bank of Wales, which then lends it to companies with interest priced at commercial rates.

The increase in financial transactions capital will see £20m go towards a £30m funding package for the refurbishment of the Holyhead Breakwater, £7.7m to Transport for Wales to help commercialise excess capacity of its rail fibre network and £10m for the semiconductor sector While details have yet to be published a £20m fund for SMEs is expected to require a element of matchfunding for capital projects, including those linked to reducing emissions and driving productivity.

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The final budget says; “ The fund will aim to support around 2,500 eligible small to medium sized businesses in the retail, leisure, tourism, and hospitality sectors, to invest in measures to future proof their business. However, while having a proportionately larger SME sector than in England, there is no funding to address a now less favourable business rates relief regime for firms in the hospitality, retail and leisure sectors than in England."

Ms Evans said that “one in five” businesses will not pay business rates next year. She added: “We have been providing temporary relief support for businesses in the retail hospitality and leisure sector since the pandemic with £1bn, but that was always intended to be temporary. We understand the disappointment of some businesses... it was a tough decision to ensure the NHS can keep going.”