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Friday, 7 December 2012

Expenditure on the NHS in real terms was lower in 2011-12 than it was in 2009-10


The chair of the UK Statistics Authority has refuted Government claims that it has increased spending on the NHS.
Following a complaint by shadow health secretary Andy Burnham, Andrew Dilnot said he ‘concludes that expenditure on the NHS in real terms was lower in 2011-12 than it was in 2009-10’.
He has asked health secretary Jeremy Hunt to ‘clarify’ statements on the Conservative website claiming ‘we have increased the NHS budget in real terms in each of the last two years’.
Mr Hunt himself told MPs on 23 October that ‘real-terms spending on the NHS has increased across the country’.
The scale of the reduction in NHS spending is very small, but taken alongside the expected Office for Budget Responsibility report showing borrowing rising, it shows that the Prime Minister is not meeting his promise at the start of 2010 to cut the deficit, and not the NHS.

More on this story here.

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