Sentences with phrase «spending over the next parliament»

The report suggested that «There are likely to be some significant cost pressures on schools» spending over the next parliament.

Not exact matches

-- Member of Parliament David Yurdiga «The federal government thinks that it is acceptable to run a $ 30 billion deficit and spending billions on foreign aid and international climate change projects, as well as on newcomer settlement programs all the while cutting over $ 100 million from the three northern territories over the course of the next five years.
The # 25bn a year for infrastructure investment, # 8bn over the next Parliament for social care and yesterday's pledges on education spending were all more or less as expected.
It even offers a number: # 100 billion is to be spent «over the next parliament».
Specifically, the manifesto argues for an end to austerity: the SNP proposal is for a 0.5 % annual increase in public spending over the course of the next parliament, rather than the reductions in spending which George Osborne laid out in his March 2015 budget.
The IFS said that the Conservative plans to get rid of «the bulk» of the deficit over the course of the next parliament will involve the biggest spending cuts since the second world war, while Labour and Lib Dem plans will result in deeper cuts that at any time since the 1970s.
Mr Osborne's estimates suggest this will reduce government spending by # 3.2 billion a year from 2011 onwards, or more than # 12 billion over the next parliament - equivalent to protecting more than 100,000 public sector jobs.
According to the analysis, while the Conservatives, Labour and Liberal Democrats are all proposing to spend more on 16 to 18 education over the course of the next parliament, only Labour's spending plans will result in a real - terms increase (8 per cent in real terms).
The government says it put # 5bn into creating new places in the last parliament and would spend another # 7bn over the next six years in response to the steep rise in pupil numbers now affecting both primary and secondary school.
It is also less than what was pledged by Labour, which wants to spend an additional # 6.3 billion on schools over the next parliament, including plans to extend universal free school lunches to all primary pupils.
The think tank says that although the Conservatives, Labour and Liberal Democrats are all proposing to spend more on 16 to 18 education over the course of the next parliament, only Labour's spending plans will result in a real - terms increase.
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