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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
Politics
PA Media & Dan Bloom

UN poverty chief warns cuts will cost lives as experts say there's 'no fat to trim'

Governments across the world must increase benefits and wages in line with inflation - or "lives will be lost", the UN's poverty expert will warn.

The most vulnerable are "paying the price" of world events, according to Olivier De Schutter, UN Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights.

Mr De Schutter will issue the warning on Monday at a Council of Europe event in Strasbourg, France.

He will say: "It is not hyperbole to say that unless governments increase benefits and wages in line with inflation, lives will be lost.

"Whether in Europe, where inflation has hit a record high of 10%, or sub-Saharan Africa where food prices have surged by nearly 24%, household budgets across the world are being stretched beyond breaking point, meaning even more people in poverty will starve or freeze this winter unless immediate action is taken to increase their income."

The news came as Chancellor Jeremy Hunt brought forward an emergency statement on the economy to today, reversing parts of the mini-Budget.

The new Chancellor, pictured in a new official portrait, has brought forward an emergency statement on the economy to today, reversing parts of the mini-Budget (Andrew Parsons / No10 Downing Street)

Mr Hunt has warned “we’re going to have to take some very difficult decisions on spending and on tax” to steady the markets.

He said all government departments faced cuts and “some taxes are going to go up”.

And while he insisted the Tories would be “compassionate”, Liz Truss has still not ruled out a real-terms cut to benefits next April.

Experts today warned that there is no real "fat" for new Chancellor Jeremy Hunt to cut as he seeks savings ahead of the fiscal plan later this month.

The new Chancellor, who stepped into the role after Kwasi Kwarteng was forced out on Friday after weeks of chaos, has been clear he will be “honest” about cuts.

But a new report, published by the Institute for Government and the Chartered Institute of Public Finance and Accountancy, warns there’s already been a "lost decade" for public services.

The report says Mr Hunt could find very little to trim from budgets that will not have further detrimental impacts on public services.

Liz Truss and her former Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng, who she has sacked (Jonathan Buckmaster)

The annual stocktake, which warns of a "crisis" in some areas, analyses the spending, staffing, activities and performance of nine separate public services.

It found the performance of public services will not have returned to pre-pandemic levels by the time of the next election in around two years.

It also reveals that the projected 3.4% per year average increase in budgets, set out in the 2021 spending review, has effectively fallen to 1.5% due to inflation and increased pay awards.

That figure could be worse still, the report warns, due to the rising cost of energy.

According to the report, that is unlikely to be enough to meet growing demands and to address the post-Covid issues facing many services.

Nick Davies, programme director at the Institute for Government, said: "Public services are in a fragile state with little prospect of improvement before the next election.

"These are not isolated problems in specific services, but interconnected structural failures.

"In many cases, there are too few staff, with excessive workloads, working on outdated equipment, in rundown buildings.

"The pandemic exacerbated these problems but they are not new. This has been a lost decade for public services, with performance worse now than it was in 2010."

The 200-page report, tracking public services in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic, found that a record seven million people were waiting for elective treatment at the end of the summer, while in the Crown Court the backlog reached 59,700 in June - higher than at any point since at least 2000.

Elsewhere, the report also found that hospital spending is not enough to deal with pandemic backlogs, while spending on local government is "no longer sufficient" to meet the demand for adult social care, children's social care and neighbourhood services.

The report also noted that the NHS wage bill will increase by £2 billion over the next year, of which officials there will have to find from existing budgets.

Jeffrey Matsu, chief economist at the Chartered Institute of Public Finance and Accountancy, warned that "services simply do not have the funding they need to get them back to pre-pandemic performance levels".

"Understanding the current state of our public services is vital if we are to find long-term and sustainable solutions. Transparency, accountability and good public financial management will be key," he said.

Labour's Pat McFadden accused the Tories of failing the nation's public services.

"For 12 years the Tories have failed our public services, leaving us with backlogs in vital services and a crisis in staff recruitment and retention," the shadow chief secretary to the Treasury said.

"They've now crashed the economy with their kamikaze budget and have no plan to fix the damage."

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