Section two – The national picture

The Department of Health and Social Care in 2016/17

In 2016/17, the DHSC had a total budget of £122.8bn (see Figure 1). Of this, £118.2bn was available for day-to-day running of health and social care through the revenue budget. The remaining £4.6bn was available for long-term investment through the capital budget.

10.5% of the department’s revenue budget (£12.5bn) is used to provide funding:

  • to various arm’s length bodies, including Health Education England (HEE) and Public Health England (PHE)
  • to local authorities for the public health grants
  • for administration costs within the DHSC.

The remaining majority (£106.8bn in 2016/17) is provided to NHS England for the commissioning of NHS services.

NHS England directly commissions some services, such as specialised services and some primary care. But most of its funding – £77.9bn in 2016/17 – is allocated to the 209 CCGs across the country to commission services for their local populations.

Funding for the DHSC has risen in real terms every year since 2010/11, although the rate of growth has fluctuated (see Figure 2). The highest rate of growth was in 2015/16 (2.8%), with the lowest in 2010/11 (0.2%). Even the rate for 2015/16 was below the long-run average for the NHS of 3.7% a year, and lagged behind all estimates of growth in demand pressures.

In 2016/17 DHSC funding grew by just 0.6% (£772m). Although this is lower than the previous 3 years, the DHSC underspent by £635m. This is a small underspend in the context of the total budget (at just 0.5%), but is an improvement on 2015/16 when the departmental budget was overspent by £155m.

As in recent years, immediate pressures crowded out long-term investment in 2016/17, with the DHSC transferring £1.2bn from the capital budget to the revenue budget. This was the third consecutive year the capital budget was used to fund immediate spending costs. As a result, DHSC capital spending was 22% below the original plan for 2016/17 (this is explored in more detail in Chapter 6).

Figure 1: National funding 2016/17

Note: RDEL excluded ring-fenced depreciation. Numbers for the acute, mental health, community, specialist and ambulance sectors refer to total operating income in each NHS provider sector.

Source: Department of Health Annual Report and accounts 2016/17; NHS England Annual Accounts 2016/17

Coming years

The budget set out in the 2015 comprehensive spending review would have seen spending per head falling in 2018/19 and 2019/20, counter to the commitment made in the 2017 Conservative Party manifesto. In recognition of the pressures facing the NHS, additional funding was announced in the 2017 Autumn Budget. £335m was made available in-year to support trusts facing challenges due to winter pressures, with a further £500m available for capital investment (although with £1bn transferred from capital to the resource budget, capital spending will once again be below the original plan).

An additional £2bn will be provided for 2018/19, of which £1.6bn has been allocated to the resource budget. In total, an additional £5.2bn is available between 2017/18 and 2020/21, including £3.5bn for capital funding. As a result, spend per head will rise in 2018/19, while relatively flat in 2019/20 and 2020/21 (see Figure 3). Overall, the growth in funding will still lag behind projected growth in demand and cost pressures, with all independent projections estimating these growing at over 4% a year above inflation. The additional funding eases the pressures, but they remain significant.

Figure 2: Annual change in TDEL by Parliament, 2010/11–2019/20 (17/18 prices)

Figure 2: Annual change in TDEL by Parliament, 2010/11–2019/20 prices)

Source: Department of Health Annual Report and accounts 2016/17; Autumn Budget 2017

Figure 3: Annual change in spend per person by DHSC, TDEL, 2019/10–2020/21 (%, 17/18 prices)

Figure 3: Annual change in spend per person by DHSC, TDEL, 2019/10—2020/21 (%, 17/18 prices)

Source: Department of Health Annual Report and accounts 2016/17; Autumn Budget 2017, Office for National Statistics population estimates


‡‡ Defined as the total department expenditure limit (TDEL).

§§ This excludes ring-fenced depreciation.

¶¶ Defined as the revenue department expenditure limit (RDEL).

*** Defined as the capital department expenditure limit (CDEL).

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