Wider public spending

The past decade has been the most austere in the history of the NHS, with funding growing at just 2.1% per year, less than two-thirds of the long-run average of 3.7%, and just a third of the 6.0% it averaged in the decade beforehand. But spending on health has been protected compared with other areas of public spending. As a percentage of public spending, it has grown from 17% in 2008/09 to 19%. This reflects the overall constraints on public spending. Spending on education, defence, public order and safety, and housing and community amenities all fell in real terms between 2008/09 and 2016/17.

The NHS is one of the few government departments whose budget is protected, along with aid and defence spending. Unprotected spending in other departments is set to fall in both per capita terms and as a share of GDP over the next four years.

Figure 14: Real-terms growth in the NHS England budget, GDP, and total public spending

Source: Office for Budget Responsibility, Economic and Fiscal Outlook (2019).

NHS England’s budget, however, is due to grow much faster than either GDP or public spending. Between 2018/19 and 2023/24, NHS England’s budget will increase by 18% in real terms, more than twice as fast as the projected GDP growth of 8% and the projected total public spending growth of 7%.

This could increase total health spending as a percentage of GDP from 7.4% to 8.1%, and as a percentage of total public spending from 19.3% to 21.3% over this period. The same trend can be seen when looking at spending by government departments, which accounts for about 40% of public spending. Health is set to account for an ever-growing share of departmental spend – 39% of total departmental spending (not including annually managed spending such as benefits) in 2023/24, up from 30% in 2008/09 and 33% in 2013/14. This is as a result of restrained spending plans in other areas, many of which also need investment.

Figure 15: Department of Health and Social Care spending as a percentage of total departmental spending

Source: Office for Budget Responsibility Economic and Fiscal Outlook (2019).

The budget for health needs to be taken in the context of wider public spending. The health of the population is not just determined by health spending but also areas like housing, education and benefits. In the long term, investing in health care at the expense of these other areas is not sustainable. The NHS has been rightly protected during the period of austerity and beyond, although spending growth remains low by historical standards. If the intention is to invest in improving people's health, spending in these areas needs to mirror the commitments made to the NHS.


** Total public spending here refers to the Office for Budget Responsibility's projections of Total Managed Expenditure (TME) as at the March 2019 Economic and Fiscal Outlook.

Previous Next