Council Tax

Part of the debate – in the House of Commons at 4:51 pm on 27 March 2006.

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Photo of Phil Woolas Phil Woolas Minister of State (Local Government), Office of the Deputy Prime Minister 4:51, 27 March 2006

With permission, Madam Deputy Speaker, I would like to make a statement on council tax for 2006–07 and the action that the Government propose to take with regard to local authorities that have set excessive budgets. Figures released today show that, excluding the council tax element of the funding package for the 2012 Olympic games, the average council tax increase in England for 2006–07 is 4.2 per cent. With the council tax element of the Olympics, it is 4.5 per cent.

We have a mature working relationship with the Local Government Association. We have worked with the LGA to look at the pressures that councils face in the next two years, and how central and local government can manage those pressures. Under the settlement for 2006–07, which the House approved on 6 February, total support for local government, including specific grants, will rise by 4.5 per cent. compared with 2005–06. That includes an extra £305 million above previous plans. The provisional settlement for 2007–08 will provide an increase of a further 5 per cent., with £508 million above that previously planned. By introducing multi-year settlements, we are enabling authorities to plan ahead more effectively in budgeting for service delivery. We have now provided a framework for authorities to deliver effective local services over the next two years that takes account of the pressures that those authorities face.

By 2007–08, Government grant for local services will have increased by more than the rate of inflation for 10 years in succession. That represents an increase of 39 per cent. in real terms since 1997. It can be compared very favourably with a real-term reduction of 7 per cent. in the four years up to 1997. I also remind the House of the council tax support that the Government provide to those on low incomes. Indeed, 14 per cent. of total council tax is paid through council tax benefit. Nobody who is unable to pay is made to pay, and we are working to ensure that all who are eligible do claim the benefit.

Given our significant extra investment of grant, and the continuing scope for efficiency savings, we made it very clear again this year that we expected authorities to budget prudently. It was only with the greatest reluctance, following the 12.9 per cent. rise in council tax in 2003–04, that we first made use of our reserve capping powers. However, as we said in our 2005 election manifesto, we will use capping to protect council tax payers from excessive increases. There can be no doubt that the recent, more modest increases in council tax could not have occurred without the Government making judicious use of those powers.

When we announced the provisional settlement in December, we said that we expected the average increase in council tax in England to be less than 5 per cent. for each of the two years 2006–07 and 2007–08. I set that out in a letter to all authorities. Ministers later wrote to those authorities reported to be considering setting increases of more than 5 per cent. I also wrote jointly with my right hon. Friend the Minister for Policing, Security and Community Safety to all police authorities reaffirming the Government's expectations.

I am pleased to report that the overwhelming majority of authorities have responded positively to our messages. Most authorities fully recognise the need to minimise the demands that they place on council tax payers. Regrettably, however, a very small number of them have set excessive budget and council tax increases, and it is for that reason that I am making a statement to the House today about the action that we propose to take.

I should like to remind hon. Members of the provisions of the capping legislation set out in the Local Government Finance Act 1992, as amended by the Local Government Act 1999. In order to determine whether each authority's budgeted expenditure as defined in the legislation is excessive, we must compare the authority's budget requirement for 2006–07 with that of the previous year. The legislation also allows us to determine other principles, such as the level of increases in council tax.

This year, the increase in budget requirement for authorities providing education, police and fire services is measured using the alternative notional amounts given in the "The Limitation of Council Tax and Precepts (Alternative Notional Amounts) Report (England) 2006/07", which the House approved on 6 February. Alternative notional amounts are notional figures used for capping purposes to help give a like-for-like comparison of budget requirements between years.

Our view is that authorities' 2006–07 budgets are excessive if they show, first, an increase of more than 6 per cent. in budget requirement compared with 2005–06, and, secondly, if council tax has increased by more than 5 per cent. in the same period. As was the case in 2005–06, a single set of principles has been applied to all authorities.

Despite the principles being more stringent than in 2005–06, when authorities' budgets were judged excessive if they showed an increase of more than 6 per cent. in budget requirement compared with 2004–05 and if council tax had increased by more than 5.5 per cent, we are proposing to take action against only two unitary authorities this year, compared with 2004–05, when we took action against 14 authorities, and 2005–06, when we took action against nine authorities. The two authorities in question are Medway borough council and York city council, which have both set excessive budgets according to the principles that I have described. We are writing to those authorities today, informing them of our decision to designate them with a view to capping them in-year, and notifying them of the maximum budget that we propose to set for them.

The authorities have a statutory right to challenge the proposed caps, and they have 21 days in which to do so. If they want to challenge, we will carefully consider the information that we have required them to send us, along with any other representations they make, before we take final decisions. We will then either make an order, to be approved by this House, designating the authorities at the level of the proposed maximum budget or another level, or we will withdraw the designation and nominate them instead. Nomination would allow us either to set them notional budgets for 2006–07 for future capping comparisons or to cap them in advance for 2007–08.

Two shire districts, Aylesbury Vale district council and Wellingborough borough council have also breached the limits. However, as they have done so by very small amounts—only 12p and 9p respectively in terms of band D council tax—we are not proposing to take action against them. We have always made clear our reluctance to take capping action, because these are powers of last resort and we would prefer not to have to use them, but the public have a right to be protected from excessive council tax increases.

Under our wider localism agenda, we are giving local authorities more freedom over how they deliver services. However, that must be set within a framework of prudent financial management and value for money. The vast majority of authorities—99 per cent.—have responded well to our clear message for council tax in 2006–07, and no one would have been happier than me if the figure had been 100 per cent. However, we remain committed to taking action against those increases that we believe to be excessive.

Annotations

Callum Wood.
Posted on 18 Apr 2006 7:48 pm (Report this annotation)

To abbreviate - it's too high.
The thing agout council tax is that everyone knows that your average Joe Bloggs dislikes paying it, and now it seems that most politicians are out against it.

Though I cannot speak for other councils, Kirklees has rises of c.5% every year, which is something like a rise of 2.5% over inflation every year... what do they do with it all?