"In
the current environment its essential that we provide
certainty," Sunak said in a statement.
"So we’ll be doing that for departments and all of the nations
of the United Kingdom by setting budgets for next year, with a
total focus on tackling COVID and delivering our Plan for Jobs."
Earlier this month Sunak was forced to abandon plans to set out
a three-year spending plan, saying the uncertainties about the
coronavirus and its impact on the economy were too great to plan
that far ahead.
Instead, the Nov. 25 statement will cover three priorities:
ensuring government departments have enough money to tackle the
pandemic and support jobs, funding for public services involved
in fight the pandemic, and infrastructure investment.
Key programmes such as planned investment in hospital building
and high speed rail, are seen as exceptions to the one-year rule
and will be given multi-year capital allocations.
Sunak has already ramped up public spending massively to counter
the COVID-19 impact on the economy. Britain is set to run a
budget deficit of nearly 17% of gross domestic product this
year, according to the International Monetary Fund.
Britain's Office for Budget Responsibility will publish its
latest outlook for the economy and the public finances also on
Nov. 25.
(Reporting by William James; Editing by William Schomberg)
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