Wales at a loss of £1.1bn compared to EU funding and local authority spend per head down 9.4% over a decade – Plaid Cymru
Plaid Cymru Treasury spokesperson, Ben Lake MP has today (Thursday 19 January) criticised the UK Government’s methodology for allocating funding under its ‘Levelling Up Fund’, describing it as “arbitrary and ad-hoc”.
Mr Lake’s constituency of Ceredigion is among eleven Welsh local authorities that have not received funding under today’s announcement, despite wealthier areas such as Rishi Sunak’s constituency of Richmond in Yorkshire receiving funding.
The Plaid Cymru MP said that given Wales is denied £1.1bn of funding it would have received under previous EU schemes, and that public spending on local authority services has fallen by 9.4% over a decade, that “the idea that we should now be grateful for the privilege of competing over a small pot of money is frankly insulting.”
Plaid Cymru argue that funding should be allocated according to relative need in order to deliver the “cohesive long-term economic planning needed to break the poverty cycle”.
Plaid Cymru Treasury spokesperson, Ben Lake MP said:
“Ceredigion is among eleven Welsh local authorities that do not receive a penny in today’s ‘Levelling Up’ round. The fact that many of the areas that have been left out today are those in most need of ‘levelling-up’, whilst some of the beneficiaries are among the wealthier areas of the UK, casts serious doubt over the appropriateness of the methodology used to allocate the funding.
“Many promises were made during the Brexit debate, but the Conservatives’ claim that Wales would receive ‘not a penny less’ may have been the most brazen. That manifesto pledge could not have been further from the truth, with Wales at a loss of some £1.1bn compared with previous EU schemes.
“To make matters worse, between 2009-2020 local authority spending per head fell by 9.4%. The idea that we should now be grateful for the privilege of competing over a small pot of money is frankly insulting. The arbitrary and ad-hoc way in which Westminster is allocating this funding is not conducive to the kind of cohesive long-term economic planning needed to break the poverty cycle.
“From the outset, Plaid Cymru have called for funding to be allocated according to need. If the UK Government want to redeem any credibility on ‘levelling up’, they should revise their criteria so that Wales receives funding according to our relative need.”
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