The Cabinet ministers of Keir Starmer have received a caution against utilizing emergency funds from the Treasury for increasing public sector salaries. The Downing Street administration labeled the restriction on the access to the government’s reserve funds as “challenging yet sensible” before the upcoming Budget session next month. In a communication to the Cabinet ministers, James Murray, the Chief Secretary to the Treasury, issued this warning. Government divisions tapping into the reserves, which amounted to £9 billion last year, will be mandated to reimburse the funds under forthcoming regulations. However, a clear directive has been issued that these funds cannot be allocated for public sector wage hikes. The official spokesman for the Prime Minister mentioned that Mr. Murray outlined measures to regulate access to the Treasury’s reserve, emphasizing that access will only be granted on exceptional grounds and not for any public sector salary increments. If Secretaries of State make a claim, they must now demonstrate that all potential savings avenues have been explored. This stringent yet judicious approach to public expenditure was highlighted. Rachel Reeves previously informed the Cabinet that access to reserve fund limits would be permitted only for situations of genuinely unforeseen, unaffordable, and unavoidable financial pressures. The Chancellor is reportedly advocating for adhering to these rules to curtail borrowing. In her keynote address at the Labour conference last week in Liverpool, Ms. Reeves cautioned about the challenging global economic conditions and predicted further challenging scenarios for the government in the near future.
