Budget fails to back public servants over Brexit challenge, says FDA

Despite praise from the Chancellor for collecting an extra £140bn in tax revenue since 2010, and being given the task of collecting an additional £820m by 2020 despite Brexit, HMRC will see its budget cut by 17% over the next three years.
FDA Assistant General Secretary Naomi Cooke said: “The Chancellor says he wants to prepare Britain for a brighter future outside the EU but has failed to equip the public servants tasked with delivering it.
“In fact, Brexit, the biggest economic event facing the UK, hardly got a mention. No additional resources for departments looking into the eye of the storm and no much-needed relief for the hundreds of thousands of civil servants who will see the value of their pay packets continue to fall.”
The FDA has warned that civil servants on the frontline of the UK’s exit from the EU have already seen a real terms cut in pay of more than 20% and that higher inflation forecasts for the next two years will mean that many civil servants will be more than 25% worse off.
“The Government has once again failed to recognise the challenge that the civil service is facing and failed to provide the additional resources needed to deliver a successful Brexit for Britain,” added Cooke. “Civil servants and the civil service cannot continue to be taken for granted in this way.”
Related News
-
Prosecutors are undervalued, underpaid and overworked, says FDA responding to CJI NI report
The FDA has responded to a new report from the Criminal Justice Inspection Northern Ireland (CJI NI) into management and performance of the Public Prosecution Service (PPSNI).
-
FDA calls for pay parity on IfG panel discussing Fast Stream reform
FDA National Officer for the Fast Stream Robert Eagleton took part in the Institute for Government’s (IfG) panel event, ‘How can the Fast Stream deliver more for the civil service?’.
-
Lords Committee report highlights lack of evidence behind civil service 60% office working mandate
A new report from the House of Lords Select Committee on Home-Based Working, which features evidence from the FDA, says the government should lead by example with good hybrid working practices within the civil service.