Minister plays down 40% departmental cuts planning

Government departments will not have to axe 40% from their budgets - despite being ordered to plan for cuts on that scale, a cabinet minister has said.
Transport Secretary Philip Hammond said some departments may see cuts "a bit higher" than the 25% announced in the budget and some "a bit lower".
Trade unions claim ministers are using the 40% figure to make eventual cuts seem more acceptable.
Labour said the plans went too far and would hit frontline services.
In his budget last month, Chancellor George Osborne said departments would face average cuts of 25% when the government's public spending review is completed in October - potentially bigger than anything attempted by a previous UK government.
Health and aid spending will be ring fenced, while defence and education will face cuts of between 10% and 20%.
But Mr Hammond said other departments have been told to go through their budgets "line by line" for savings of between 25% and 40%.
'Difficult questions' He said ministers wanted to avoid a "salami slicing" approach, with each department taking an equal hit.

ANALYSIS

There's a standard trick in the world of car salesman known as "the hot water cold water" technique.
And it looks as if the government is applying the same selling skills of the car dealer to the business of selling cuts to the public services.
Basically, what it amounts to is that when a potential buyer comes in to look at a car he is first quoted an exorbitant price.
This is the hot water from which the buyer immediately pulls his hand out.
Then the price is lowered (this is the cold water) and hey presto the price/hot water becomes a lot more bearable even though it's still pretty painful.
Now looking at the government's call for some departments to estimate the impact of forty per cent cuts - could that possibly be the hot water to make us much more amenable to the rather less scorching prospect of twenty five per cent cuts ?
Even so 25% still looks pretty scalding.
Cuts threaten new road projects
The purpose of asking departments to suggest cuts of up to 40% now was to help the government decide its overall spending priorities and it was unlikely any would be forced to make savings on that scale, he said.
Mr Hammond told BBC One's Andrew Marr show: "I don't expect any departments will see a 40% cut but some departments may see cuts a bit higher than 25%...some departments may then see cuts a bit lower than 25%."
He added: "We are going to look at the priorities of the coalition. We are going to look at the individual impacts on departments - and that's why departments are being asked to prepare not only a 25% case but also a 40% case".
He admitted it would be "challenging to take out even 25%" from budgets but added "that does not mean we should not look at each line of our budgets and ask the difficult questions".
In his own department, transport, he said the cuts would effectively mean a halt to new road building - but he said big infrastructure projects that helped the economy would still be prioritised.
And he said the emphasis would be on making the existing road network work more effectively by tackling bottlenecks and road works.
'Fantasy land' He accused his predecessor as transport secretary, Lord Adonis, of announcing "all sorts of eyewatering projects without funding them".
Shadow home secretary Alan Johnson described the notion that 40% cuts could be made without affecting frontline services as "fantasyland"
Shadow Home Secretary Alan Johnson, for Labour, said any suggestion that the scale of cuts being proposed by the coalition government would not affect frontline public services was "fantasy land".
He told Andrew Marr the coalition had added an extra £40bn in cuts to the £70bn proposed by Labour to halve Britain's record £156bn annual budget deficit over four years.
He said the government was going "far too far" and there was "no need to do this".
Public sector unions are threatening "co-ordinated industrial action" if ministers try to implement cuts as deep as 40%.
Mark Serwotka, general secretary of the UK's Public and Commercial Services union, said there was "no economic case to put people on the dole queue".
"We are already drawing up plans with other public sector unions to ensure that if the government attacks our pensions, our jobs and public services, they will face resistance the like of which we haven't seen in this country for decades," he said.
"We will see not just co-ordinated industrial action by unions but campaigns in every community."
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by news bbc

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