Under the Provisional Settlement proposals, the gap in funding between rural and urban areas will, in fact increase. There is therefore a continuation of historic underfunding and unfairness for rural communities.

Once again, through the proposals, rural residents, communities, and businesses will, through their principal local authorities, find themselves in comparison to their urban counterparts both:

HEADLINE ANALYSIS OF THE PROPOSALS

The RSN’s analysis of the Provisional Settlement proposals shows in 2022/23 rural residents in comparison to residents in urban areas will, on average:

The conclusion of the above is that once again Principal Councils serving rural areas in comparison to urban:

– Get less government grant per head of population and are required to pay more per head of population in Council Tax (through lower incomes when earned in the rural economy – where the cost-of-living is higher)

– Are required to pay for more of their essential services through Council Tax 

and yet

– Get fewer services – which are often more expensive to access

LOOKING TO THE FUTURE

More fundamental changes in local government funding have been delayed yet again. There will be no action in “this Spending Review period” – effectively in the life of this Parliament.

The impact of the delays to the review are:

  1. London is getting some £236M a year more in Government Grant than the formula says it should (of which £166M is received by only 5 boroughs) – this at the expense of rural and non-London local authorities.
  2. Rural Services Delivery Grant (RSDG) was at £85M in 2020/21 (and still is at that level). £85M should, as presently assessed, be £96.27M in 2023/24 to reflect inflation.
  3. Due to their underfunding, Rural Councils in 2022/23 were only able to budget to spend £67.00 per head on so-called discretionary services whilst urban areas budgeted to spend almost twice that (£131.3I per head).
  4. Cost of Living is higher in rural areas, but wages earned in the rural economy are lower. 
  5. If in 2021/22 rural residents had paid the average urban band D council tax, those council taxpayers collectively would have been better off to the tune of £419.3m. Much of this would have been spent by them locally meaning a loss to the rural economy generally.  This impact is greater still when the difference between average London and average rural Band D council tax is applied, and sees the rural council taxpayers collectively, and rural economy, suffering to the tune of £1.520bn. THIS IS FOR A SINGLE YEAR – the cumulative impact over a period would have been enormous.
  6. As an example, an average Band D charge for Herefordshire Council this year is £2114 but for Southwark is £1595. That is over £519 (or 32.5%) more a year for rural residents to be paying in Herefordshire compared to Southwark residents.

The RSN is calling for ACTION – NOW


You can view the consultation here

The government is currently consulting on the 2023/24 Provisional Local Government Finance Settlement. We urge all rural local authorities to respond to the consultation before the closing date of 16 January 2023.