The chancellor has abandoned his predecessor’s list of infrastructure schemes slated for acceleration and appears to have kept the freeze in funding for council road repairs in place, despite soaring inflation.
In his Autumn Statement, which included forecasts that government borrowing would increase significantly, Jeremy Hunt said the construction of infrastructure such as roads, rail lines and communities would be safeguarded by capital investment of more than £600bn over the next five years.
Mr Hunt (pictured with the Autumn Statement document) told MPs: ‘I can announce that I am not cutting a penny from our capital budgets in the next two years and maintaining them at that level in cash terms for the following three years.
‘This means that although we are not growing our capital budget as planned, it will still increase from £63bn four years ago to £114bn next year and £115bn the year after – and remain at that level.’
Rick Green, chair of the Asphalt Industry Alliance, which produces the annual ALARM survey of local authority roads, said: ‘It’s promising that the chancellor’s speech today recognised the importance of sustained investment in infrastructure to keep the country connected, drive economic prosperity and support levelling-up.
‘What remains to be seen is the level of funding that maintaining existing assets – including our vital local road network – will receive, as a real-terms cut still appears inevitable due to inflation.’
The official Treasury document states: ‘The government will seek to accelerate delivery of projects across its infrastructure portfolio, rather than focus on the list of projects that were flagged for acceleration in the Growth Plan.’
This relates to former chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng’s disastrous mini-budget in September, which listed a string of transport and infrastructure projects that the Government intended to prioritise for acceleration, including the A303 Stonehenge Tunnel.
Despite suggestions that Mr Hunt would use the occasion to move towards road pricing, he announced instead that from April 2025 electric vehicles (EVs) will no longer be exempt from Vehicle Excise Duty.
AA president Edmund King said: ‘Whilst we understand that EVs will need to be taxed, we stress that the road to electrification must not be stalled by excessive taxation.
‘Unfortunately the chancellor’s EV taxation actions will dim the incentive to switch to electric vehicles.’
The RAC’s head of policy, Nicholas Lyes said he did not expect the tax change to have much of an effect on dampening the demand for EVs, given the many other cost benefits of running one.
He said: ‘After many years of paying no car tax at all, it’s probably fair the Government gets owners of electric vehicles to start contributing to the upkeep of major roads from 2025.
'While vehicle excise duty rates are unlikely to be a defining reason for vehicle choice, we believe a first year zero-VED rate benefit should have been retained as a partial incentive.’
A document from the Office for Budget Responsibility, published alongside the Autumn Statement, indicates that Fuel Duty remains set to rise by 23% in March.