UK cabinet ministers who are refusing to make the required spending cuts are being warned that the Treasury will simply seize their funds, leaving them unable to foot their departments’ bills.
Several government departments have failed to submit plans to
cut an additional 10 per cent from their budgets in an internal
effort to reduce wasteful expenditure, claiming the demanded cuts
are too steep, the Mail Online reported Friday.
Across Whitehall, government ministries are attempting to unload
some of their expenditures by reclassifying into areas with rising
budgets in a political battle that British media has dubbed ‘the
Hunger Games,’ in reference to the dystopian film in which 24 young
people are forced to participate in a battle to the death.
Treasury Chief Secretary Danny Alexander is now warning the “rebel
ministers” that he will remove “billions” out of their
administration budgets unless they comply. That would leave the MPs
unable to pay staff salaries, rental on office space and other
costs.
The threat comes as departments were ordered to create plans for
introducing spending cuts of 11.5 billion pounds (almost US$18
billion) by this week as the government prepares to implement a
spending review for the year 2015-16 later this month.
In February, Moody’s, the rating agency, deprived Britain of its
coveted AAA status over its failure to put its public finances in
order.
Earlier in the week, Prime Minister David Cameron suggested that
some defense spending could be moved into the foreign aid budget to
ease the financial burden on the military.
Cameron also signaled that food, health and education programmers
could also be shifted into the Department for International
Development.
The ministerial showdown has led to the creation of the so-called
National Union of Ministers, which is arguing that their
departments are being asked to sacrifice while other departments
are exempt from the cuts.
One prominent member of the National Union of Ministers, Defense
Secretary Philip Hammond, has warned publicly of the consequences
of deeper spending cuts.
However, when Hammond leaked plans by the Ministry of Defense to
seize 200 million pounds ($311 million) from the Department of
Health to cover the cost for private schooling for the children of
servicemen, Cameron called on ministers to “keep their thoughts to
themselves.”