Education and health strike gold in tight Welsh budget
Welsh Finance Minister Jane Hutt pledged to spend millions more on health and double grants for cash-strapped school children
Welsh Finance Minister Jane Hutt pledged yesterday to spend millions more on health and double grants for cash-strapped school children despite revealing the toughest budget since devolution.
Ms Hutt (pictured) promised £570 million for the NHS over the next three years including an immediate £150m injection and insisted it was "at the heart of our budget."
The Pupil Deprivation Grant will be boosted from £450 to £918 per child from next year to break the link between poverty and achievement.
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The first Budget of the Labour government falls far short of addressing Wales’s needs, maintaining austerity-era policies while providing inadequate funding for critical services and infrastructure, writes LUKE FLETCHER MS