An introductory guide to
2016 edition
local government
finance
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An introductory guide to
2016 edition
local government
finance
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© August 2016 CIPFA
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Preface
The summer of 2016 has seen the greatest political turmoil experienced in recent history since the 1970s.
The referendum vote to leave the EU was followed in quick succession with the election of a new prime minister and a new cabinet. With the change at the top it will be important for local government to continue the momentum of devolution.
The challenges presented by the changes to business rates will also continue to require local government attention as the long term implications of any agreements will impact on financial sustainability for many years to come. This, along with the integration of health and social care, will dominate the local government agenda in 2016/17 as the risks attached to this dominate financial debate.
Chapter One
A brief introduction to
local government
sfsf
Local government in England is a patchwork of different types of council. There is a mixture of single-tier councils, in which one council provides all the services for an area, and two-tier councils, in which these services are shared between two councils, known as an upper-tier council and a lower-tier council. In addition, police and fire services also come within the local government boundary.
Greater devolution in England has seen an increase in the number of combined authorities. The Greater Manchester Combined Authority is at the forefront of this change but – as at June 2016 – there are ten agreed deals currently changing that local government landscape.
In Wales, there is only a single tier of local government, plus police and fire services.
As well as the principal local authorities, in many areas of England and Wales there are also local councils. These may be parish, town or community councils, which provide a much smaller number of services within a small local area.
The following table illustrates the local government structure for single- and two-tier areas in England and Wales.
England outside London |
London |
Wales |
|
County councils |
Metropolitan councils and |
Greater London Authority |
Unitary councils |
District and borough councils |
London borough councils |
||
Police and fire authorities* |
* Police services are provided by the Greater London Authority (GLA) in London and fire services are still the responsibility of some upper-tier authorities.
Councils provide a whole range of services, with responsibility split between upper- and lower-tier councils in two-tier areas. The following table shows some of the services provided by local government and highlights which tier has responsibility for them in two-tier areas. Councils do, however, work increasingly in partnership with each other and while an individual council will retain responsibility for provision of services, other councils or organisations may provide these on their behalf. Combined authorities are an example of how this can be done. The drivers behind this are better use of resources and improved provision for the customer.
Upper tier |
Lower tier |
||
Education Highways* Country parks and footpaths Economic regeneration* Concessionary fares and public transport* |
Social care Libraries Trading standards Waste disposal Planning strategy* Registrars Public health |
Housing Waste collection Environmental health Parks Markets and town centres |
Planning Street cleaning Museums and leisure centres Economic regeneration Parking |
* Provided by the GLA in London, which also has responsibility for police and fire services.
Councils receive funding for the services they provide from local residents and businesses through council tax and business rates and from central government through grants for specific purposes and general purposes (Revenue Support Grant). Central government also regulates how councils have to raise and spend money and the services they provide. These are described in more detail in the following chapters.
While the devolution agenda has seen a rise in the debate around tax-raising powers with many councils wanting fiscal control to move away from Whitehall, the current system is still highly centralised.
The financial year for all councils is 1 April to 31 March.
The revenue budget
and resources
the Revenue Budget
The revenue budget is the term used to describe the amount that a council spends on its day-to-day running of services. This includes wages and salaries, property and transport running costs and payments to suppliers.
In addition to the running costs of services, councils have to fund the costs of borrowing money to pay for their capital assets. Councils also need to meet the costs of certain other local service providers, such as the Environment Agency for flood prevention work, through what are known as levies. Once all these things are taken into account, along with specific grants, a figure known as ‘net revenue expenditure’ is reached.
The money a council spends on investing in new buildings, infrastructure and expensive pieces of equipment is known as the capital budget and is covered later in this guide.
Information released in November 2015, revised in February 2016 by the DCLG, Local Authority Revenue Expenditure and Financing: 2014-15 Final Outturn, England, shows how this expenditure is allocated across local government services.
Proportion of total net expenditure by service, England, 2014/15
* Housing benefit includes mandatory rent allowances and rent rebates and non-mandatory housing benefit payments.
** ‘Other’ includes ‘highways and transport’, ‘public health’, ‘fire and rescue’, ‘central services’, ‘cultural, environmental and planning’, ‘other services’ and ‘precepts, levies trading accounts and adjustments’ excluding housing benefit.
Financing of revenue expenditure, England, 2014/15
* ‘Government grants’ includes ‘Local Services Support Grant (LSSG)’, ‘Specific grants inside AEF’, ‘Revenue Support Grant’ and ‘Police Grant’. Since 2013/14 this specific grants inside AEF have included public health grant, local council tax support grant and the central share of non-domestic rates.
Specific Grants
Councils receive a number of specific grants from central government to support government priorities. The table below sets out income from the five largest specific grants in England. The trend is to move away from specific grants and include funding in the main settlement.
Main specific grants – England 2014/15
Grants inside aggregate external finance |
£ million |
Dedicated Schools Grant (DSG) |
28,254 |
Public Health Grant |
2,796 |
GLA Transport Grant |
1,756 |
Pupil Premium Grant |
1,753 |
The Private Finance Initiative (PFI) |
1,205 |
Source: Local Authority Revenue Expenditure and Financing: 2014-15 Final Outturn, England
COUNCIL TAX Requirement
From the net revenue expenditure figure any use of council reserves (covered later) is subtracted to get to a budget requirement figure that is then funded from general government grant, non-domestic rates or council tax.
Council Tax
Council tax is collected from residents within a council’s area based on the value of the property they live in. Council tax was introduced in 1993 to replace the community charge (or poll tax). For the purpose of council tax each property is assigned to one of eight bands, A to H, based on their value in 1991. The value of each property is assessed by the Valuation Office Agency, an agency of central government. For properties built after 1991, value is assessed as if the property had existed in 1991. Residents who do not agree with the council tax band their property has been placed in have a right of appeal.
In Wales, the property values relating to each band were reassessed and updated in 2005 based upon 2003 property values. This process is known as council tax revaluation. There has been no revaluation in England.
The band a property is placed in determines how much council tax will be paid relative to other properties in the same council area. For example, a Band A property will pay two thirds of the amount of council tax paid by a property in Band D, while a property in Band H will pay double. The following table sets out the property values that relate to each of the council tax bands and the relative amounts of council tax that will be paid.
|
English |
Welsh values before 2005 |
Welsh values from 2005 |
Relative |
A |
Less than £40,000 |
Less than £30,000 |
Less than £44,000 |
2/3 |
B |
£40,001 to £52,000 |
£30,001 to £39,000 |
£44,001 to £65,000 |
7/9 |
C |
£52,001 to £68,000 |
£39,001 to £51,000 |
£65,001 to £91,000 |
8/9 |
D |
£68,001 to £88,000 |
£51,001 to £66,000 |
£91,001 to £123,000 |
1 |
E |
£88,001 to £120,000 |
£66,001 to £90,000 |
£123,001 to £162,000 |
11/9 |
F |
£120,001 to £160,000 |
£90,001 to £120,000 |
£162,001 to £223,000 |
13/9 |
G |
£160,001 to £320,000 |
£120,001 to £240,000 |
£223,001 to £324,000 |
5/3 |
H |
Over £320,000 |
Over £240,000 |
Over £324,000 |
2 |
The level of council tax can be reduced in certain circumstances, including:
The requirement for councils to have discount schemes for those on low income was introduced in 2013/14. Previously there was a national scheme for council tax benefit that was part of the benefits system. Since 2013/14 each billing authority has been required to deliver its own local scheme with some freedom to decide on the criteria against which people will be assessed. Because the council tax discount is converted to a percentage reduction in the council tax base, it automatically impacts on major and local preceptors.
Council tax is collected by local billing authorities; these are unitary authorities, district councils, metropolitan councils and London boroughs. Other local authorities, including county councils, police and fire authorities and the GLA, raise money from the council tax by setting a precept which is collected on their behalf by the billing authority. The precept is the formal term given to the total amount an authority other than a billing authority wishes to raise from the council tax. This amount is converted to an amount of council tax and shown separately on bills.
Calculating the Council Tax
The council tax is calculated by subtracting the amount of business rates and Revenue Support Grant that a council expects to receive from its budget requirement. The balance is left to be funded by the council tax and the actual council tax is calculated by dividing this amount by the council tax base.
The council tax base is calculated by converting the number of dwellings in each band to Band D equivalents, for example each house in Band H is equivalent to two Band D houses and each Band A house is equivalent to two thirds of a Band D house. From this amount the value of any discounts is subtracted; for example, if a single person’s tax discount (equivalent to 25%) is awarded to four houses in the same band, this would reduce the tax base for that band by one. The following example shows a very simplified version of how this works.
Band |
Number of properties |
Reduction due to discounts |
Adjusted number of properties |
Ratio |
Band D equivalent |
A |
3,000 |
1,200 |
1,800 |
2/3 |
1,200 |
B |
4,000 |
1,300 |
2,700 |
7/9 |
2,100 |
C |
6,000 |
1,500 |
4,500 |
8/9 |
4,000 |
D |
4,500 |
1,000 |
3,500 |
1 |
3,500 |
E |
3,200 |
500 |
2,700 |
11/9 |
3,300 |
F |
1,950 |
150 |
1,800 |
13/9 |
2,600 |
G |
1,850 |
50 |
1,800 |
5/3 |
3,000 |
H |
920 |
20 |
900 |
2 |
1,800 |
Total |
21,500 |
In this example the tax base for the area is 21,500 Band D equivalents. The Band D council tax is calculated by dividing the amount to be raised from council tax by the council tax base. The council tax for other bands is then calculated by multiplying the Band D council tax by the relative ratio for each band; for example, if the Band D council tax is £900, the Band A council tax will be two thirds of this amount or £600.
This calculation will be carried out by the billing authority, major preceptors and local billing authorities to come to a final council tax figure that citizens will pay. The example below shows the calculation for an area with a police and crime commissioner, a county council, a district council and a parish council. The council tax base is higher for the police and crime commissioner and the county council as these cover several district council areas and lower for the parish council as there will be several within the district council area.
Council |
Precept/amount to be collected from council tax |
Tax base |
Band D |
£ |
£ |
£ |
|
County council |
225,000,000 |
250,000 |
900 |
Police and crime commissioner |
30,000,000 |
250,000 |
120 |
District council |
4,300,000 |
21,500 |
200 |
Parish council |
75,000 |
1,500 |
50 |
Total to be paid by council tax payers |
1,270 |
Council tax can be paid either in a lump sum or in instalments, usually by direct debit. Since 2013/14 all residents have had the option to pay their council tax over 12 instalments. Previously most councils offered the option to pay over ten instalments to give some flexibility to minimise council tax arrears.
Billing authorities are responsible for collecting council tax and paying over the major and local preceptors’ shares. They are also responsible for dealing with any arrears and taking action against non-payers, which includes the ability to make discretionary hardship payments to those genuinely struggling to meet their bills.
Council Tax Increases
Consecutive governments have been concerned about the level of increases in council tax and have sought to limit the amount by which council tax is allowed to increase. Initially this was done through capping under which councils were given specific limits to the amount by which their budgets could increase. This system of crude and universal capping was abolished in 1999 but the secretary of state retained reserve powers.
For England, since 2012/13, council tax referendum rules have been in place. Under these rules, if a council increases its council tax above a pre-announced percentage, that council will have to organise a referendum of council tax payers to approve the increase. The referendum limit for 2015/16 was 2%. Councils are unlikely to risk going to a referendum because this would take place after the budget setting and council tax billing processes have finished and councils would risk having to meet the cost of re-billing if tax payers vote no. However in 2015 Bedfordshire Police asked for additional funds equivalent to 48p per week on a Band D property; this was above the referendum limit and a vote was held. The public chose to reject the tax rise.
As well as using referendums to limit council tax increases, the government has also made a grant available to those councils that implemented a council tax freeze, with eligible councils receiving grant equivalent to the income that would have been raised by a small increase in council tax. 2015/16 was the final year for the allocation of the council tax freeze grant.
In the 2015 Autumn Statement councils were given the flexibility to include a 2% increase for adult social care. In its annual Council Tax Survey, CIPFA found that council tax in England (excluding London) rose by an average of 3.6%, adding £54 to the average Band D bill. However, Greater London council tax payers saw an average increase of just 0.6% or £8.04.
The Collection Fund
Because a billing authority collects council tax on behalf of all the councils in its area, there is a need to avoid mixing up the true income due to the billing authority with income that is merely passed straight on to its preceptors. The collection fund is the way this is done. All council tax income is paid into the collection fund and the payments are made from the collection fund into the billing authorities’ individual accounts and to the major preceptors. The government does not want the income councils receive during the year to vary too significantly as this may cause problems for budgeting purposes, and so has made regulations to achieve this through the collection fund.
The amount that individual councils receive from the collection fund is fixed at the level of the precept or the amount that is projected when the council tax is set. This amount is paid out of the collection fund regardless of how much council tax is collected during the year. If more council tax is collected than expected, this creates a surplus on the collection fund; if less is collected, this creates a deficit on the collection fund. The surplus/deficit on the collection fund is shared out to the individual councils in the following years and taken into account in those budget calculations.
The collection fund is also used to collect and pay out amounts related to business rates.
Business Rates
Business rates are payable by businesses based on the rateable value of the premises they occupy. Valuations are carried out by the Valuation Office Agency on a five-year cycle. The last valuation list came into existence in 2010 and listed the rateable value of all business properties. The rateable value broadly represents the annual rent the property could have been let for on the open market on a particular date, on full repairing and insuring terms. For the current rating lists, this date was set as 1 April 2008.
Councils are responsible for calculating actual rates bills and for collecting rates and will use the rateable value in working out how much businesses have to pay. The actual rate bill is calculated by applying the rate multiplier (a rate in the pound) to the rateable value and then deducting any reliefs that are applicable. The multiplier is set by the DCLG in England and by the Welsh Government in Wales.
The business multiplier for 2016/17 is:
For England, a small business is one where the total rateable value is under £18,000 (or under £25,500 in London). For example, a property with a rateable value of £12,000 in England would have an annual rates bill of £12,000 x 0.487 = £5,844.
In the 2016 Budget, it was announced that firms occupying property with a rateable value of £12,000 or less would pay no business rates from 2017.
Some businesses may be eligible for small business relief or charitable discounts, which can affect the amount of rates they pay. In addition, billing authorities are able to grant discretionary relief to individual businesses, for example to promote town centre regeneration.
Until 2013/14, councils merely collected business rates on behalf of the government. The business rates (or non-domestic rates as they were then called) were passed back to councils as part of their overall funding, ie they were allocated through the funding formula, so some individual councils received back less in funding than they had collected in business rates. From 2013/14 councils in England, other than police and crime commissioners, are able to keep a portion of the business rates raised in their areas. The system remains unchanged in Wales.
Business Rate 100% Retention
The government has committed to allow local authorities to retain 100% of business rate income from 2019/20. The details of the scheme and how it will work are currently being discussed and a consultation is expected in summer 2016.
Business Rate 50% Retention – England Only
Since April 2013, councils have been allowed to keep a proportion of the business rates they collect from businesses in their area. The proportion a council is allowed to keep depends upon the type of local authority. In all areas, half of business rates have to be paid over to central government. Billing authorities continue to collect all of the business rates in their area on behalf of the major precepting authorities, which are the same as for council tax, and on behalf of central government.
The shares of total business rates each type of local authority is allowed to keep are set out in the following table.
District councils |
40% |
County councils (with responsibility for fire) |
10% |
County councils (where there is a separate combined fire authority) |
9% |
Unitary and metropolitan councils (with responsibility for fire) |
50% |
Unitary and metropolitan councils (where there is a separate combined fire authority) |
49% |
Combined fire authorities |
1% |
London boroughs |
30% |
Greater London Authority |
20% |
Because the amount of business rates an individual council is able to collect will vary enormously depending upon location and the characteristics of the council, the government introduced a system of top-ups and tariffs to redistribute business rates. Councils with a relatively high level of business rates pay a tariff into a national pot which is used to pay top-ups to those councils with relatively low levels of business rates. The level of these top-ups and tariffs was set by the 2013/14 local government finance settlement, and is set for a period of at least seven years, although both top-ups and tariffs will increase by inflation over that time.
In order to prevent councils having to drastically cut services as a result of a significant fall in business rate income and to provide some protection against major economic shocks, the government introduced a safety net mechanism to ensure that no council will experience a fall in business rate income of more than 7.5% in any one year. This safety net is paid for by a levy on what the government deems to be ‘excessive growth’. Councils whose business rates increase by more than inflation have to pay over a greater proportion of business rates to government.
The levy rate for each council is set as part of the local government finance settlement. To ensure that an incentive for growth is retained, the levy rate is capped at 0.5, ie all councils are able to keep at least half of the growth in their local share of business rate income.
The amount of business rates a local council will take into account when setting its budget each year is set when the billing authority completes its estimate of business rate income for the following year in January and completes a return to government (called the NNDR1 form) setting out this amount. This also fixes the amount that the council will pay over to government.
Business rate income is paid into the collection fund, administered by the billing authority, as it is collected from businesses. The collection fund then makes payments out to the billing authority general fund, the major preceptors and government, based on the NNDR1 estimate. If more income is received than estimated, this creates a surplus on the collection fund, or if less is collected, a deficit, and this is paid over to the individual councils and government the following year.
Where a council’s estimate is so low that the safety net becomes payable, payments are made on account by government during the year. Any levy payments and the difference between estimated and actual safety net payments become payable at the end of the financial year, although the actual cash is paid over in the following financial year.
Revenue Support Grant
Revenue Support Grant is a grant paid by government to support councils’ general expenditure. There are no restrictions on how it is to be used (within a council’s legal powers) and the amount each council will receive is set out in the local government finance settlement.
Chapter Three
Capital budgets and resources
Capital Budgets
A council’s capital budget covers the money it spends on investing in buildings, infrastructure and expensive pieces of equipment. Capital spending by councils is mainly for buying, constructing or improving physical assets such as:
It also includes grants and advances made to the private sector or the rest of the public sector for capital purposes, such as advances to housing associations. In order to count as capital expenditure, new assets or additions to assets must have a life of more than one year.
The secretary of state at his discretion can allow certain revenue costs to be treated as if they are capital costs. This process, known as a capitalisation direction, is subject to an annual application process and is typically used for one-off items such as redundancy costs and meeting the costs of equal pay claims. The secretary of state can also extend the definition of capital expenditure using regulations.
Councils in England spent £21.5bn on new assets and additions to existing assets in 2014/15, an increase of 9.5% on the £19.7bn spent in 2013/14, mainly due to an increase in expenditure on the buying of share and loan capital.
The chart below shows capital expenditure for the period 2010/11 to 2014/15.
Capital expenditure and receipts – England 2010/11 to 2014/15
Source: National Statistics, Local Authority Capital Expenditure and Receipts: England 2014/15 Final Outturn (revised), October 2015
Capital receipts are received when a council sells capital assets. The chart also shows the expenditure excluding the GLA as the GLA tends to distort the total council capital spending figures as it includes expenditure by Transport for London.
In Wales, councils spent £1.0bn in 2014/15, a decrease of £25m or 2% over the previous year.
Capital expenditure and receipts – Wales 1996/97 to 2014/15
Source: Welsh Government Statistical Release, Local Authority Revenue and Capital Outturn Expenditure: 2014/15, October 2015
Financing of Capital Expenditure
Councils finance capital spending in a number of ways, including:
The following graph shows the proportion of capital expenditure financed by borrowing and other sources of finance in England and Wales over the period 2010/11 to 2014/15.
Financing local authority capital expenditure – England and Wales 2010/11 to 2014/15
Note: The 2011/12 figures exclude the housing self-financing transaction of approximately £13bn in order to avoid distorting the year-on-year comparisons.
Sources: National Statistics, Local Authority Capital Expenditure and Receipts, England: 2014/15 Final Outturn (revised), October 2015; Welsh Government Statistical Release, Local Authority Revenue and Capital Outturn Expenditure: 2014/15, October 2015
The graph shows that the proportions of capital expenditure financed by:
The Prudential Code
Before 2004, there was a very complicated framework of rules and regulations that controlled how councils were allowed to invest in assets and the amount that they could spend. April 2004 saw the introduction of CIPFA’s Prudential Code for Capital Finance in Local Authorities. The Prudential Code provides a framework within which councils can judge for themselves whether capital investment is affordable, prudent and sustainable in the year in question and in future years. The Prudential Code is given statutory backing, which means that councils are required to ‘have regard’ to it, by the Local Government Act 2003 (in England and Wales) and the Local Government in Scotland Act 2003.
The Prudential Code requires a council to think about six things when it agrees its capital programme:
Councils need to prove that they are complying with the Prudential Code and this is done through a series of prudential indicators that are set locally and approved at the same time as the council sets its budget for the following year. The table below sets out the key prudential indicators.
Key prudential indicators
Indicator |
Description |
Estimate of the ratio of the capital financing costs to the authority’s net revenue stream over the next three years |
This indicator helps a council identify if borrowing costs become too high as a proportion of its budget. This is important as borrowing costs always have to be paid and are very hard to cut if resources fall. |
Actual ratio of the capital financing costs to the authority’s net revenue stream |
The current value of the indicator above. This gives a baseline against which a council can see if borrowing is forecast to become a greater or a lesser part of the budget in the future. It also allows the accuracy of past estimates to be measured. |
Estimates of the incremental impact of the capital investment decisions on the council tax for three years, or longer |
Because all councils’ borrowing is secured against future income including the council tax, ultimately all borrowing would have to be collected from council tax payers if no other income was available. It is therefore important to understand the impact of decisions on future council tax. |
Authorised limit |
The maximum amount of money a council can borrow. This amount can be changed at any point during the year by a meeting of the full council. |
Operational limit |
The maximum amount of money a council expects to borrow during the year. This is lower than the authorised limit and acts as a useful warning sign if it is breached during the year, which could mean that underlying spending may be higher or income lower than budgeted. |
Debt compared to the capital financing requirement |
Councils are only allowed to borrow money in the medium term to finance capital expenditure. |
In addition to setting limits for borrowing and the capital programme, the council is required to confirm that it complies with CIPFA’s Treasury Management in the Public Services: Code of Practice and Cross-Sectoral Guidance Notes. These require the council to set detailed ratios and limits for how it manages its borrowings and investments.
Treasury Management
Treasury management is the term used to describe the way a council manages the cash it needs to meet both its day-to-day running costs and borrowing for capital expenditure. The following table highlights some of the main cash inflows and outflows of a council.
Key cash flows for a council
Day to day |
Longer term |
||
Cash in |
Cash out |
Cash in |
Cash out |
Council tax and business rate income (or precept for upper-tier authorities) Revenue Support Grant Other grants and income from charging for services |
Precepts (from billing authorities to precepting authorities) Wages and salaries Payments to suppliers Grants to other bodies |
Cash-backed reserves and provisions Capital receipts Grants and contributions Borrowing |
Capital expenditure Repayment of borrowing |
The treasury management function for a council will make the arrangements to borrow and invest money over either the short term or the longer term in order to ensure that it has money available when it needs it. Councils may borrow money from banks and building societies, other councils, the financial markets or the Public Works Loan Board (which is part of the government’s Debt Management Office and allows councils to borrow at interest rates closer to those paid by central government for its borrowing). Councils invest money mainly with banks and building societies but may also invest in other places such as money market funds and the government’s Debt Management Office.
In making arrangements for treasury management, a council is required to follow CIPFA’s Treasury Management Code. The Code aims to help ensure that councils manage the significant risks associated with the function while also ensuring the council receives value for money. It defines treasury management as:
…the management of the organisation’s investments and cash flows, its banking, money market and capital market transactions; the effective control of the risks associated with those activities; and the pursuit of optimum performance consistent with those risks.
It is very important that councils understand the risks that are associated with treasury management, as highlighted by the collapse of the Icelandic banks a number of years ago, which put at risk substantial funds that had been invested by councils. The key treasury management risks are:
A council is required to approve a treasury management strategy, which sets out how it will borrow and invest money and manage those risks. The strategy is likely to include the following items:
It should also include the following treasury management indicators:
The way the treasury management risks interact is very complicated and councils will rely heavily on professional advice from specialist officers and external advisors. It is important, however, that senior officers and councillors understand the treasury management risks the council is taking and they should remember that the responsibility for treasury management must always remain within the council.
Chapter Four
Local authority accounting and reporting
Local authority accounting differs from private sector accounting in a number of important ways. Although local authority accounting is based on the same accounting standards, these are mainly designed for the private sector so need to be adapted for councils. In addition, the government makes specific rules known as statutory requirements that local authorities must follow when they prepare their financial statements, limiting the amount that can be charged to council tax payers and avoiding significant changes in expenditure from one year to the next. As a result, local authority accounting is a combination of the accounting standards that dictate how all organisations should account, and legislation.
Accounting standards are set by the International Federation of Accountants (IFAC) and are known as International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS). These set out how accountants should present items in the annual statement of accounts. Legislation is set out through a mixture of regulations and accounting directions that are issued by the Department for Communities and Local Government (DCLG), requiring councils to treat certain items in the accounts differently to the accounting standards.
All the accounting requirements for councils are brought together in CIPFA’s Code of Practice on Local Authority Accounting in the United Kingdom. This chapter of the guide outlines some of the key accounting principles and looks at the annual statement of accounts that all councils are required to produce. This is a simplified overview that is aimed at giving the reader a general understanding when reading the accounts of councils.
Annual Statement of Accounts
Each local council is required to produce an annual statement of accounts by 30 June immediately following the end of the financial year. The accounts contain detailed information on the financial position of the council. They show not just the income and expenditure of the council, but also the assets and liabilities it holds. The statement of accounts is a key way that councils are able to demonstrate that they are using public money properly, known as financial stewardship. The format of the statement of accounts is set out in the Code of Practice on Local Authority Accounting in the United Kingdom and contains the following key statements.
Movement in reserves statement |
This statement shows the impact of the financial year on the council’s reserves. This statement also includes all of the income and expenditure that is recognised under accounting rules but then removed from the accounts by legislation to give the amount of expenditure that has been funded by the local tax payer. |
Comprehensive income and expenditure statement |
This is where all the income and expenditure of the council is recorded in line with accounting rules. This statement is similar to the one you would find in a private company. |
Balance sheet |
This statement summarises a council’s financial position at each year end and reports the assets, liabilities and reserves of the council. Some of the reserves are specific to councils, such as the pensions reserve and the capital adjustment account, and exist to allow accounting entries required by legislation. |
Cash flow statement |
This summarises the cash flows that have been made into and out of the council’s bank account during the financial year. |
Accruals
The principle of accruals is a key one for accounting and it describes when income and expenditure is recognised (included) in the accounts. The simplest form of accounting is cash basis, where transactions are recognised in the accounts when the actual cash is received or paid out. This would not, however, accurately reflect the true position of the council as it would not show how much the council owes or is owed.
Under the accruals basis of accounting, income and expenses are recorded when earned and incurred, regardless of when cash is exchanged (ie received or paid). Income is recognised either when it is earned (ie services are provided) and realised (ie cash is received) or realisable (ie it is reasonable to expect that cash will be collected in the future). Expenses are recognised when costs have been incurred (ie goods or services are provided) and payment is made or becomes payable (ie it is reasonable to expect that payment will have to be made in the future).
Taking a simple example, if a council is providing home care that it charges for, it would recognise the costs of the home care as it was provided even if it has yet to be invoiced or paid for. It would then recognise the income due from the client as soon as the service was provided and cash was received or it was reasonable to expect that payment would be received (for example, if payment was due following receipt of an invoice by the client). Income and expenses included in a council’s accounts that have not yet been settled (ie cash has not been received or paid) will give rise to debtor (receivables) and creditor (payables) balances in the council’s balance sheet.
Debtors/receivables come into existence where income has been recognised but consideration has not yet been received by the council. Put simply, debtors are individuals or organisations that owe the council money.
Creditors/payables come into existence where expenditure has been recognised but payment has yet to be made by the authority. Put simply, creditors are individuals or organisations the council owes money to.
Taking the home care example, the debtor would be created and the income recognised even where the income is payable many years in the future following the eventual sale of the client’s home.
Capital Accounting
Capital accounting is the term used to describe the entries in a council’s accounts that are made in relation to its non-current assets, otherwise known as property, plant and equipment – mainly buildings, infrastructure and pieces of equipment. They are called ‘non-current’ as they are expected to provide services or economic benefit to the council for more than one year. There are two key elements to capital accounting:
Asset Valuation
When the council invests in new assets it includes these in the balance sheet at the cost of the investment plus any directly related expenses. In order to ensure that the balance sheet is kept up to date, assets need to be regularly revalued, at least every five years or more frequently for the assets whose values may be volatile. If council assets are not regularly updated, then the balance sheet will very soon become out of date. For example, if a Victorian school building were left on the balance sheet at the amount it cost to build, it may be undervalued by several hundred thousand pounds. The following table sets out the main categories of assets and how they are valued.
The table reflects the Code’s adoption of IFRS 13 Fair Value Measurement, which applied prospectively from 1 April 2015. However, the Code adapts the measurement requirements for property, plant and equipment and has introduced the concept of current value. This definition of current value means that the measurement requirements for property, plant and equipment providing service potential for an authority have not changed from previously, ie they are measured for their service potential either at existing use value, existing use value – social housing (for council dwellings) or depreciated replacement cost (for specialised assets), and not at fair value. Since 2015/16, the Code has however changed the measurement requirements for assets classified as surplus assets. These assets are now measured at fair value in accordance with the definition in IFRS 13 and without any adaptations to that definition. Where applicable, all other assets are measured at fair value. From 2016/17 a new class of asset, the Highways Network Asset, is valued at depreciated historical cost in accordance with the methodologies of the Code of Practice on the Highways Network Asset (2016 Edition).
Category of asset |
Description |
Valuation |
Description |
Land and buildings |
Land and buildings used to provide services |
Current value based on existing use or depreciated replacement cost |
A valuation based on how much the assets could be sold for if they were sold for the same purpose they are currently used for, eg a school is valued if sold for use as a school rather than for housing. Revalued at least every five years more frequently if necessary. |
Vehicles, plant and equipment |
Vehicles, plant and equipment used to provide services |
||
Highways Network Asset |
For example roads, footpaths, bridges and tunnels |
Depreciated replacement cost |
The current value ie depreciated replacement cost calculated in accordance with the Code of Practice on the Highways Network Asset. |
Infrastructure |
For example roads, footpaths, bridges and tunnels |
Cost |
The cost of acquiring the asset or work carried out to date.* |
Assets under construction |
New buildings that are in the process of being built |
||
Housing – dwellings |
Houses used to provide social housing |
Existing use value – social housing |
The current value of the houses if they were to be sold to be used for letting for social rents. |
Heritage assets |
An asset with special qualities that is held and maintained principally for its contribution to knowledge and culture |
Valuation, or cost where a value is not available |
Value does not have to be professional valuation but could be an insurance valuation (for museum or art gallery exhibits, for example). For some assets, a value may not be available (for example an archaeological site) and cost can be used where this is available. |
Community assets |
Assets that the council intends to hold in perpetuity, for example a park |
Cost or as per heritage assets |
Councils can choose to use cost or the same basis as heritage assets. |
Investment assets |
Assets held for income generation purposes rather than service provision |
Fair value as at balance sheet date |
These are valued at fair value (ie highest and best use). |
Where a council is in the process of selling an asset or has made the decision to sell an asset, it is classified as an asset held for sale and is included in current assets on the council’s balance sheet. This reflects the fact that the council does not intend to hold the asset for the long term.
When an asset is revalued, this creates a difference between its previous value and its current value. A change in valuation is generally reflected in the revaluation reserve. When an asset’s value falls, ie a revaluation loss (or it is impaired), the revaluation reserve can be reduced by this fall in value provided that the value of the asset in question has previously increased by at least as much (accumulated revaluation). If the accumulated revaluation figure for an asset is not enough, any balance between the fall in value and the accumulated depreciation has to be charged to the comprehensive income and expenditure statement.
Depreciation
Depreciation is the term used to describe the charge that is made to the income and expenditure statement to reflect the council’s use of its assets. The argument is that, in using an asset to provide services, its value is diminished. This is most simply illustrated by taking a vehicle as an example. Suppose a council buys a new minibus for £20,000 which it intends to use for ten years, at which point it expects to sell it for £10,000. If it included just the cash values in its accounts, it would have expenditure of £20,000 in the first year and income of £10,000 in year 11. In years two to ten it would still be using the minibus but would show no cost in its accounts of doing so. If, instead, it spread the £10,000 cost of owning the asset (the purchase cost of £20,000 less its final value of £10,000) over the ten years of expected use, it would charge £1,000 per year to its comprehensive income and expenditure statement.
The actual calculation of depreciation is slightly more complicated in practice but the principle remains the same, with an asset’s value, less any final value on disposal, being spread over the expected life of the asset. Because the value of land, provided it is not being used for landfill or mineral extraction, does not change as a result of using it, land is not depreciated – only the buildings upon it.
Capital Accounting in the Movement in Reserves Statement
The comprehensive income and expenditure statement for a council will include the costs of depreciation, charges for impairment and gains and losses on the disposal of non-current assets. Depreciation and impairment have been described above while gains and losses on the disposal of non-current assets reflect the difference between the balance sheet value of an asset and the amount it is sold for. Because of the way councils are financed and the fact that money received for the sale of non-current assets is tied up in capital receipts, the government does not want these items to hit the bottom line, and so has made regulations to take these items out in the movement in reserves statement. Depreciation is replaced with a minimum revenue provision, which makes a charge to the accounts for the repayment of borrowing associated with capital expenditure. These adjustments are made against the capital adjustment account, which is an unusable reserve and is one of the reserves specific to councils.
reserves and Provisions
Reserves
Reserves are split into usable reserves and unusable reserves on the balance sheet. Usable reserves include general and earmarked reserves, ie those reserves that can be spent on future services. Unusable reserves include all those accounting reserves that cannot be used for expenditure on services.
General and Earmarked Reserves
When reviewing their medium-term financial plans and preparing their annual budgets, councils should consider the establishment and maintenance of reserves. These can be held for three main purposes:
Earmarked reserves formally remain part of the general fund of the council. The general fund of a council represents the money available to local tax payers that can be used for expenditure on services. Key categories of earmarked reserves are as follows.
Category of earmarked reserve |
Rationale |
Sums set aside for major schemes, or to fund major reorganisations |
Where major expenditure is planned in future years, it is prudent to set aside resources in advance. |
Insurance reserves |
Reserves held to fund repairs or replacement of assets where the council chooses not to buy insurance against these costs with external insurance companies. |
Reserves of trading and business units |
Surpluses arising from trading or business units may be held back to cover potential losses in future years, or to finance capital expenditure. |
Reserves retained for service departmental use |
Councils may let departments keep all or some of any underspends to use for future projects. |
Reserves for unspent revenue grants |
Where revenue grants are received by the council with no conditions or where the conditions are met and expenditure has yet to take place. The Code Guidance Notes recommend that these sums are held in earmarked reserves. (For further information on grant conditions please refer to Module 2, section C of the 2015/16 Code Guidance Notes.) |
Schools balances |
These are the unspent balances of individual schools’ budgets that can only be used by those schools. |
Unusable Reserves
Councils also show a number of accounting reserves on their balance sheets. These are not backed by cash so cannot be spent on council services but arise because of entries in the accounts. These accounts are as follows.
Category of unusable reserve |
Rationale |
Pensions reserve |
This reflects the difference between the amount charged for pensions in the accounts under accounting rules and the actual payments made to various statutory pension schemes for the year. |
Revaluation reserve |
The accumulated balance of changes in the value of non-current assets. |
Capital adjustment account |
The difference between depreciation and the charges made to the accounts under capital accounting rules. |
Available for sale financial instruments reserve and financial instruments adjustment account |
The difference between the amounts charged to the accounts for local authority borrowings and investments under accounting rules and the amounts charged under legislation. |
Unequal pay back pay account |
The difference between the amounts charged to the accounts for compensation for unequal pay under accounting rules and the amounts charged under legislation. |
Collection fund adjustment account |
The difference between the amounts recognised in the accounts for council tax and non-domestic rates income (England) and the amounts charged under legislation. |
Other Reserves
Councils will hold the following two usable reserves:
Provisions
A council may set up a provision when it knows that it is highly likely that it will have to pay out money or transfer assets in the future; for example, the council may be involved in a court case that could eventually result in the payment of compensation. Provisions are charged to the appropriate service line in the comprehensive income and expenditure statement when the council becomes aware of the need for them. When payments are eventually made, they are charged to the provision carried in the balance sheet. The level of provisions should be regularly reviewed to ensure they reflect the most accurate estimate of future cost.
Pensions
IAS 19 Employee Benefits is probably one of the best known financial reporting standards as it has been frequently mentioned in news items about final salary pension schemes. The accounting standard requires the balance sheet to reflect a snapshot of a pension fund’s assets and liabilities at the end of the financial year and the associated costs to be reflected in the comprehensive income and expenditure statement.
The standard applies to all employee benefits but has a particular impact on defined benefit schemes where the pension paid is based upon the salary of the recipient, not the amount they have paid into their pension pot. Police and fire schemes are excluded from the accounting standard as they are ‘unfunded’ schemes where contributions are used to pay existing pensions with the difference underwritten by government.
The difference between the cost of pensions under accounting rules (IAS 19) and the actual payments made is reversed out of the accounts in the movement in reserves statement against the pensions reserve.
Other Accounts
Councils may use other accounts to record income and expenditure relating to certain services they provide or functions they carry out. Key accounts include:
Trading accounts |
Used where a council has set up a trading arm to record income and expenditure to assess whether or not the trading arm is creating a surplus of income over expenditure. The word ‘surplus’ is used instead of ‘profit’ in not-for-profit organisations such as councils. |
Housing revenue account |
Used to record the income and expenditure related to a council’s housing function and required by legislation. |
Collection fund |
Used to record income and expenditure related to council tax and non-domestic rates collected by billing authorities. |
Local Authority Reporting
The statement of accounts is a key way that councils are able to show they are using public money properly and forms the core of local authority reporting. In addition, councils have to comply with some other key aspects of financial reporting.
Narrative Reporting
The financial statements on their own can be difficult for a lay person to understand and interpret, so explanations and commentary are needed to help the reader make sense of the financial statements and to help demonstrate the extent to which the objectives of the council have been achieved.
Remuneration of Senior Officials
Since 31 March 2010, councils have been required to include detailed remuneration information for their senior employees in their annual statement of accounts. Remuneration includes all monetary and non-monetary payments made to an employee as part of their employment. It does not include employer pension contributions. However, for the purposes of disclosing senior officer remuneration in England and Wales, employers’ pension contributions must be reported in addition to the remuneration.
The Transparency Agenda
Councils are required to publish details of all expenditure over £500 to encourage ‘armchair auditors’ – members of the public with an interest in council finances who are prepared to question councils over what they spend. In February 2015, the DCLG published its latest version of the Local Government Transparency Code, which councils are required to follow.
The code requires councils to publish the following data:
This data should be published on the council’s website and in a format that is as widely usable as possible.
Chapter five
Governance and the role of the chief financial officer
Governance
Governance comprises the arrangements1. put in place to ensure that the intended outcomes for stakeholders are defined and achieved.
Source: International Framework: Good Governance
in the Public Sector, IFAC/CIPFA, 2014
Key elements of the systems and processes that comprise a council’s governance include arrangements for:
Each council is required to include an annual governance statement with its statement of accounts that sets out how the council has monitored its governance arrangements throughout the year and reviewed how effective they are in supporting planned outcomes.
CIPFA has worked with the Society of Local Authority Chief Executives and Senior Managers (Solace) to produce the CIPFA/Solace Framework Delivering Good Governance in Local Government and accompanying guidance, which helps councils ensure that their governance arrangements meet best practice. New editions of the Framework and guidance were published in 2016.
The Role of the Chief Financial Officer
The chief financial officer (CFO) is the person in the most senior finance role in a council. The CFO in a council has to be a member of a professional accountancy body such as CIPFA. This means that in carrying out their job they are bound by very rigorous professional rules and expectations. The CFO also has very specific legal responsibilities to the local tax payer.
The role and responsibilities of the ‘treasurer’ were developed by case law in England and Wales. In Attorney General v De Winton 1906, it was established that the treasurer is not merely a servant of the council, but holds a fiduciary responsibility to local tax payers. This means that when CFOs give advice and carry out their jobs they have to think about what is the best decision not only for the council, but also for local tax payers.
Section 151 of the Local Government Act 1972 requires councils to ‘make arrangements for the proper administration of their financial affairs’ and appoint a CFO to have responsibility for those arrangements. This means that the CFO is legally responsible for ensuring that a council manages its finances properly.
To help CFOs to do their job and councils to understand how they can ensure their arrangements support CFOs in their legal responsibilities, CIPFA has published its Statement on the Role of the Chief Financial Officer in Local Government (2016), plus a separate statement for police, recognising their different arrangements. The statement goes into detail about the role, but it is based upon the five principles set out below.
The CFO in a local authority:
To deliver these responsibilities, the CFO:
Chapter Six
Audit and value for money
External Audit – Current arrangements
The external auditor of an organisation is required to carry out an in-depth examination of the annual statement of accounts and certify that it represents a ‘true and fair’ view of the financial position of the organisation. If an auditor finds errors in the accounts or views them as misleading, they can ‘qualify’ them, which means that they publicly report on why accounts do not give a true and fair view.
This is essentially the same process that is carried out by the external auditor of a council. However, external audit is also very important in ensuring proper stewardship of public money; therefore, in councils, external auditors look not only at the financial statements but also at the financial aspects of how a council is managed. The external auditor must satisfy themselves that the accounts are prepared in accordance with regulations and accounting rules and that the council made proper arrangements for securing economy, efficiency and effectiveness in its use of resources. Auditors may report on their work to the general public and other key stakeholders.
In England, until 31 March 2015, the Audit Commission was responsible for appointing local authority auditors from private firms of accountants. However, the Local Audit and Accountability Act 2014 formally abolished the Audit Commission and established new arrangements for the audit and accountability of certain public bodies including local authorities. Importantly, it requires these public bodies to appoint their own external auditors, replacing the previous process of commissioning of external auditors that had been carried out by the Audit Commission.
A transitional body is overseeing the existing contracts in the remaining time that they have to run. Smaller councils, such as parish or town councils, are able to appoint their own auditors for the financial year beginning 1 April 2017 and larger authorities, such as London boroughs, county councils or unitary authorities, are required to appoint their own auditors to start from the financial year beginning 1 April 2018.
In Wales, audit is the responsibility of the Wales Audit Office, which carries out audits using its own staff.
The Code of Audit Practice, published and maintained by the National Audit Office, sets out in detail how the auditor should fulfil this role and gives further details of the external auditor’s objectives when conducting an independent assessment of a council. The Code of Audit Practice has to be approved by both Houses of Parliament at five-yearly intervals and auditors must comply with it. The most recent version applies from 1 April 2015. In Wales, the Code of Audit Practice is the responsibility of the Wales Audit Office and is approved by the Welsh Assembly.
The Code of Audit Practice also outlines how auditors should fulfil other statutory functions outlined in the Local Audit and Accountability Act 2014. These functions are:
The results of audit work are communicated in the following reports:
Other specific reports may be issued at any point during the audit process, if required:
The external auditor has particular duties in relation to questions of:
To fulfil these duties, the auditor has access to all documents as appear necessary for the purposes of the audit. Auditors may decide:
Before each audit of the financial statements, the accounts and documents must be available for public inspection for 30 working days. Any person interested may come into the council to view those accounts and supporting documents. They are allowed to make copies. In addition, those entitled to vote in an area may meet the external auditor and question them about the accounts.
Internal Audit
Internal audit is a team within a council that exists to review the procedures and transactions of the council to ensure that public funds are being used properly. The internal audit team may be employed directly by a council or by an external service provider. All councils are required by legislation to have an internal audit function to keep their financial processes under review.
The Public Sector Internal Audit Standards define internal auditing as follows:
Internal auditing is an independent, objective assurance and consulting activity designed to add value and improve an organisation’s operations. It helps an organisation accomplish its objectives by bringing a systematic, disciplined approach to evaluate and improve the effectiveness of risk management, control and governance processes.
In order to carry out their work, internal auditors will document and review the procedures for spending money and collecting income within the council. They will also look in detail at a sample of transactions to ensure that these procedures are being followed; this is known as compliance testing. Internal auditors are also responsible for reviewing the procedures for governance, risk management and the internal controls that exist within the council. They may also carry out fraud investigations and help to share anti-fraud and anti-corruption messages with the employees of the council.
The role of internal audit is set out in a written document that also ensures it has access to all the council’s systems, records and personnel that it needs to do its job properly. This documentation also sets out internal audit’s power to report its findings to ensure that it has appropriate access to decision-making bodies.
Audit Committees
Audit committees are special committees of the council that are set up to maintain an overview of their financial arrangements. Audit committees often include independent members who are not councillors but sit on the committee for their financial knowledge. The head of internal audit should have a right of direct access to the audit committee.
Chapter Seven
Education
Introduction
Education is a function carried out by county, metropolitan and unitary councils. In London, the London boroughs have responsibility for education, while the mayor has a role in promoting educational standards across London.
Education is provided in England by the main types of school described below:
There are two further categories of school, though these are much fewer in number:
Local authorities must ensure that there are sufficient good quality school places in their locality. They have a key role in ensuring that the schools admission process is fair.
In April 2016:
By April 2016, there were 383 free schools including studio schools and UTCs.
In January 2015, there were 2.5 million pupils who were taught in academies. At the same time, 61.4% of state-funded secondary schools were academies (including free schools, university technical colleges and studio schools) and 14.6% of state-funded primary schools were academies.
For councils, the main issues around schools converting to academy status are likely to be managing the change and minimising the impact on their finances, particularly where the level of services sold to schools changes if the new academies then choose to buy those services from elsewhere.
Education remains a key priority for the government and the Spending Review and Autumn Statement 2015 included a commitment to protect schools’ funding in line with inflation.
Education is the biggest local government service, with budgeted revenue expenditure of £35bn in England in 2015/16. This figure excludes expenditure on academies, which are funded directly by the Department for Education via the Education Funding Agency. Education accounted for around 31% of total spending on all local government services.
Schools Funding Formula
The government started a process in 2012 to reform the school funding system to make it fairer, more consistent and more transparent. The government set out how the system would start to change ahead of introducing a national funding formula.
In March 2014 the government announced that it had decided not to set out a multi-year process of converging all local authorities towards a single funding formula at that time. Instead, the government published a consultation on fairer school funding from 2015. This proposed allocating additional funding of £350m for 2015/16 – every local authority would attract a minimum funding level for every pupil and school.
Currently, revenue funding is distributed to local authorities through the Dedicated Schools Grant (DSG) which is allocated to them on the basis of historic data. The DSG is split into three blocks: the schools block, special needs block and early years block.
Most of the DSG is distributed to maintained schools using locally determined formulae. However, there has been significant variation in how local authorities allocate funding to schools. In order to move to a more consistent, comparable and transparent system, from April 2013 local authorities were required to use much simpler formulae.
Local authorities are now limited to a maximum number of factors in their formulae, which relate largely to pupil characteristics and pupil numbers (taken from the Annual School Census data), and less so on the circumstances of the school. Funding is available for pupils with high needs in special schools or mainstream schools, based on the needs of the pupil. From 2014/15, the government required that a minimum of 80% of delegated schools block funding is allocated through an appropriate and locally determined combination of the pupil-led factors.
Approach for 2015/16 and 2016/17
Following the above consultation and the government’s response, the DfE published Fairer Schools Funding: Arrangements for 2015 to 2016 in July 2014. This set out a number of reforms that the government was making to the schools funding system for 2015/16. The main proposals included:
To protect schools from significant budget reductions, the government ensured that no school saw a reduction larger than 1.5% per pupil in its 2014/15 budget compared to 2013/14 (excluding sixth form funding). This was reiterated for 2015/16. In addition, local authorities with falling school numbers continued to be protected by arrangements that ensure that no authority lost more than 2% of its budget in cash terms.
Once a school has converted to academy status, it ceases to be funded through the council. Instead, its funding comes in the form of a grant, known as the General Annual Grant, paid by the Education Funding Agency.
The schools block is intended to cover core provision for pupils in primary and secondary education to the age of 16. For 2016/17, allocations for the schools block will be calculated largely on the basis of how much an area received per pupil in 2015/16 with some adjustments. The £390m fairer schools funding will be continued. The core schools’ budget will continue to be protected and per pupil funding together with the pupil premium will be maintained in cash terms. However, the government intends to make savings from the Education Services Grant (ESG) which funds local authorities and academies for services such as school improvement and education welfare services.
Consultation: Schools National Funding Formula
In March 2016, the government issued a consultation document to start the process for introducing a national funding formula from 2017/18.
The proposals are intended to ensure that:
The consultation proposes that several factors should be used to allocate core schools funding. They include:
The government has also announced that there will be a parallel consultation on a national funding formula for early years funding later in 2016. Once the key principles have been agreed, the government will seek views on the weighting of the factors. The second stage consultation will set out the impact of the funding formulae across schools and local authorities.
The government has noted that the changes will be phased in, to ensure a smooth transition. Local authorities will retain their role in school funding until 2019/20 – although it is envisaged that the national funding formula will begin in 2017/18.
Pupil Premium
The pupil premium aims to provide significant funding for disadvantaged children to help close the attainment gap. The pupil premium is allocated to schools for most pupils and can be seen separately in their funding. Schools can decide how the pupil premium is spent but they have to say how they have used the extra money to support deprived pupils.
Schools received £2.5bn through the pupil premium in 2015/16. Since April 2015, schools attract £1,320 for primary school pupils, £935 for secondary school pupils and £1,900 per looked after child. The pupil premium is allocated based on the number of children who are known to be eligible for free school meals and children who have been looked after (by the council) for more than six months.
Sixth Form and Further Education
The government is committed to helping all 16- and 17-year-olds to take part in education or training and raised the participation age to 18 in 2015.
Raising the participation age does not mean young people must stay in school; they will be able to choose one of the following options:
For this is to be successful, all sections of the education system will need to play their part. Councils are expected to play a key role in championing the needs of young people in their areas and in working with partners to achieve full participation.
Education in Wales
In Wales there are some 1,595 state schools, with around 465,700 pupils. In January 2015 there were 13 nursery, 1,330 primary, 207 secondary, 6 middle and 39 special schools. Secondary school education is provided through community-based comprehensive schools.
Education is the biggest local government service in Wales, with budgeted revenue expenditure of almost £2.5bn in 2015/16 accounting for 33% of total budgeted expenditure.
The Welsh Government provides funding to local authorities for pre-16 provision in schools through the local government revenue settlement. Local authorities are responsible for the planning, organising and funding of maintained schools in their area according to local needs and priorities.
Local authorities set budgets for schools according to a local formula and in accordance with the School Funding (Wales) Regulations 2010. The regulations require that 70% of funding for individual schools’ budgets is distributed according to factors which are learner led. Local authorities must consult their schools forum prior to setting schools’ budgets.
A critical report in 2012 from the schools inspectorate Estyn highlighted, among other things, that 40% of pupils starting secondary school had reading ages below their actual age and prompted a review of the Welsh education system. In January 2013, the minister announced the appointment of Robert Hill to undertake the review on the future delivery of education services in Wales. It focused on looking at the effectiveness of current education delivery at school and local authority level, considering what should be undertaken at school, local authority, regional and national level.
The report resulting from Robert Hill’s wide-ranging review suggested transferring some statutory education functions to Wales’ regional consortiums. There are four formal education consortiums in Wales, each covering a different geographical area. They were set up with the aim of sharing good practice, knowledge and skills.
However, the Welsh Government chose not to consider restructuring school services, pending the results of the Commission on Public Service Governance and Delivery. The aim of the Commission was to “look hard, honestly and objectively at the way public services are governed and delivered in Wales, and how they may be improved”. The Commission’s report was published in January 2014 and recommended that councils in Wales should merge, leaving ten, 11 or 12 local authorities rather than the current 22. On 25 November 2015, the Local Government (Wales) Act 2015 became law. This new law enables preparations to be made for a programme of local government mergers and reform.
Also in November 2015, the Welsh Government issued a consultation on the draft Local Government (Wales) Bill and Explanatory Memorandum. The aim of the draft Bill is to complete the programme of local authority mergers and set out a new legislative framework for local government. The draft Bill proposes a reduction in the number of authorities to eight or nine.
Post-16 Education in Wales
In Wales, the Department for Education and Skills (DfES) funds individual further education institutions and local authorities for maintained school sixth form provision. Grant agreements with the DfES set out the funds that the DfES has agreed to pay for post-16 learning, how the funds will be paid and the terms and conditions for the use of funding. This includes monitoring and audit requirements for the use of funds.
In February 2011, the Minister for Education and Skills announced a comprehensive review of post-16 planning and funding. A new post-16 planning and funding framework was introduced for the 2014/15 academic year. It focuses on the quality of the learning offer in terms of the outcome for individual learners. Programmes are at the core of the new framework with each programme having a defined purpose and outcome against which it will be monitored. In 2016/17, the key priority remains to ensure post-16 education and training continues to contribute to economic growth with successful pathways for learners.
Chapter Eight
Housing
Housing is a function of district, metropolitan and unitary councils and London boroughs. Social housing is provided by different types of organisations:
Housing Revenue Account
Councils with more than 50 social houses are required to maintain a separate account that contains all the income and expenditure relating to their housing stock. This account is called the housing revenue account (HRA) and is a landlord account that covers the income and expenditure necessary to manage and maintain the housing stock, including major repairs, and associated debt financing charges.
The HRA is a separate or ringfenced account, meaning that funds must be kept separate from other local authority income and expenditure, to make sure that council housing rents are not used to subsidise general council expenditure and that the general council tax payer does not subsidise council housing either. Any surplus in year must go to a separate reserve (or working balance) to only be used for the HRA. Councils must balance their HRA each year; they must not budget for a deficit after the working balance is taken into account.
Self-Financing Implementation
Before April 2012, there was an incredibly complicated national housing subsidy system. The system used a series of calculations to work out whether a council should pay a ‘surplus’ of rent over expenditure to the government or whether they should receive subsidy to bridge the gap between rents and expenditure. In the final years of the subsidy system, the value of surpluses collected from councils overall significantly exceeded the subsidy paid out.
Since April 2012 each council is reliant on its own rent income to provide council housing. To bring this change into operation, business plans were produced for councils’ long-term (30 years) investment requirements as well as for the day-to-day cost of running their homes. The government then used these business plans, along with information on councils’ current levels of debt, to work out whether councils should receive an additional share of the national housing debt or have some of their housing debt repaid before the introduction of self-financing. This one-off settlement was to enable a starting position that recognised the different needs of individual councils that had previously been met by the subsidy system.
Income and Expenditure
Housing revenue account expenditure was budgeted at £8.5bn and income was estimated at £8.5bn for 2014/15. Spending on repairs and maintenance and on interest and debt repayment are two of the biggest items of HRA expenditure. At £7.2bn in England, rents make up the biggest percentage contribution to HRA income.
Rents, Service Charges And Other Income
The rent restructuring programme began in 2002/03. The aim was to bring council rents more in line with those of housing associations. This was done by setting targets known as formula rents. Formula rents are based on local earnings levels and property values and are increased annually at half a percent over the rate of inflation because rents needed to increase by more than inflation in order to catch up with housing association rents. The scheme was made more complicated by rules on the amount any individual tenant’s rent can increase and by rent caps based on the number of bedrooms in a property.
As part of the 2013 spending round the government announced that from 2015/16 social rents would rise by CPI plus 1% each year for ten years. Guidance released in May 2014 confirmed that the government would end the rent convergence policy in April 2015.
However the summer Budget in July 2015 announced a rent decrease of 1% a year for the next four years to be implemented by housing associations and local authorities. The implications for business plans and future building projects are currently being considered but many commentators have expressed concerns for the sector.
Local housing authorities may also make separate service charges to tenants for those services, such as a concierge service or community aerials, which are not available to every tenant. In some accommodation there are communal heating systems and councils recover the cost from individual tenants. Other income sources can include individual garages or parking spaces.
Housing Business Plans
Business planning for the HRA is critical. Housing authorities must be able to show that they can afford to maintain their housing stock and provide services to tenants over the long term. The HRA business plan looks at long-term investment needs, covering 30 years. In preparing the business plan, councils need to assess the right balance between expenditure on long-term planned maintenance and the more reactive repairs when things go wrong. Self-financing gives councils more freedom to balance this relationship to achieve the best value for money, but there are restrictions on how much councils can borrow for housing, which may limit a council’s ability to invest in major maintenance programmes.
Business plans should be regularly reviewed.
Housing Allocations
Local housing authorities often work with local housing association partners, operating joint waiting lists and allocation policies. The DCLG’s Allocation of Accommodation: Guidance for Local Housing Authorities in England (2012) sets out the factors that councils should take into account in framing their allocation scheme to offer a choice of accommodation to applicants. It included guidance on the freedoms introduced by the Localism Act 2011, which gave local housing authorities more flexibility in deciding who is eligible to go on to their waiting lists. Certain categories of applicants (such as returning armed forces members) are eligible for inclusion.
Councils are able to offer flexible two-year tenancies in addition to traditional secure tenancies.
Homelessness
Housing authorities are required to provide advice and assistance to homeless people or those in danger of becoming homeless. They also have to provide accommodation to people who are unintentionally homeless and in priority need. This has generally been through providing initially temporary, often expensive and private, accommodation before moving into council or housing association housing. Under the Localism Act 2011, councils can now also offer a year’s good quality private sector tenancy to fulfil this requirement.
Housing authorities must maintain a homelessness strategy. A revenue grant allocation is made by the DCLG to help housing authorities meet their homelessness duties.
welfare reform and housing Benefit
Housing benefit cost over £23bn in 2014/15 and has been identified as a prime area for spending reductions. The government has begun to introduce a new system of universal credit and this will replace most housing benefit (and a number of other benefits).
As part of welfare reform, the government has also cut housing benefit support for claimants in temporary accommodation and placed limits on the amounts of housing benefit that will be paid. Local housing allowance rates place limits on the level of rents that will be supported. Previously this limit was based on average rents in the area; now it is based on a lower amount. There is also a limit being placed on the size of house that is used to calculate housing benefit, the ‘spare room subsidy’ (more often referred to as the ‘bedroom tax’), where for example a family occupying a three-bedroom house who would only be entitled to a two-bedroom house under the new rules will still receive housing benefit, but based upon local rental costs for two bedrooms.
The Welfare Reform and Work Act 2016 contains a number of changes that will impact on housing. These include:
Right To Buy
Since the 1980s over 2 million council properties have been sold under the right to buy scheme, nearly 50% of the (then) total. The recession and tighter rules on discounts caused the volume of right to buy sales to fall away considerably in later years and in 2011/12 just 3,080 sales were completed, generating capital receipts after discount of £238m.
In 2012, however, the government raised the discounts in England to increase or ‘reinvigorate’ right to buy sales with receipts from sales (after allowable costs, repayment of housing debt and currently forecast receipts for councils and central government) used to replace the additional homes sold as a result of the higher discount levels.
Councils may retain some right to buy receipts subject to specific rules set out by the government (see Reinvigorating Right to Buy and One for One Replacement: Information for Local Authorities, DCLG, 2012).
Housing association tenants have recently been allowed to buy their own homes following a voluntary agreement with the government.
Leaseholders
Because of right to buy, many former council estates are now a mix of tenanted property and owner occupation (many of whom are leaseholders). Local housing authorities try to ensure that leaseholders pay their fair share of estate costs (for services such as maintaining lifts) in order to avoid unnecessary expense to the housing revenue account. However, the rules on recovery are complex, especially where major works are concerned, such as re-roofing a block of flats.
For five years after a right to buy is completed, only works identified in the sale documentation can be recharged to leaseholders. Leaseholders have statutory rights to loans if works exceed a certain value, and councils can operate more generous local loan schemes.
Gypsies And Travellers
Local housing authorities and county councils provide and operate sites for Gypsies and travellers.
Empty Homes
In October 2015 approximately 600,000 homes in England were empty, and around 200,000 of those had been empty for over six months. Local councils have a key role in identifying empty homes and working with owners to bring them back into use. The New Homes Bonus is a grant that can be paid by central government to local councils for increasing the number of homes and bringing empty homes back into use. The graph below from Empty Homes (England) (Housing of Commons Briefing Paper 3012, May 2016) shows a gradual reduction in empty homes since 2008.
Private Sector Licensing And Houses In Multiple Occupation
Councils must keep the housing conditions within their area under review. Under the Housing Act 2004 a housing health and safety rating system is used to determine whether the authority needs to intervene. Local councils may decide to introduce a licensing system for specific categories of rented property. A particular problem area is usually houses in multiple accommodation. Problems can include overcrowding, increased fire risks, etc.
Sheltered Housing
Local housing authorities provide sheltered supported or extra care properties. Some of this accommodation is hard to let, and councils find it difficult to identify funding for modernisation. Yet expenditure on sheltered housing can mean larger savings on care homes and other more costly support.
The need for sheltered housing is increasing as the country’s ageing population grows, while the profile of users is altering with regard to vulnerability (eg substance abuse).
Decent Homes Standard
The decent homes standard set out, essentially, that all homes should be warm, weatherproof and have reasonably modern facilities. It applies to social rented housing (predominantly council or housing association housing).
The broad principle is that a home must have reasonably modern facilities. The specified requirements are as follows.
Many councils achieved the decent homes standard for their housing by 2012. However, the self-financing settlement did not contain sufficient resources to enable councils to achieve the standard if they had not already done so. The government allocated a further £160m investment in the decent homes programme, targeted at those councils with the biggest backlogs of repairs, in the 2013 spending review. The term ‘Decent Homes Plus’ refers to environmental and estate works that go beyond the narrow purpose of decent homes.
HOUSING AND PLANNING ACT 2016
Following Royal Assent in May 2016, this Act will introduce a number of legislative changes that will impact on the housing sector. There had been considerable debate around this legislation and the detail is being discussed. However the Act contains the following key elements:
Chapter nine
Social care
Social care is a function carried out by county, metropolitan and unitary councils and London boroughs. Social care has long been the second largest area of expenditure within councils and the largest under effective local control, but with the increase in academies, changes to education funding and the rising demand for social care, it is likely that it will become the largest service provided through councils. Budgeted expenditure for social care for 2015/16 was £21.8bn for England and £1.6bn for Wales.
Adult Social Care
Adult social care includes services for elderly people and a wide range of services for those in the 18- to 64-years age group. Budgeted expenditure for adult social care for 2013/14 was £14.1bn for England and £1.0bn for Wales.
Services for older people consume almost half of the money allocated for adult social care in both countries: 45% in England and 49% in Wales. Services for people with learning disabilities are the second largest element of the adult social care budget, with 35% in England and 31% in Wales. Accounting arrangements have, however, recently been amended to focus more on the nature of support required (whether difficulties are physical/sensory/memory and cognition/learning disability/mental health) rather than the age group supported.
Other services include those for people with physical disabilities, sensory impairment and mental health needs, and asylum seekers.
Demand-led Pressures
Adult social care is a demand-led service. This means that if a person is assessed as needing care and that care is within the eligibility range set by the national rules introduced by the Care Act 2014, then the person must receive that care. Historically, this has made social care one of the most difficult budgets to manage. The key is to intervene early enough in a client’s care to prevent long-term admission to residential care, which is an expensive commitment.
Better procurement, improved back office arrangements, and a preference for community-based rather than residential care where possible, are just some of the changes that councils have implemented to help them meet the challenges they face. The large growth in the population aged over-65 and especially over-80 has increasingly focused the attention of both local and national government on the demands on adult social care, particularly long-term care.
There has been mounting pressure on social care budgets. The concerns were summarised in the Association of Directors of Adult Social Services (ADASS) conclusions from its 2014 survey that:
Adult social care spending has been kept under control through a combination of budget savings of 26 per cent (the equivalent of £3.53 billion over the last four years), the NHS transfer and at least £900 million of savings from other council services. The service is now under extreme pressure and facing financial crisis.
The government responded to this by enabling council tax increases for social care additional to any general increase for which referendum requirements apply. From 2016/17 social service authorities can increase the council tax by an extra 2% per year with no referendum requirement, provided the additional income raised is dedicated to social care. This will yield £400m per year if all authorities choose to implement it, ie an extra 1.8% on current budgets for social care. There has been a broad consensus within local government that this is helpful, but not in itself sufficient to enable rising social care demand to be met. There has also been criticism of the distributional aspects.
Paying for Care
The charging systems in England and Wales follow similar principles.
Residential care is means tested and based on a national system in each area. Capital such as property is taken into account after 12 weeks when the residential stay is permanent. If a service user has sufficient resources, they will pay for the full cost of the service until their resources fall below a certain limit. Charging for non-residential services is discretionary and the policy is determined locally within a nationally set framework. Generally, property is not taken into account. In Wales the cost of non-residential care is capped at £50 per week. In England the maximum cost is set locally.
The Care Act 2014 incorporated plans to introduce, from April 2016, a £72,000 cap on care costs in England. This would have limited the amount anybody would pay for social care over their lifetime to £72,000, although for anyone in residential care, this would not include living costs such as food, energy bills and accommodation. In reality, the care cap was only likely to directly benefit those with high care needs over a long period, but it would importantly have reduced the impact on those individuals, and hence the concern of all that they might fall into that group. In July 2015, however, the government announced a delay in implementation from 2016 to 2020, in the light of perceived difficulties with practical implementation and cost. Many commentators believe that this has made it unlikely that implementation will occur at all, though the government maintains that it will.
The Welsh Government is currently considering its approach to the cost of long-term care and whether a cap on residential care costs should be introduced in Wales.
Children’s Social Care
Budgeted expenditure for children’s social care for 2013/14 was £7.7bn for England and £0.6bn for Wales.
Looked after children account for the largest proportion of the money allocated for children’s social care in both countries: 45% in England and 43% in Wales.
Commissioning and social workers are the second largest element, with 20% in England and 23% in Wales.
Other services include youth justice work, family support and support for asylum seekers.
Children’s social care is also demand led. If a child is placed into a local authority’s care, then that child must be supported, with residential placements being the most expensive. As with adult social care, the policy focus is to intervene early in order to both prevent expensive admission into care and provide better outcomes for children in their own homes.
CHILDREN’s social care and Community Budgets
In April 2011, 28 councils in 16 areas, along with their partners, were put in charge of community budgets that pool various strands of government funding into a single local pot for tackling social problems around families with complex needs.
Community budgets allow providers of public services to share budgets, improving outcomes for local people and reducing duplication and waste.
It has been estimated that around £8bn a year is spent on around 120,000 families that have multiple problems, with funding only getting to local areas via hundreds of separate schemes and agencies. Despite this investment, these families’ problems continue. Community budgets aim to join services up and intervene earlier. It is hoped that this integrated, early intervention approach will also drive down costs.
The government intended to roll out community budgets nationally in England, but this programme has now become somewhat subsidiary to the more broadly based moves towards devolution.
Health and Social Care Integration
While community budgets have been the primary driver for integration in children’s services, the government has more recently sought to boost the pace of integration in adults’ services through new initiatives.
In 2015/16 the Better Care Fund required at least £3.8bn to be used to advance integrated transformation of health and social care. The government encouraged additional contributions to be made through local decisions, and the fund as finalised totaled £5.3bn. The spending review in 2015 announced that the Better Care Fund would remain in place at least during the current parliament, and set out plans to increase this by £1.6bn by 2020/21. This forms the basis for pooled budgets for health and social care to work more closely together in local areas, based on plans agreed between the NHS and local authorities. It has been described as “the biggest ever financial incentive for councils and local NHS organisations to jointly plan and deliver services, so that integrated care becomes the norm by 2018”.
The Better Care Fund offers a real opportunity to address immediate pressures on services and lay foundations for a more integrated system of health and care delivered at scale and pace. But it will create risks as well as opportunities. The £3.8bn was not new money, leaving commissioners to make important decisions about how the funding transfer can make a positive difference to social care services and outcomes for service users.
Clinical commissioning groups and councils had to jointly agree plans for how the money will be spent. These plans must meet certain criteria and must be signed off by health and wellbeing boards and NHS England.
Consistent with that approach, in 2015 the government agreed a £6bn plan to devolve all health and social care in the Manchester conurbation to local control. Further agreements have followed, and though not all have incorporated joint working with health, this could well provide the major part of the future template for integration. The government requires all local health and social care economies to submit, by 2017, plans for how they will pursue full integration by 2020.
Chapter TEN
Police
Policing in England and Wales was radically reformed in 2012 with the introduction of police and crime commissioners, who are responsible for commissioning police services in their areas as well as services related to crime and anti-social behaviour. This means that they are responsible for setting the overall budget for police services and setting the priorities and objectives for policing for their local areas.
The police and crime commissioner is a directly elected individual, other than in London, where the mayor has responsibility for policing (apart from in the City of London, which has a police committee). The chief constable remains responsible for delivering policing in their area in accordance with the budget, priorities and objectives set by the police and crime commissioner. The police and crime commissioner holds the chief constable to account for delivery. Both the police and crime commissioner and the chief constable have been established as separate organisations, which has implications for police finance.
The Policing and Crime Bill, anticipated for Royal Assent in early 2017, may also lead to some police and crime commissioners taking on the governance of local fire and rescue services and potentially merging their local police force and fire and rescue services into a single employer with a single chief officer reporting to the police and crime commissioner.
Expenditure and Budgets
Total funding for policing for 2015/16 was £10.1bn in England and £0.6bn in Wales. From April 2013, policing has been paid for by a mixture of council tax and Police Grant received from the Home Office. Police are not part of the localisation of non-domestic rates regime but are affected by the localisation of support for council tax. The police and crime commissioner is responsible for setting the council tax for policing for their area as well as the overall police budget.
Financial Management
The Financial Management Code of Practice for the Police Service for England and Wales, updated in 2013 by the Home Office, sets out key principles that police and crime commissioners and chief constables must follow as well as a protocol for how the two organisations work together. The police and crime commissioner must decide how much financial freedom to give to the chief constable, and this will vary from area to area. There are, however, a few important principles that must be followed.
It is important that individual police and crime commissioners pay careful attention to the financial arrangements they put into place as there is no single solution. They will have to implement arrangements that reflect local circumstances.
Statement of Accounts
Both the police and crime commissioner and the chief constable will need to produce their own statement of accounts. The police and crime commissioner then has to bring these together into something called the group accounts, which show the total costs of policing for the whole area. The individual accounts of the police and crime commissioner and the chief constable will each have a large single item relating to money passed from the police and crime commissioner to the chief constable; these will cancel each other out in the group accounts.
Key definitions
Accounting Standards |
Rules set by the International Accounting Standards Boards that set out how transactions are to be shown in an organisation’s accounts. |
Accrual |
The recording of income and expenditure when it becomes due rather than when cash is paid out/received. |
Aggregate Start-up Funding Assessment |
The amount of central government money to be allocated to local government to calculate the start-up position for the non-domestic rate localisation system. |
Annual Statement of Accounts |
An annual statement setting out the income and expenditure of the council along with its assets and liabilities. |
Arm’s-length Management Organisation |
An organisation set up by the council to manage its council housing on its behalf. |
Audit Committee |
A special committee of the council that reviews the financial management and accounts of the council. |
Balance Sheet |
A statement showing the assets and liabilities of the council. |
Baseline Funding Level |
The proportion of the start-up funding assessment to be funded from locally retained business rates. |
Billing Authorities |
District, unitary, metropolitan and London borough councils who collect council tax and non-domestic rates on behalf of all local councils. |
Budget Requirement |
The amount a council needs to fund its spending from council tax, non-domestic rates and Revenue Support Grant. |
Capital Budget |
The money a council spends on investing in new buildings, infrastructure and expensive pieces of equipment. |
Capital Financing Charges |
The amount a council has to pay to support its borrowing to pay for the purchase of major assets. |
Capital Receipt |
The money a council receives for selling assets that can only be used to repay debt or for new capital expenditure. |
Cash Flow Statement |
This statement summarises the cash flows that have been made into and out of the council during the year. |
Chief Financial Officer |
The most senior finance person in a council responsible for ensuring the proper financial management of the council. |
Code of Practice on Local Authority Accounting in the United Kingdom |
A code produced by CIPFA/LASAAC that sets out how councils should show transactions in their accounts and the format of the accounts. |
Collection Fund |
An account used by a billing authority to pay in the council tax and non-domestic rates it collects and to pay the income to itself and its major preceptors. |
Community Budget |
A budget created by a number of public sector organisations combining their resources. |
Comprehensive Income and Expenditure Statement |
This statement shows all the income and expenditure of the council. |
Council Tax |
A tax paid by local domestic households to their council. |
Dedicated Schools Grant |
A grant that has to be used by councils to fund schools. |
Deficit/Surplus on the Collection Fund |
The difference between the amount of tax estimated to be collected and the amount actually collected. |
Depreciation |
The charge to the comprehensive income and expenditure statement for the use of assets. |
Earmarked Reserve |
Money set aside for future use on a specific area of expenditure. |
Estimated Business Rate Aggregate |
The total amount of business rates that the government estimates will be collected by councils in total. |
External Audit |
An external review of the council’s accounts and systems. |
Funding Formula |
A mathematical formula based on population, deprivation and other local indicators to allocate the aggregate start-up funding assessment between individual local councils. |
Governance |
The framework by which a council can gain assurance that it is setting and achieving its objectives and ensuring value for money in the proper way. |
Housing Revenue Account |
An account used to record the income and expenditure related to council housing. |
Internal Audit |
An internal review of the organisation’s systems to give assurance that they are appropriate and being complied with. |
Levies |
Amount collected by special-purpose bodies from councils, including flood defence and in some areas public transport. |
Levy (Non-domestic Rates) |
A proportion of non-domestic rate growth above inflation that a council has to pay into the central pot. |
Local Councils or Local Precepting Bodies |
Parish, town and community councils. |
Local Government Control Total |
The amount of the overall public spending envelope the government decides should be spent by local government. |
Local Government Finance Settlement |
The annual announcement by the government and the Welsh Government on the amount of resources they will give to local government. |
Major Preceptors |
County councils, the Greater London Authority and police and fire authorities who collect their share of council tax through a precept on their billing authority. |
Movement in Reserves Statement |
This statement shows the impact of the financial year on the council’s reserves. |
Net Revenue Expenditure |
The amount a council spends on providing services after capital financing costs and specific government grants are taken into account. |
Non-domestic Rates |
A tax paid by local businesses to their council. |
Precept |
The total amount of council tax county councils, the Greater London Authority and police and fire authorities require billing authorities to collect on their behalf. |
Principal Local Authorities |
County councils, district councils, unitary councils, metropolitan councils, London boroughs, the Greater London Authority and police and fire authorities. |
Proportionate Shares |
An individual council’s estimated share of the estimated business rates aggregate based on the proportion of the total business rate income it has collected over the past two years. |
Provision |
Money set aside against a specific future liability. |
Prudential Code |
A code produced by CIPFA that councils are required to follow when deciding upon their programme for capital expenditure. |
Pupil Premium |
An amount that is paid to schools by the government for each of their pupils that are classified as deprived. |
Registered Provider |
A not-for-profit organisation that provides social housing. |
Revenue Budget |
The amount that a council spends on its day-to-day running of services through the financial year. |
Revenue Support Grant |
General grant paid to councils by the government to support their expenditure. |
Right to Buy |
The right of council tenants to buy their council houses at a discount. |
Ringfencing |
A term for the earmarking of money (eg a grant or fund) for one particular purpose, so as to restrict its use to that purpose. |
Safety Net |
Funding from the central non-domestic rates pot that is used to support councils whose rate income has fallen by more than 7.5% in any one year. |
Schools Funding Formula |
The formula that is used to distribute funding between individual schools. |
Specific Government Grants |
Grants given to councils by central government to fund specific services or projects. |
Standard Spending Assessment |
An individual council’s share of the local government spending control total for Wales. |
Start-up Funding Assessment |
An individual council’s share of the aggregate start-up funding assessment as calculated by the funding formula. |
Top-up and Tariff |
The amount of local non-domestic rate income that an individual local authority has to pay in to/receives from the central pot. |
Total Service Expenditure |
The amount a council spends on providing services before capital financing costs and specific government grants are taken into account. |
Trading Account |
An account used to record the income and expenditure of a part of the council that is engaged in trading activities. |
Treasury Management |
The management of the cash balances and borrowing needs arising from the council’s cash flows. |
Treasury Management Code |
A code produced by CIPFA that councils are required to follow in managing their treasury management activity. |
Treasury Management Strategy |
An annual document approved by full council that sets out how a council will manage its cash and borrowings. |
Valuations Office Agency |
The government agency responsible for valuing domestic and non-domestic properties for local tax purposes. |
Further reading
Please visit www.cipfa.org/publications for more information.
Balancing Local Authority Budgets, CIPFA, 2016
CIPFA Statement on the Role of the Chief Finance Officer of the Police and Crime Commissioner and the Chief Finance Officer of the Chief Constable, CIPFA, 2012
Code of Practice on Local Authority Accounting in the United Kingdom, CIPFA, annual
Delivering Good Governance in Local Government: Framework (2016 Edition), CIPFA/Solace, 2016
The Guide to Local Government Finance, CIPFA, annual
Housing Finance under Self-financing, CIPFA, 2013
Investing in Council Housing, CIPFA/CIH, 2016
The Prudential Code for Capital Finance in Local Authorities, CIPFA, 2011
The Prudential Code for Capital Finance in Local Authorities: Guidance Notes for Practitioners (2013 Edition), CIPFA, 2013
The Public Sector Internal Audit Standards, the Relevant Internal Audit Standard Setters, 2012
A Risk-based Approach to the Audit of Procurement (2015 Edition), CIPFA, 2015
The Role of the Chief Financial Officer in Local Government, CIPFA, 2015
The Role of the Head of Internal Audit in Public Service Organisations, CIPFA, 2010
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AN INTRODUCTORY GUIDE TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT FINANCE \ 2016 EDITION