Freezing spending in real terms would save £20bn a year but mean a further 9pc budget cut to public services
The UK risks returning to the austerity of the 2010s if the Government freezes public services spending, economists have warned.
While a real-terms freeze would save around £20bn a year by 2026-27, the impact would be huge, the Resolution Foundation said.
Rampant inflation has already reduced public spending power by £22bn in real terms and turned planned spending increases into cuts for some departments.
For example, real-terms education spending has gone from an increase of £1.5bn in 2024-25 from this year to a cut of £1bn, while the scale of future defence spending cuts has more than doubled from around £800m to £1.9bn.