FactCheck: Gove’s schoolboy error on funding for school buildings
“We’re spending more over the next four years in school buildings than the last Labour government spent over its first eight years.”
Education Secretary Michael Gove, 25 October 2011
The background
Michael Gove received a rather damning school report from the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) today, offering the gloomy news that schools and universities face the worst cuts since the 1950s.
Capital spending alone – which funds school buildings – is set to drop by 60 per cent over the next four years.
Shadow education minister Stephen Twigg said: “Michael Gove should be going back to the Treasury, back to George Osborne, getting the extra money for school buildings that are so obviously needed”.
But Mr Gove rejects the image of kids taking classes under “leaky roofs”. In fact, he claims the government is spending more over the next four years than Labour did in its first two parliaments.
Who gets top marks?
The analysis
The government plans to cut capital spending for education from £7.6bn over the last financial year 2010-11, to £4.9bn in the current year, and each year thereafter – bringing it down to £3.4bn in 2014-15 and spending a total of £15.8bn over the four years.
By contrast, Labour’s capital spending on schools between 1997/98 and 2004/05 totted up to £15bn in cash terms, or about £20bn in today’s prices, according to the IFS.
This government’s £15.8bn over four years certainly does not add up to more than £20bn over eight years under Labour’s first two terms, so how can Mr Gove have got his maths so wrong?
The Department for Education explains that he should have mentioned averages. The DfE said: “There will be a total of £15.8bn of capital spending over the period. Although this amounts to a 60 per cent reduction in real terms in capital spending over the period, the annual capital budget will be higher than the average annual capital budget in the 1997-98 to 2004-05 period.”
This claim looks fine, though it does mean that in 2014-15, the capital budget for education will be about the same as it was what it was in 2002-03 in real terms.
Plus Luke Sibieta, co-author of today’s IFS report, told FactCheck that the cut for the DfE’s capital budget is far deeper than other government departments – which are facing average capital spending cuts of 28 per cent.
The DfE’s cut to capital spending comes second only to that of the Communities department’s cut of 75 per cent – funds which are mainly spent on social housing.
The verdict
The key difference between the Labour and coalition governments’ education spending is on capital budgets.
The IFS’s report says that other than that, there is actually “remarkable similarity” in the two government’s priorities: both favoured shifting money away from higher education and towards schools.
FactCheck has to tick off Mr Gove for a schoolboy error – total spending on school buildings over the next four years will not eclipse spending under Labour’s first eight years. He should have clarified that he meant average annual spend.
Mr Gove’s problem is that Labour cranked up the spending in its final term – announcing a seven-fold increase in capital spending for schools in 2008-11, proclaiming it to be the “biggest commitment to improving schools for generations“.
Mr Gove says Labour was spending money that it didn’t have and is pulling back the capital budget by 60 per cent.
“We need to get more for less,” he said today.
Clearly, but it’s worth pointing out that the move will revert schools’ capital budgets to the state they were in 2002.
Yet in 2011, population growth sees us plagued by primary schools desperate for more space.
And FactCheck notes there’s still no word on where the funding will come from for the new Free Schools’ buildings.
By Emma Thelwell



There are 8 comments on this post
I have got to the stage of believing that Gove just doesn’t care whether he’s caught lying or not. He does it ALL THE TIME, doesn’t get so much as a tap on the knuckles, let alone a rap. Capital budgets as they were in 2002? What’s next? NHS budgets from 1992?
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this government really isn’t very good at numbers: does it not understand how much information flow has changed in the last few years and that nowadays ministers utterances are checked…
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Well, it seems he was right, he just forgot to inflation proof his numbers… it is true that this parliament will be spending more than either of Labour’s first two terms did individually on school buildings; 2002 was well into Labour’s second term, so I don’t think spending the same amount as then can really be all that bad.
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Dont forget that some/much of this governments Capital spending for schools will be on “free” schools and academies, Mr goves pet projects. Spending for normal schools within LEAs will be cut drastically.
why is it a new Free school can get upwards of a half a million pounds to set itself up when good quality surrounding schools will get their capital allowances cut?
challenge Mr Gove to remove his politically motivated free schools and academics from the figures, show us how bad the cuts REALLY are?
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Hi aj – Emma from FactCheck here. Yes the government won’t tell us yet how it plans to fund the Free Schools buildings – other than the fact the money will come from the DfE budget. We will keep asking though! The IFS has been grumbling about that too – told me yesterday that there should be more transparency.
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The reason Gove didn’t say, as his department suggests, that
“the annual capital budget will be higher than the average annual capital budget in the 1997-98 to 2004-05 period.”
is that it would be met with a blank look from the vast majority of the electorate.
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“Yet in 2011, population growth sees us plagued by primary schools desperate for more space.”
Tell me about it. The primary where I’m a governor has to take in two extra classes (60 children in total) every year for at least the next three years and the children will be taught in portakabins. Added to that we will also have to accomodate in a decrepit canteen with a leaking roof which is aready too small for the 400 pupils we have. And the response from the local authority at a recent meeting was too bad, you’ll have to make do. That is how much this government cares for children setting out on what is the most critical stage in their life.
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I suppose if you are as wealthy as most cabinet members then inflation doesn’t affect you too much but in terms of school building – especially when money is being syphoned off for Private schools to become Free Schools – it will make a colossal difference.
Nothing it seems is safe with this government and certainly nothing they say is what it seems to be.
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