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Spending Review: 2.6 million families 'will be £1,600 a year worse off' after benefit changes

Up to 2.6 million working families could be an average of £1,600 worse off a year as a result of benefit changes announced in Chancellor George Osborne's Spending Review, according to independent economic experts.

Despite Mr Osborne's decision to scrap proposed cuts to tax credits due to come in next April, the Institute of Fiscal Studies says the introduction of the new Universal Credit, which consolidates a number of existing benefits, will result in the cut in cash for affected households.

The IFS also says Mr Osborne was "lucky" to receive a £27 billion windfall which allowed him to perform his U-turn on tax credits, adding the Chancellor will "need his luck to hold out" if he is to meet his target of a surplus by 2019/20 without raising taxes or imposing further spending reductions.

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N. Ireland, Wales and Scotland to get grant increases

  • Northern Ireland’s block grant will be over £11bn by 2019-20 – and funding for capital investment in new infrastructure will rise by over £600m over 5 years.
  • Wales' block grant will reach almost £15bn by 2019-20 – and capital spending will rise by over £900m over 5 years.
  • Scotland's block grant will be over £30bn in 2019-20 – while capital spending available will rise by £1.9bn

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