Contents
- Issues of the medium term financial strategy
- Medium term financial strategy
- Change in financial planning assumptions
- Budget pressures, growth, inflation, council tax and business rates
- Collection fund
- Fees and charges
- Risk Strategy
- Reserve and contingency strategy
- Transformation
- Capital programme
- Treasury
- Strategy milestones
- Risk and mitigation measures
- Comments of the director of finance and corporate services
- Comments of the monitoring officer
- Summary of legal implications
1. Issues of the medium term financial strategy
The budget for 2025/26 and Council Tax for the financial year was agreed by Council on 5 March 2025.
This report follows on from the last Medium Term Financial Strategy report presented to Public Cabinet on 24 February 2025 and extends to the 2029/30 financial year. This provides an update on the Council’s financial estimates and projections over the medium term (2026/27 to 2029/30) based on information currently known.
Setting the Council’s annual revenue budget has become an increasingly challenging process over recent years. The Council successfully set a balanced budget for 2025/26 against a series of challenging circumstances including a growing and ageing population, an increase in demand and cost of services, policy changes such as the increase in National Insurance Employers Contribution and an elevated interest rate environment compared to previous years. Many of these challenges continue, particularly within Children’s and Adult Social Care, SEN transport and Housing, where there is increasing demand, higher unit costs, and greater competition, because of changing market conditions. Inflation pressures and its impact across a range of services alongside pay settlements continue to present a financial challenge to Bexley.
When setting the 2025/26 budget, a medium term budget gap of £32.658m was forecast for 2026/27 increasing to £43.893 by 2028/29. This assumed that there is an increase of 1.99% on Council Tax and 2.00% for Adult Social Care Precept for 2026/27 onwards.
| 2026/27 | 2027/28 | 2028/29 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| £’m | £’m | £’m | |
| Budget Gap Reported to Public Cabinet February 2025 | 32.658 | 38.490 | 43.893 |
If the future Local Government Finance Settlement provides for social care grants to continue throughout the medium term and permits for Council Tax to be levied at 2025/26 levels of 4.99% (as confirmed in the Spending Review), this would significantly reduce the budget gap in 2026/27 onwards, to £11.794m in 2026/27, £15.977m in 2027/28, £19.576m in 2028/29 and £20.819m in 2029/30.
The Autumn Budget on 30 October 2024, where the Chancellor of the Exchequer confirmed the overall funding totals for 2025/26, included an outline of the approach that will be taken at Spending Review 2025 (published on 11 June 2025), referring to it as “Phase 2” (with this 2025/26 Budget representing phase 1, which was announced alongside the 2024 Autumn budget).
Highlighted key future pressures relevant to 2026/27 onwards
The Council continues to face ongoing and increasing pressures in relation to:
Highlighted key changes (policy and legislation)
Proposed policy and legislative changes could have significant operational and financial impacts on the council. The key changes are outlined below, with the remaining legislative changes contained in Appendix B.
In order to address these challenges, the Council is continuing to plan early to ensure we are able to deliver a balanced budget for 2026/27 whilst at the same time reduce the budget gap in future years. The financial assumptions within the strategy remain under continuous review and will be reported to Public Cabinet at future meetings throughout 2025/26.
Options
This report sets out the latest Medium Term Financial Strategy over the period 2026/27 to 2029/30. This covers a further financial year from the report presented to Public Cabinet on 24 February 2025.
The Council has a duty to set a balanced budget and agree its Council Tax before the statutory deadline in March 2026. Council will consider the 2026/27 budget on 5 March 2026.
Proposed decisions
Cabinet is recommended:
- to note the current planning assumptions used in the Medium Term Financial Strategy for 2026/27 to 2029/30
- to note the latest forecast position for the Medium Term Financial Strategy
- to note the transformation programme update on this agenda, that is the primary approach for setting a balanced budget for 2026/27, noting the Medium Term Financial Strategy will be updated once the modelling has been completed
- to note a further report is due at Public Cabinet late 2025 which will provide a further update on the Council’s Medium Term Financial Strategy
Reasons
Based on the latest information on external funding and known income and expenditure pressures the Council now has a budget gap of £32.658m was forecast for 2026/27 increasing to £46.842m by 2029/30.
The Council is under a legal duty to set a balanced and sustainable budget and maintain adequate reserves such that it can deliver its statutory duties and Council priorities.
A Medium Term Financial Strategy covering the entirety of the resources available to the Council is considered to be the best way that resource prioritisation and allocation decisions can be considered and agreed in a way that provides a stable and considered approach to service delivery and considers relevant risks and uncertainty.