London, UK September - 27 2024: Theatre Royal Haymarket interior with an audience seated and waiting for a performance to begin.
When Chancellor Rachel Reeves rose in Parliament to outline the new government’s first spending review, arts leaders listened with equal parts hope and trepidation. The creative industries, hailed just days earlier as a pillar of Britain’s economic revival, were again in the spotlight, but the numbers behind the rhetoric paint an uneasy picture.
Reeves confirmed plans to unlock £132.5 million in dormant assets to “get young people involved in music, drama and sport,” framing culture as a vital tool for social mobility. She also listed the creative industries among the “growth-driving sectors” intended to pull the nation out of sluggish productivity.
Yet tucked inside the Treasury tables is a 1.4 per cent real-terms cut to the Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) over the review period. Even more striking is a 15 per cent reduction to the department’s own administration budget by 2030, effectively shrinking the civil-service workforce tasked with delivering policy.
For Caroline Norbury, chief executive of Creative UK, the dual message is bittersweet. “The government has firmly recognised the creative economy’s strategic potential,” she said, “but potential requires fuel. We need long-term certainty, not headline platitudes.”
No one voiced frustration more bluntly than Equity general secretary Paul Fleming. “These cuts are a self-imposed injury to a growth-driving sector,” he argued. “One day ministers hail us as critical to economic strategy; the next they slash the very department that nurtures us.”
Fleming’s critique lands amid a cost-of-living crisis that has already hollowed out theatre workforces and forced touring companies to shelve productions. Grants remain frozen while inflation drives up energy and materials costs. A leaner DCMS could mean slower grant processing, fewer sector specialists, and less policy clout when culture must compete with defence or health for political attention.
Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy countered the gloom by trumpeting “nearly £3 billion in capital funding” earmarked for sports facilities, youth centres, and cultural institutions. Roughly £2.9 billion will go to safeguarding heritage sites and modernising museums and theatres across the country.
But theatre leaders warn that bricks and mortar alone won’t keep the stage lights on. Claire Walker and Hannah Essex, co-chief executives of SOLT and UK Theatre, stressed that one in four theatre organisations ran a deficit last year, with nearly 40 per cent of venues warning of closure without urgent investment. “Savings must come from administrative efficiencies,” they wrote, “not by stripping back core investment in the sector.”
Behind today’s press statements lies a harsher reality: audience numbers outside London have yet to rebound to pre-pandemic levels; insurance costs have soared; and local authorities, themselves facing budget cuts, can no longer fill the gap. Every pound trimmed from DCMS multiplies the risk that small regional theatres, youth orchestras, or grassroots dance companies will simply vanish.
The dormant-assets scheme is a welcome shot in the arm for youth programmes, but it is one-off money, weighted toward sports as much as culture. Meanwhile, real-terms erosion of day-to-day spending threatens the pipeline of training, touring, and talent development that underpins the entire creative ecosystem.
Arts organisations have endured a decade of austerity, a pandemic shutdown, and now a cost-of-living crunch. With each wave of pressure, the sector has innovated: hybrid performances, immersive exhibitions, outdoor festivals. Yet resilience has limits. As Fleming notes, “You cannot keep asking a growth sector to sprint on a starvation diet.”
In the coming weeks, DCMS officials will translate the spending review into departmental priorities. The devil will lurk in grant frameworks, tax-relief thresholds, and local authority settlements. Industry voices will lobby for clearer roadmaps, stronger workforce support, and a genuine partnership approach, less headline, more substance.
Reeves’ pitch to voters is that growth should be “for everyone, everywhere.” If the government truly believes the creative industries are a cornerstone of that vision, it must match ambition with sustained investment. Otherwise, today’s “transformational boost” risks becoming tomorrow’s footnote in a catalogue of missed opportunities, an encore no one in the arts wants to stage.
Photo Credit: DepositPhotos.com
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