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Key figures from British spending review

Here are the main facts and figures from the spending review delivered by British finance minister George Osborne, which ushered in the deepest cuts for decades to reduce a record deficit.

JOB LOSSES

- 490,000 public sector jobs expected to be lost over four years, to be achieved through retirement and redundancies

MINISTRY CUTS AND SAVINGS

- Average 19% cuts to departmental budgets over four years
- Savings of £6 billion sterling in government department administration costs

DEBT and DEFICIT

- £109 billion structural budget deficit to be eliminated by 2015
- Britain currently paying £43 billion a year in debt interest at a rate of £120m a day
- Debt interest payments in 2014-2015: £63 billion
- Public spending cut to 2008 levels in real terms.

TOTAL GOVERNMENT SPENDING

2011-2012: £702 billion
2012-2013: £713 billion
2013-2014: £724 billion
2014-2015: £740 billion

BUDGET CHANGES AT KEY MINISTRIES

Defence: Budget cut by 7.5%
Education: Budget cut by 3.4%
Foreign Office: Budgeet cut by 24%
Health: Budget up by 1.3%
Home Office: Budget cut by 23%
International Development: Budget up by 37%
Work and Pensions: Budget up by 2.3%

PENSIONS

- State pension age for men and women to climb to 66 by 2020, saving £5 billion a year
- Employee contributions to increase
- £1.8 billion of savings to public sector pensions

WELFARE

- Accounts for third of all public spending
- Changes to save £7 billion a year
- Removing child benefit from higher-rate taxpayers to save £2.5 billion a year

MONARCHY
- One-year cash freeze in household expenses paid to Queen Elizabeth II and her husband Prince Philip
- Royal Household spending to fall by 14% in 2012-2013

CRIME and JUSTICE
- Police spending cut 4% each year

HEALTH

- This year £104 billion spent on health care, rising to £114 billion by 2014.
- Aiming to save up to £20 billion a year by 2014-2015 through efficiencies but money ploughed back into health care.

BROADCASTING

- BBC licence fee frozen for next six years - savings equivalent to 16% of BBC budget
- BBC to take role of funding World Service from the government, saving taxpayers £340m a year