£120m has been set aside for free school meals and childcare funding, Welsh Government Finance Minister Rebecca Evans has today announced in a three year budget to “support the Wales of today and shape the Wales of tomorrow.”

In the budget, the Welsh NHS will be “supported to provide effective, high quality and sustainable healthcare”, and help in its ongoing response to and recovery from the pandemic, with an additional £1.3bn in direct funding.

The budget will “tackle inequality and invest in future generations” through an additional £320m to continue a long-term programme of learning and education reform.

This includes an additional £30million for childcare and early years provision; £40millionfor Flying Start and Families First; £90million for free school meals; £64.5million for wider schools and curriculum reform; and £63.5million investment in post 16 provision.

On top of this, £900m capital funding will improve the quality of school buildings through the 21st century schools programme.

Local authorities will receive close to an additional £0.75bn providing funding to schools, social care and other vital services.

In 2022-23 more than £250m will be provided for social services, including £180m within the local government settlement, direct investment of £45m and £50m of additional social care capital.

Wales’ response to the climate and nature emergency will be supported with targeted, green investment of an additional £160m revenue and a total capital investment of £1.8bn.

It includes funding to support the Programme for Government commitment to a national forest as well as biodiversity, active travel, the circular economy, renewable energy, flooding, and decarbonising housing. £1.6bn capital will be invested in providing good quality housing, including £1bn for social housing and £375m for building safety.

Rebecca Evans, Minister for Finance and Local Government, said: “This budget will support the Wales of today and shape the Wales of tomorrow.

“It will support our public services to be stronger, put Wales further down the path to being a net zero nation, and create a fairer nation with equality at its heart.

“We are still operating in a difficult financial context, with our budget nearly £3bn lower than if it had increased in line with the economy since 2010-11.

“Revenue funding is increasing by less than half a per cent in real terms between 2022-23 and 2024-25, and overall capital funding is falling in cash terms in each year of the Spending Review period – 11 per cent lower in real terms in 2024-25 than the current year.

“The UK Government’s Spending Review did not deliver for Wales and this budget is delivered in that context.

“While there are tough choices ahead, we have been able to provide funding that will allow Wales to rise to the challenges we face, grounded in the distinctively Welsh values of environmental, social and economic justice.

“Where the Spending Review was silent on the climate and nature emergency, we are taking action. Where the Spending Review did not support coal tip safety, we are stepping up.

“And where the Spending Review failed to address regional inequality, we are investing in every part of Wales and making meaningful investment in tackling inequality.

“This is a budget to kickstart delivery of our ambitious and bold Programme for Government and I am proud to publish it, providing the foundations for recovery and moving us towards a stronger, fairer, greener Wales.”

The budget contains funding to support commitments in the Co-operation Agreement signed between the Welsh Government and Plaid Cymru, and will deliver the commitments in the updated Programme for Government.