• A freeze on hiring in the civil service until April 2011.
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• £10m savings on cutting down on first-class travel and £5m from restricting ministerial cars and drivers and getting members of the government to walk, use public transport or a pooled car.
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• The Cabinet Office, one of the smallest spending departments, will have to save £79m.
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• £600m from cutting public sector quangos.
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• Schools, 16- to 19-year-olds and Sure Start funding protected.
• £670m savings in the Department for Education.
• £80m saved by abolishing schools technology agency Becta and other savings in education quangos.
• £50m will be invested in further education colleges, particularly building programmes.
• £150m extra funding for 50,000 new adult apprenticeship places at small and medium-sized companies.
• There will be 10,000 fewer university places for this autumn than had been promised by Labour, this at a time of record demand.
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• Cuts totalling £535m in the Department for Work and Pensions.
• £320m savings by reducing then axing child trust funds.
• £320m by ending "ineffective" elements of employment programmes.
• Labour's key programme to persuade employers to improve workforce skills, Train to Gain, is being cut.
• Extra £20m funding for respite care, to pay for 8,000 week-long breaks for people caring for severely-disabled children.
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• £780m cuts in the Department for Communities and Local Government.
• £1.2bn reduction to local authority grants, though the main grant, the £29bn formula grant, is untouched.
• £270m by scrapping "lower value" spending by regional development agencies.
• Retaining £150m cuts in housing identified by Labour, but providing an extra £170m to fund 4,000 social housing.
• Removing £1.7bn ringfencing of other council grants.
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• The core NHS budget is protected.
• Savings expected to be dominated by cuts to quangos, with money saved to be recycled in the NHS budget.
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• "Great majority" of £6.243bn of spending cuts will be used to cut the 2010-11 deficit, which was previously estimated at £163bn.
• British industrial growth could be hit by the £836m of cuts at the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills.
• Possible targets for cuts include an £80m loan to Sheffield Forgemasters, a £20m loan to Nissan to develop green cars, and £270m of support for General Motors/Vauxhall.
• £200m of the BIS savings will be "recycled", funding 50,000 adult apprenticeship starts and capital investment in some Further Education colleges.
• Cuts will be made to the "Train to Gain" skills scheme.
• On unemployment, the Young Person's Guarantee scheme stays, but the temporary jobs option is being dropped, saving £290m.
• Cuts in IT projects and consultancy will hurt outsourcing companies.
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The Home Office budget is to be cut by £367m:
• £34m from increased immigration and visa fees, and criminal asset recovery receipts.
• £135m from police efficiency savings.
• £82m from arms-length bodies, including NPIA (£30m) and SOCA (£10m).