What Labour says it will cost

£82.9bn

Early years education £5.6bn

Expand free tuition through supply-side funding model, increased funding rate, reopen SureStart centres, fund for adapting foster homes for disabled children

Schools £5.5bn

Raise three-year spending increase from 2019-20 to £25bn, introduce arts pupil premium, extend free school meals to all primary pupils, other funding

Skills and lifelong learning £4.7bn

Restore education maintenance allowance, equalise 16-19 funding with Key Stage 4, free KS3 and KS4+ with maintenance grants, restore Esol funding

Higher education £13.6bn

Abolish tuition fees and restore maintenance grants for full-time and part-time students

Health £6.9bn

Raise average annual funding growth to 4.3% in real terms, including funding for public health and Health Education England. Free dentistry, prescriptions and car parking for NHS England

Social care £10.8bn

Introduce free personal care for over 65s and fill existing projected funding gap

Work and pensions £9bn

Reforms to universal credit, scrap bedroom tax and reforms to bereavement support payments, raise carer’s allowance to jobseeker's allowance, extend maternity and paternity rights and pay. Restore pension credit and housing benefit eligibility for mixed-age couples, uprate state pension of British pensioners overseas

Culture, media and sport £2.6bn

Free TV licences for over 75s, British Broadband costs

Local govt excl adult social care £6.1bn

Additional funding through revenue support grant.

Funding to tackle homelessness

Public sector pay catch-up £5.3bn

Barnett consequentials £10.3bn

Mechanism to automatically adjust public expenditure allocated to Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales

Other £2.5bn

Inc national youth service, peace fund, 5,000 extra firefighters, vehicle scrappage and justice reforms

How Labour says it will pay for it

£82.9bn

Income tax £5.4bn

Additional rate payable from £80,000 and new super-rich rate payable from £125,000

Corporate taxation £30bn

Gradually reverse cuts to corporation tax to reach 21% (small profits rate) and 26% (main rate). Unitary taxation of multinationals

Taxing income from wealth equitably and efficiently £14bn

Tax capital gains and tax dividends at income tax rates

Financial transactions tax £8.8bn

Extend stamp duty reserve tax

Fair tax Programme £6.2bn

Tackling tax avoidance and evasion

Tax reliefs and expenditures £8.3bn

Efficiency review of corporate tax reliefs, reform of R&D funding

Other £10.2bn

Reverse cuts to inheritance tax and bank levy, impose VAT on private school fees, scrap married persons’ allowance, introduce a second homes tax. (Includes additional tax revenue from fiscal multiplier)

How Labour says it will pay for it

What Labour says it will cost

£82.9bn

£82.9bn

Early years education £5.6bn

Expand free tuition through supply-side funding model, increased funding rate, reopen SureStart centres, fund for adapting foster homes for disabled children

Income tax £5.4bn

Additional rate payable from £80,000 and new super-rich rate payable from £125,000

Corporate taxation £30bn

Gradually reverse cuts to corporation tax to reach 21% (small profits rate) and 26% (main rate). Unitary taxation of multinationals

Schools £5.5bn

Raise three-year spending increase from 2019-20 to £25bn, introduce arts pupil premium, extend free school meals to all primary pupils, other funding

Taxing income from wealth equitably and efficiently £14bn

Tax capital gains and tax dividends at income tax rates

Skills and lifelong learning £4.7bn

Restore education maintenance allowance, equalise 16-19 funding with Key Stage 4, free KS3 and KS4+ with maintenance grants, restore Esol funding

Financial transactions tax £8.8bn

Extend stamp duty reserve tax

Higher education £13.6bn

Abolish tuition fees and restore maintenance grants for full-time and part-time students

Fair tax Programme £6.2bn

Tackling tax avoidance and evasion

Health £6.9bn

Raise average annual funding growth to 4.3% in real terms, including funding for public health and Health Education England. Free dentistry, prescriptions and

car parking for NHS England

Tax reliefs and expenditures £8.3bn

Efficiency review of corporate tax reliefs, reform of R&D funding

Other £10.2bn

Reverse cuts to inheritance tax and bank levy, impose VAT on private school fees, scrap married persons’ allowance, introduce a second homes tax. (Includes additional tax revenue from fiscal multiplier)

Social care £10.8bn

Introduce free personal care for over 65s and fill existing projected funding gap

Work and pensions £9bn

Reforms to universal credit, scrap bedroom tax and reforms to bereavement support payments, raise carer’s allowance to jobseeker's allowance, extend maternity and paternity rights and pay. Restore pension credit and housing benefit eligibility for mixed-age couples, uprate state pension of British pensioners overseas

Culture, media and sport £2.6bn

Free TV licences for over 75s, British Broadband costs

Local govt excl adult social care £6.1bn

Additional funding through revenue support grant.

Funding to tackle homelessness

Public sector pay catch-up £5.3bn

Barnett consequentials £10.3bn

Mechanism to automatically adjust public expenditure allocated to Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales

Other £2.5bn

Inc national youth service, peace fund, 5,000 extra firefighters, vehicle scrappage and justice reforms