The Chancellor concluded his statement at 1.38pm.
There will be no cuts in the police budget at all, with funding protected in real terms.
Chancellor George Osborne today ruled out any cuts in police budgets in England and Wales.
Foreign Office budget protected in real terms.
Overseas aid budget to increase £16.3 billion by 2020.
New 3% surcharge on stamp duty for buy-to-let properties and second homes from April 2016, raising almost £1 billion.
Department for Work and Pensions resource budget cut by 14%.
Conditions for benefits to be extended to more than one million more claimants, with those signing on required to attend jobcentre every week for the first three months.
Apprenticeship levy set at 0.5% of employer’s pay bill from April 2017, with £15,000 allowance for each employer.
Part-time students to receive maintenance loans and tuition fee loans to be made available in further education, benefiting a total of 250,000 students.
Total financial support for education and childcare to increase by £10 billion, and new national funding formula to be introduced for schools from 2017.
National Citizens Service to be expanded to 300,000 places.
Investment of £23 billion in school buildings and 600,000 new school places, with 500 new free schools and University Technical Colleges.
Nursery sector funding to increase by £300 million.
New support worth £20 million for social impact bonds.
UK Sport receives 29% increase in budget.
Business department budget cut by 17%, but science budget protected in real terms, rising to £4.7 billion.
Extension of small business rate relief scheme for another year and support for aerospace and automotive industries confirmed for the next decade at current level.
Reforms to compensation culture to cut more than £1 billion from cost of motor insurance, which could save motorists £40 to £50 a year.
New domestic energy scheme to replace ECO will save 24 million households an average of £30 a year.
Renewable Heat Incentive to be reduced by £700 million and energy intensive industries to be permanently exempted from environmental tariffs.
Support for climate finance to increase by 50% over the next five years, but Department for Energy and Climate Change budget to be cut by 22%.
Spending on energy research to be doubled, and a new Shale Wealth Fund of up to £1 billion for communities affected by fracking industry. Support for low carbon electricity and renewables to more than double.
Environment department day to day budget cut by 15%, but £2 billion committed to protect 300,000 homes from flooding.
Transport spending to include electrification of TransPennine, Midland Mainline and Great Western, £11 billion for London infrastructure, and £250 million to relieve pressure from Operation Stack on Kent roads, as well as £300 million for cycling and £5 billion on road maintenance.
Department for Transport operational budget cut by 37%, but transport capital spending to increase by 50% to £61 billion.
Scottish block grant more than £30 billion by 2019/20 and capital spending to rise by £1.9 billion in the years to 2021.
New funding floor for Wales set at 115%, and legislation to allow the devolution of income tax to Wales without a referendum. Welsh block grant to reach almost £15 billion by 2019/20 and capital spending to rise by more than £900 million.
Northern Ireland block grant to be more than £11 billion by 2019/20 and funding for capital investment in infrastructure to rise by more than £600 million over five years.
By the end of this Parliament, local government to be spending the same in cash terms as it does now.
Councils to be allowed to spend 100% of receipts from sold assets to improve local services and encouraged to draw on reserves.
Councils to receive an additional £10 million to help homeless people.
Uniform business rate to be abolished and local government to keep revenue from business rates by the end of the Parliament.
Chancellor sets aside £12 billion for Local Growth Fund and announces 26 new or extended Enterprise Zones, including Carlisle, Dorset and Ipswich.
Savings credit to be frozen at current level.
Basic state pension to rise by £3.35 next year to £119.30 a week.
Additional £1.5 billion for local authorities by 2019/20 through the Better Care Fund.
Local authorities with responsibility for social care to be allowed to levy a new precept of up to 2% on council tax, bringing almost £2 billion more into the care system.
Additional £600 million for mental health.
NHS funding to deliver £5 billion for health research, 800,000 more elective hospital admissions, 5 million more out patient appointments, 2 million more diagnostic tests, new hospitals in Cambridge, Sandwell and Brighton, and cancer testing within four weeks.
Commitment to £10 billion real terms increase in the health service budget delivered in full, with the first £6 billion delivered up front next year. NHS budget to rise from £101 billion today to £120 billion by 2020/21.
Abolition of cap on student nurse numbers, to create up to 10,000 new training places.
Day to day spending of Government departments to fall by an average of 0.78% a year in real terms, compared to 2% over the last five years.
Public spending of £756 billion this year, then £773 billion, £787 billion, £801 billion in subsequent years, reaching £821 billion in 2019/20 and £857 billion 2020/21.
State spending to hit 36.5% in five years – down from 45% in 2010.
Cabinet Office budget cut by 26%, Treasury budget by 24% and the cost of all Whitehall administration cut by £1.9 billion.
Every individual and small business to have their own digital tax account by the end of the decade.
HM Revenue and Customs to make savings 18% in its own budget and invest an extra £800 million in the fight against tax evasion.
Borrowing forecast for this year cut from £74.1 billion to £73.5 billion, falling to £49.9 billion, £24.8 billion and £4.6 billion in subsequent years, reaching a surplus of £10.1 billion in 2019/20 and £14.7 billion in 2020/21.
Deficit to be 3.9% of national income this year, then 2.5% in 2016/17 and 1.2% and 0.2% in subsequent years, before moving to surplus of 0.5% in 2019/20 and 0.6% the following year.
Housing benefit for new social tenants to be capped at same level as private sector and housing benefit and pension credit payments to be stopped for people who leave the country for more than one month.
The Government will breach its welfare cap in the first years of this Parliament, but meet it in the later part.
Minimum income floor for Universal Credit to rise in line with the National Living Wage.
Tax credit taper rate and thresholds to remain unchanged, with a disregard of £2,500, avoiding changes all together.
The Government will borrow £8 billion less than forecast and spend £12 billion more on capital investments.
Mr Osborne said the Spending Review was designed to make Britain “the most prosperous and secure of all the major nations of the world”.
Four-year public spending plans are forecast to deliver a surplus as well as falling debt in every year that follows, said the Chancellor.
Welfare savings totalling £12 billion will be “delivered in full… in a way that helps families”.
Since 2010, no economy in the G7 has grown faster than Britain, said the Chancellor.
Office for Budget Responsibility forecasts GDP of 2.4% in 2015, then 2.4% in 2016, 2.5% in 2017, 2.4% in 2018 and 2.3% in 2019 and 2020.
OBR forecasts that the economy grows “robustly every year”, living standards rise every year and more than one million extra jobs will be created over five years, says the Chancellor.
OBR has certified that the Government’s economic plan delivers on the commitment to reach surplus by 2019/20 and reduce debt to GDP ratio every year of this Parliament.
Debt forecast to be 82.5% of national income this year – down from 83.6% at time of July Budget.
Debt to fall to 81.7% next year, then 79.9% in 2017/18, 77.3% in 2018/19, 74.3% in 2019/20 and 71.3% in 2020/21.
Combined effects of better tax receipts and lower debt interest means a £27 billion improvement in public finances compared to July Budget.
The Chancellor of the Exchequer, George Osborne, rose to give his Spending Review and Autumn Statement to the House of Commons at 12.33pm.