By Esmée Hardwick-Slack
Philip Hammond delivered his third Budget as Chancellor on October 29th, announcing the governments planned spending over the next 12 months.
Here are the key points from the announcement:
Business & digital
- New 2% digital service tax on UK revenue of large tech companies, from April 2020
- Profitable companies with global sales of more than £500m will be liable
- Small retail businesses in England will see business rates reduced by a third
- The annual investment allowance is to rise five-fold from £200,000 to £1 million for two years
- Reforms to individuals working under IR35 are to be extended to the private sector from April 2020
- New 100% mandatory business rates relief for all lavatories made available for public use
- £900m business rates relief for small businesses and £650m to rejuvenate High Streets
- Measure to benefit 90% of independent shops, pubs and restaurants, cutting bills by £8,000
- Contribution of small companies to apprenticeship levy to be reduced from 10% to 5%
- New centre of excellence to manage existing deals “in tax payer’s interest.”
- Private finance initiative (PFI) contracts to be abolished in future
Personal taxation & wages
- The personal allowance threshold (the rate at which people start paying income tax at 20%) is to rise to £12,500 in April – after which the rate will rise in line with inflation
- The higher-rate income tax threshold (the rate at which people start paying tax at 40%) to rise from £46,350 up to £50,000 in April – after which the rate will rise in line with inflation
- A 4.9% increase will see the national living wage set at £8.21 an hour for over-25s, from April 2019
Housing
- Stamp duty land tax abolished for first-time buyers of shared-ownership homes worth up to £500,000
- £500m for the Housing infrastructure Fund to enable 650,000 homes to be built
- Letting relief limited to properties where the owner is in shared occupancy with the tenant
- New partnerships with housing associations in England to deliver 13,000 homes
- Guarantees of up to £1bn for smaller house-builders
Duties
- Beer, cider and spirits duties to remain unchanged for 2019/20
- Cost of a bottle of wine duty to rise by inflation plus 2%, in February 2019
- A packet of 20 cigarettes to go up by 33p
- A ten gram pack of cigars to go up by 17p
- Fuel duty to be frozen for ninth year in a row
- Remote Gaming Duty to increase by 21% for online gambling on “games of chance” from 2019
Welfare & pensions
- Work allowances for universal credit to be increased by £1.7bn
- 2.4 million working families with children to benefit by £630 a year
- An extra £1bn to help welfare claimants transfer to the new consolidated benefit
Economy
- Chancellor said the era of austerity is “finally coming to an end.”
- 2018 growth forecast downgraded to 1.3% from 1.5% in March
- The forecast for 2019 raised from 1.3% to 1.6% and annual forecasts raised to 1.4%, 1.4%, 1.5% and 1.6% in 2020, 2021, 2022 and 2023 respectively.
- 3.3 million more people in work since 2010 and 800,000 more jobs forecast by 2022
- Wages growth at its highest in nearly a decade
Public Finances
- Public borrowing in 2018 to be £11.6bn lower than forecast in March, representing 1.2% of GDP, the total value of goods and services.
- Borrowing as a share of GDP to rise to 1.4% next year
- Borrowing to total £31.8bn, £26.7bn, £23.8bn and £19.8bn in next five years.
- Debt as share of GDP peaked at 85.2% in 2016-17, falling to 83.7% this year and to 74.1% by 2023-24.
- 1.2% annual average growth in departmental spending promised
Brexit
- Extra £500m for preparations for leaving EU
- Spring statement next March could be upgraded to full Budget if needed
- A commemorative 50p coin to mark the UK’s departure for the EU
Defence & security
- An extra £160m for counter-terrorism police
- An extra £1bn for armed forces, for cyber-capabilities and the UK’s nuclear submarine programme.
- £10m for mental health care for veterans, to mark the centenary of the Armistice which brought WWI to an end
- £1m to fund school trips to WWI Battlefields
- £1.7m in Holocaust education programmes to mark the 75th anniversary of the liberation of Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, in Northern Germany
Education & health
- Confirmation of an extra £20.5bn for the NHS over the next five years
- An extra £2bn a year for mental health services
- New mental health crisis centres to provide support in every accident and emergency unit in the country
- More mental health ambulances and a 24-hour mental health crisis hotline
- An extra £700m for councils to care for the elderly and those with disabilities
- £10m for air ambulances
- A one-off £400m “bonus” to help schools buy “the little extras they need” this year
- Funding for 10 University Enterprise Zones
Transport
- A £30bn package for England’s roads, including repairs to motorways and potholes
- A 30% growth in infrastructure spending
- Opening the use of e-passport gates at airports – currently available to people from Europe – to those from the USA, Canada, New Zealand, Australia and Japan
- Air Passenger Duty to be indexed in line with inflation
Environment
- A new tax on plastic packaging which does not contain 30% recyclable material
- No tax on takeaway coffee cups, but to be reconsidered if the industry doesn’t make enough progress
- £60m for planting trees in England
- £10m to deal with abandoned waste sites
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