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Chancellor of the Exchequer
AUTUMN BUDGET 2017 Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond 22 November 2017
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State of the UK economy “economy continues to confound those who talk it down' - future 'full of change, full of challenges and full of new opportunities”
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State of the UK economy “The bit with the ‘long economicky words’ in it…..” OBR forecasts: GDP to grow 1.5% in 2017 1.4% 2018 1.3% in (in March this was forecasted as 2%).
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State of the UK economy OBR forecasts: Government borrowing to fall:
Forecasted at £49.9bn this year - £8.4bn lower than forecast at the Spring Budget. Borrowing will fall every year of the forecast - from £39.5bn (2018) to £25.6bn in , to reach lowest level in 20 years.
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State of the UK economy OBR forecasts:
UK's debt, as a percentage of economic output, or GDP, is expected to fall from 2.4% this year to 1.9% next year. The OBR forecasts the deficit to be 1.3% of GDP in , giving £14.8bn of headroom against the 2% target.
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State of the UK economy OBR forecasts:
Another 600,000 people in work by 2022.
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Infrastructure Vehicle Excise Duty increased for most polluting diesel cars (but not on business vans) £400m for electric car charging infrastructure (those charging electric vehicles at work will not face taxes) £500m investment in 5G, broadband and Artificial Intelligence
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Investment Allocating a further £2.3 billion for investment in R&D (research and development) and increase main R&D tax credit to 12%. Ambition to drive up R&D investment across the economy to 2.4% of GDP. National Productivity Investment Fund extended for a further year and expanded to over £31bn. Help for technology future by unlocking over £20bn of new investment in UK scale-up businesses, including through a new fund in the British Business Bank.
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Education £20m to support FE colleges with introducing T levels
£600 maths premium for extra pupils taking A level or Core maths in England’s schools Maths: £40m for attract more maths teachers Computing: triple number of computer science teachers to 12,000; new national centre for computing. National retraining scheme for digital expertise.
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Regional Policies Extra £2bn for Scotland, £1.2bn for Wales and £650m for NI £1.7bn Transforming Cities fund to deliver better transport Scottish police and fire services to get refunds on VAT from April 2018.
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Welfare Universal Credit waiting time reduced – other reforms to UC
Repayment on advances for those claiming UC will be extended from 6 to 12 months National Living wage will rise by 4.4% in April, from £7.50 ph to £7.83 (extra £600 pa for FT workers) Income tax-free personnel allowance will rise to £11,850 in April (Higher-rate tax threshold to increase to £46,350) £125m of funding to help 140,000 people.
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Duties Duties on wines, spirits and beers will be frozen.
Duties of cigarettes and rolling tobacco to rise New rail card for those aged allowing 30% off fares Cancelled fuel duty rise that was set for next April Short haul and long-haul economy Air Passenger Duty frozen, but will rise on premium tickets.
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Health £10.8bn of investment for the NHS, plus an additional £2.8bn for NHS England. £350m for this winter Further money will be made available if the pay review body recommend an increase in wages for NHS staff £10bn capital investment fund for hospitals.
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Tax Offshore tax avoidance to be tackled – brining in a further £200m (charge more tax on royalties relating to UK sales when those royalties are paid to a low tax jurisdiction) VAT tax threshold not altered. The point at which small businesses pay VAT will be kept at £85,000 Online VAT fraud to be tackled Tax avoidance schemes to save £4.8bn by £200m a year extra from income tax on UK sales for digital companies.
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Housing £44bn over next 5 years to support the housing market
Housing market to grow by over 3000,000 homes per year by mid-2020s Continue to protect green belt – houses targeted at urban areas Local authorities will now have the power to charge a 100% council tax premium on empty properties. The government will invest £28m in three new “Housing First” pilots in the West Midlands, Manchester and Liverpool to support homelessness 5 new ‘garden towns’ to be built Stamp duty to be abolished for all first-time buyers up to £300,000 (it will also be available on the first £300,000 of the purchase price of properties up to £500,000).
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Brexit £3bn set aside for Brexit preparations.
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