2017 Budget – quick summary
Philip Hammond has delivered his first Budget as chancellor. We will share a detailed report going over everything you and your business will need to be aware of soon, but in the meantime here is a summary to get you up to speed.
The main pull out points:
- No changes in National Insurance rates or to income tax or VAT for the employed or employees
- Personal tax-free allowance to rise as to £11,500 this year
- Increase in National Insurance rates for the self-employed
- Privately-owned SMEs to get extra year to prepare for tax digitisation and quarterly reporting
- Reduction in tax-free allowance on share dividends from £5,000 to £2,000
- Dividend income paid on shares held in a stocks and shares ISA will remain tax free
- Fuel duty frozen for a further year
- Funding of £5m to support people returning to work after a career break
The full summary of the key points taken from the BBC:
Personal taxation
- There will be no changes in National Insurance rates or to income tax or VAT for the employed or employees
- The personal tax-free allowance to rise as planned to £11,500 this year and to £12,500 by 2020
Increase in National Insurance rates for the self-employed
- The main rate of Class 4 National Insurance contributions for the self-employed to increase from 9% to 10% in April 2018 and 11% in April 2019
- The increases, applying to earnings between £8,060 and £43,000, will raise £145m a year by 2021-22 at an average cost of 60p a week to those affected. All Class 4 earnings above £43,000 will continue to be taxed at 2% while those below £8,060 will pay nothing.
- Class 2 National Insurance, a separate flat rate contribution paid by self-employed workers making a profit of more than £5,965 a year, is to be scrapped as planned in April 2018
- Taken together, millions of self-employed workers could pay an average of £240 a year more but ministers say those earning £16,250 or less will pay less
Business
- Privately-owned SMEs to get extra year to prepare for tax digitisation and quarterly reporting
- Rate rises for businesses losing existing relief will be capped at £50 a month
- £435m for firms affected by increases in business rates, including £300m hardship fund for worst hit
- Pubs with rateable value
- A £820m tax avoidance clampdown, including action to stop businesses converting capital losses into trading losses and introduction of UK VAT on roaming telecoms services outside the EU
Pensions and savings
- Reduction in tax-free allowance on share dividends from £5,000 to £2,000
- The measure, affecting small business owners and investors, will come into force in April 2018, raising £2.63bn by 2021-2022
- Dividend income paid on shares held in a stocks and shares ISA will remain tax free
- Measures to tackle abuse of overseas pension schemes
The state of the economy
- UK second-fastest growing economy in the G7 in 2016
- Growth forecast for 2017 upgraded from 1.4% to 2%. But GDP downgraded to 1.6%, 1.7%, 1.9% in subsequent years, then 2% in 2021-22
- Annual rate of inflation forecast to rise from 2.3% to 2.4% in 2017-18 before falling to 2.3% and 2.0% in subsequent years
- A further 650,000 people expected to be in employment by 2021
Alcohol, tobacco, gambling and fuel
- Fuel duty frozen for a further year
- Vehicle excise duty rates for hauliers and the HGV Road User Levy frozen for another year
- No increases in alcohol or tobacco duties on top of those previously announced
- A new minimum excise duty on cigarettes based on a packet price of £7.35
- Tobacco will rise by 2% above Retail Price Index (RPI) inflation, with a packet of 20 cigarettes costing 35p more
- Duty on beer, cider, wine and spirits will increase in line with RPI inflation
- This will equate to 2p on a pint of beer, 1p on a pint of cider, 36p on a bottle of whisky and 32p on a bottle of gin
Women
- New funding totalling £20m to support the campaign against violence against women and girls
- A further £5m committed to project to celebrate the centenary of women first getting the vote, and to educate young people about its significance
- Funding of £5m to support people returning to work after a career break
Public borrowing/ deficit/ spending
- Annual borrowing £51.7bn in 2016-17, £16.4bn lower than forecast
- Borrowing forecast to total £58.3bn in 2017-18, £40.6bn in 2018-19, £21.4bn in 2019-20 and £20.6bn in 2020-21
- Public sector net borrowing forecast to fall from 3.8% of GDP last year to 2.6% this year, then 2.9%, 1.9%, 1% and 0.9% in subsequent years, reaching 0.7% in 2021-22. But borrowing still predicted to be £100bn higher by 2020 than forecast in March 2016
- Debt rose to 86.6% this year, but will fall to 79.8% in 2021-22
Education (England only)
- £300m to support 1,000 new PhD places and fellowships in STEM (science, technology, engineering and maths) subjects
- Free school transport extended to all children on free school meals who attend a selective school
- Upgrade fund of £216m for existing schools
- £320m of funding for 110 new free schools and grammar schools
- New T-Levels to be introduced to give parity of esteem for technical education
- Number of hours of training for technical students aged 16 to 19 increased by more than 50%, including a high-quality, three-month work placement
Health and social care
- £100m to place more GPs in accident and emergency departments for next winter
- Additional £325m to allow the first NHS Sustainability and Transformation Plans to proceed
- An extra £2bn for social care
- Long-term funding options to be considered but so-called “death tax” on estates ruled out
- Most sugary soft drinks to be taxed at 24p per litre as part of plans to reduce childhood obesity
Housing/ infrastructure/ transport/ regions/ science
- Transport spending of £90m for the north of England and £23m for the Midlands to address pinch points on roads
- £690 million competition fund for English councils to tackle urban congestion
- £270m for new technologies such as robots and driverless vehicles
- £16m for 5G mobile technology and £200m for local broadband networks
- £250m in funding for Scottish Government, £200m for Welsh Government and £120m for Northern Ireland Executive
The source for this report is: www.bbc.co.uk