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UK Budget 2010/11

Hyde

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There has been many surprising news so far in UK budget so i thought of making a new thread. Who knows if anybody is interested to know about UK's next fiscal year's budget
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Budget: Osborne's 'tough' package puts VAT up to 20%


* VAT increase
* Public sector pay freeze
* Child benefit frozen
* Housing benefit cuts
* Disability Living Allowance cuts
* Tax cut for lowest paid
* Two year council tax freeze
* Capital Gains Tax increased
* Bank levy
* NI tax holiday for job creation outside South-East of England
Key points: At-a-glance Harman attacks 'reckless' Budget How the VAT rise will work UK to 'balance books' by 2016 In quotes: Budget reaction Readers' reactions to the Budget

Chancellor George Osborne increased VAT from 17.5% to 20% and cut welfare spending as he moved "decisively" to tackle Britain's record debts.

Child benefit and public sector pay will be frozen and 25% cut from public service spending - but alcohol, tobacco and fuel will escape tax hikes.

Unveiling his first Budget to MPs, Mr Osborne said "tough but fair" action on debt was "unavoidable".

But Labour said it was "reckless" and would "throw people out of work".

Acting Labour leader Harriet Harman said Mr Osborne's budget would stifle growth and hit hardest "those who can least afford it".

BBC Political Editor Nick Robinson described the financial statement as a "massive gamble economically and politically".

It represents a major departure from the previous government's economic policies, with business leaders saying they hoped it would be a "defining moment" in Britain's economic recovery.

But trade unions have warned hundreds of thousand of jobs could be lost in the public services, potentially wrecking local economies and sparking a "double-dip" recession.

Setting out his plans in the Commons, Mr Osborne said "decisive" action was needed to prevent a "catastrophic collapse" in economic confidence but stressed it would be done in a "fair" way with the better-off shouldering most of the burden.

"Everyone will pay something but the people at the bottom of the income scale will pay proportionately less than those at the top. This is a progressive Budget," he said to jeers from Labour MPs.

UK households, on average, will be about £400 a year worse off, Budget documents suggest, with the poorest 10% losing £200 and the richest £1,800, although the poorest will be hit harder than most as a percentage of their income.

Mr Osborne vowed to balance Britain's books within five years, with the bulk of the savings to come from cuts to benefits and public services rather than tax increases.

And he laid the blame for the state of the nation's finances squarely at the door of the previous Labour government, saying: "The years of debt and spending make this unavoidable."
'Biggest gamble'

Tax credits will be cut for families earning more than £40,000 a year - and there will be a two year pay freeze for public servants paid more than £21,000. Those earning less will get a £250 rise for two years.

Mr Osborne also announced real terms cuts across all government departments of 25% over four years - except health and foreign aid which are ringfenced.

Will Hutton, of the Work Foundation, who is advising the government on public sector pay, described the cuts as "brutal" and questioned whether they were achievable without wrecking the coalition government.

He described Mr Osborne's Budget as the "biggest gamble a post-war government has made".

The full details of the impact of the cuts will not be revealed until Wednesday 20 October, when Mr Osborne publishes his spending review.

The VAT increase, which Mr Osborne said would raise £13bn a year, is to come into effect in January.

Capital gains tax will be increased to 28% for top rate taxpayers - less than the 50% some Conservative backbenchers had feared. This will come into effect at midnight.

In other moves, Mr Osborne pledged to pledge to link pensions to earnings - or prices or 2.5% if they are higher.

Housing benefit will be reformed with a maximum limit of £400 a week, in a package saving £1.8bn a year by the end of the Parliament.

Other benefits to be cut include the health in pregnancy grant while the Sure Start maternity grant will be restricted to the first child only and lone parents will be expected to look for work when their youngest child goes to school.
Bank levy

But there will be an extra £150 a year for the poorest families, through changes to family tax credits.

The government is also to introduce a medical assessment for Disability Living Allowance from 2013 for new and existing claimants.

Mr Osborne also announced plans to help the low paid by raising personal tax allowances, taking an estimated 880,000 people out of the tax system and give millions of basic rate taxpayers a tax cut of £200 per year.

From January 2011, the government will introduce a bank levy, which will apply to the balance sheets of UK banks and building societies and the UK operations of foreign banks. Mr Osborne said the move would raise £2bn a year once it was fully in place.

Mr Osborne said public sector workers paid more than £21,000 a year would have a two year pay freeze with those paid less getting a flat pay increase of £250 for the next two years.

The plan is the first step towards a key Liberal Democrat coalition demand of taking all those earning less than £10,000 out of tax.
'Enterprise-led recovery'

The chancellor must find £3.5bn to pay for the giveaway - which will be clawed back from top rate taxpayers - and Labour are likely to argue it is irresponsible in the current climate.

Mr Osborne also froze the Civil List payments to the Royal Family at £7.9m a year and said in future years they would be subject to scrutiny by the National Audit Office.

He stressed that the pain of his austerity measures would be shared by "everyone" - but said all would share in the proceeds of the "enterprise-led recovery" that he promised would follow.

"Yes it is tough, but it also fair," said Mr Osborne of his first budget, adding: "Everyone will share in the rewards when we succeed. When we say that we are all in this together, we mean it."

He said that the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) now estimated growth this year of 1.2% and 2.3% next year - compared to its previous forecasts of 1.3% of 2.6%.

Giving her response to Mr Osborne's statement, acting Labour leader Harriet Harman poured scorn on the Liberal Democrats for providing a "fig leaf" for their Conservative coalition partners, arguing "this reckless Tory budget would not be possible without the Lib Dems".
'Irresponsible'

"The Lib Dems leaders have sacrificed everything they ever stood for to ride in ministerial cars and to ride on the coat tails of the Tory government," she added.

Plaid Cymru also lashed out at the Lib Dems, with Treasury spokesman Jonathan Edwards accusing party leader and Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg of sitting next to Tory leader David Cameron "like a nodding dog, agreeing with every word as VAT was raised".

"They are running out of major election policies on which to U-turn," he added.

The SNP welcomed some Budget measures, such as the freeze on whisky duty and the restoration of the pensions and earnings link, but branded planned spending cuts "irresponsible".

In a message to Liberal Democrat supporters, Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg said the government had "no choice except to clear up the financial mess that Labour left us".

And he said the Budget had taken "difficult decisions in an honest and fair way and with the clear stamp of Liberal Democrat values running through it," citing examples including the restoration of the pensions and earnings link and the tax boost for the low paid.
'Breadline Britain'

Lib Dem Deputy Leader Simon Hughes, who has vowed to protect the party's core values, issued a statement in support of Mr Clegg after the Budget statement, saying it would protect the "needy and vulnerable".

So far only one Lib Dem MP, Bob Russell, has publicly suggested he might vote against the Budget, as the party had campaigned against VAT increases at the election because "the low paid disproportionately pay more".

He told BBC Radio 5 Live: "I am not at all happy. I need to discuss with colleagues how it is we have got into this situation."

Dave Prentis, general secretary of public service union Unison accused the coalition government of "declaring war" on public services, saying the Budget would "raise the spectre of breadline Britain" in some parts of the country.

"Public sector workers will be shocked and angry that they are the innocent victims of job cuts and pay freezes".

But CBI director general Richard Lambert called the Budget "the UK's first important step on the long journey back to economic health".

Green MP Caroline Lucas called Mr Osborne's statement a "budget for pointless austerity" full of cuts that were "neither unavoidable or fair".

But in an e-mail to Conservative supporters, Prime Minister David Cameron said: "In this emergency Budget I believe you have the measure of this government.

"Will it provoke debate? Certainly. Will it cost our coalition some popularity? Possibly. But is this the right thing to do - for the health of our economy, for the poorest in our society, for the future of our country? I passionately believe it is."

What's your reaction to the Budget? Have you got a question about how it will affect you? You can send us your comments using the form below.
 
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Budget: Education spending faces 25% cut


Education spending in England could be cut by as much as 25% over the next four years, the Chancellor has said.

But George Osborne said in his Budget statement that he recognised the "particular pressures" on the education system.

Teachers and lecturers also face a two-year pay freeze from 2011.

Christine Blower of the National Union of Teachers said the Budget showed that public services would "bear the brunt of the brutal cost cutting".

The ATL teachers' union warned that "this level of funding reduction will inevitably include fairly savage staffing cuts".

Mr Osborne also announced that lone parents would have to start work when their youngest child started school or would face losing their income support benefit.

Currently lone parents do not have to start looking for work until their youngest child reaches the age of 10.

The former Labour government had planned to reduce that age limit to seven this October.

Currently, out-of-work parents have to apply for Jobseeker's Allowance once their youngest reaches age 10.

And in order to receive this, claimants must be available and actively looking for work.

Other cuts included the freezing of child benefit which is paid to all families, regardless of income, and the axing of the health in pregnancy grant.

Tax credits will be reduced for families earning over £40,000 next year.
Education cuts

The Chancellor said all departments would be hit by an average spending cuts of 25%, but that not all departments would experience the same rate of reduction.

The detailed settlements would be set out in the comprehensive spending review in October.

The planned reductions in education spending will be met by opposition from the teaching unions.

The coalition government had said it would protect front line spending on schools for one year.

But universities and colleges are already grappling with £1.4bn worth of cuts over the next three years.

University and College Union general secretary Sally Hunt said: "Starving education of funds and making families pay more to access a university education, while authorising billions in tax giveaways to big business would be a disaster for the UK.

"Today's corporation tax cut could have funded university places for all students forced to cough up for university fees."
'Unprotected'

Paul Marshall, executive director of the 1994 Group of universities, said: "Our universities are driving economic growth and meeting the most pressing challenges facing our society - they should not be left unprotected".

General secretary of the Nasuwt teaching union Chris Keates called the budget dishonest at every level.

She said: "Despite all the pre and post-election rhetoric, schools and education are not protected from the swingeing 25% cut in departmental budgets over the next four years."

The NUT's Ms Blower added: "Cutting funds for schools and other related services will irretrievably harm children and young people, particularly the poorest ones."

She also said it begged the question where the government would find the funding for its free schools and academies programme.

On the lone parent benefit change, co-founder the Netmums parenting website Siobhan Freegard said many mothers would be feeling very anxious.

She said many wanted to work but found it difficult to find jobs that fitted around school hours and paying for childcare before and after the school day.
 
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I have been hit hard by this budget. i blame labour more than the tories+libdems in this situation.
 
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I have been hit hard by this budget. i blame labour more than the tories+libdems in this situation.

but labour's were always peoples first choice and they have indeed worked a lot for the public. I like labours and first time in my life my family did not vote for labours :whistle:

I think this budget could have been made peoples friendly like Labour's previous budgets, by this budget i would say this government is inexperienced and need time to learn :confused:

Its like a knife on peoples throat :no: poor public earning less money will suffer :cry:
 
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but labour's were always peoples first choice and they have indeed worked a lot for the public. I like labours and first time in my life my family did not vote for labours :whistle:

I think this budget could have been made peoples friendly like Labour's previous budgets, by this budget i would say this government is inexperienced and need time to learn :confused:

Its like a knife on peoples throat :no: poor public earning less money will suffer :cry:

the thing is, bankers and banks arent taking the burnt, it is mostly the poorer people who are all worse off. VAT, abolishing child benefit, they could at least keep it for the middle and low income people, they also froze pay rise(that include cost of living as well) for public sector workers, that is very difficult for people. what i am mad is about the benefit cheats and tax evasion, i am working in a place that we see lots of cases of abusing the system, we report it and nothing happens. that is very bad, they should be very firm with the banks and financial institutions, firm with benefit cheats and tax avoiders(both in big and small scale), thats how they can save alot of money, not by punishing the low/middle and lower income people.
 
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