Kam-MoneyAM
- 17 Mar 2004 14:02
Key points from Gordon Brown's eighth Budget, which was delivered in the House of Commons on Wednesday.
Taxes and duties
Tax rates will be frozen on: corporation tax, capital gains tax, air passenger duties, vehicle excise duty.
Stamp duty also frozen.
Betting duties also remain unchanged, but there will be a review of the tax treatment of betting exchanges.
Inheritance tax rates are frozen, with the starting point for the tax raised to 263,000.
Tax relief for small-budget British films will be transferred directly to the filmmakers to avoid third parties wrongly taken advantage of the measure.
Duty on pint of beer raised by 1p, and by 4p on wine, but frozen on spirits, cider and sparkling wine.
Tax on cigarettes up in line with inflation - 8p a packet.
Accountancy firms will have to register tax avoidance schemes with the Inland Revenue.
Council tax help
Pensioners aged over 70 to get an extra 100 this year to help with their problems paying rising council tax bills.
Economic outlook The chancellor opened his speech saying: "The purpose of this Budget is to lock in for Great Britain the economic stability that can and will endure."
The British economy grew by 2.3% in 2003, meeting Treasury forecasts.
The growth forecast remains at 3-3.5% for 2004 and 2005 and at 2.5-3% for 2006.
Claimant count unemployment was now at 2.9% on Wednesday's new figures - the lowest since 1993.
Manufacturing output is expected to grow by just under 2% this year and over 2% next year.
Housing
The deputy prime minister will consult on how to increase the supply and affordability of housing after Wednesday's Barker Review on homes' shortages.
Euro The Treasury will review progress on joining the euro in the next Budget, but not now.
Borrowing
The government's fiscal rules have been met at every stage of the economic cycle, said Mr Brown.
The "golden rule" on balancing the books over the economic cycle will be met with a 11bn surplus.
The public sector borrowing for 2003/4 will be 37.5bn, falling to #23 billion by 2009.
Cutting bureaucracy
20,000 civil servants to be moved out of Whitehall to the regions.
Department of Work and Pensions to lose more 30,000 staff over four years, with its Budget cut by more than 5% by 2008.
Customs and Excise and the Inland Revenue to be merged.
All departments will cut back room administration budgets by at least 5% by 2008.
Public spending
In 2006-07 and 2007-08, current spending will rise by 2.5%, with the money allocated in this summer's spending review.
Mr Brown said he had already rejected calls to freeze the defence, Home Office and transport budgets. Both defence and transport would get real terms increases, he said.
Education budget to rise to 8.1bn by 2008, with spending on early years teaching to rise to 669m.