Mini-budget: Raft of tax cuts ‘for a new era’ include stamp duty cut for homebuyers | Politics News
Income tax will be cut by one penny, Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng has announced, as part of a raft of measures aimed at boosting economic growth.
The reduction in the basic rate from 20% to 19% will be introduced in April 2023 – one year earlier than planned.
At the same time, the 45% top rate of tax will be abolished with a single higher band of 40%.
Mini-budget – latest updates
The planned increase in corporation tax from 19% to 25% will also be axed, while stamp duty will be cut for homebuyers.
The mini-budget, called the “growth plan” by the government, comes as the UK faces a cost of living crisis, soaring inflation and climbing interest rates.
The chancellor had already confirmed the National Insurance hike introduced by Boris Johnson’s government to pay for social care and tackling the NHS backlog will be reversed on 6 November.
Economists have described the chancellor’s announcement as the “biggest tax-cutting event since 1972”.
It is understood the tax cuts will cost £45bn.
In his Commons statement, the chancellor also announced:
- Duty frozen on beer, wine, cider and spirits
- Caps on bankers’ bonuses will be axed as part of wider City deregulation
- New investment zones will be created with targeted tax cuts and relaxed planning laws
- Plans to speed up major infrastructure projects, including roads, railways and energy projects
- Moves to impose tighter conditions on unions wanting to strike with pay offers put to a vote
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The government argues the action being taken will help bolster economic growth and increase the tax to fund public services.
But critics argue the measures are a risk when public debt is already high and the cost of borrowing is rising.
Mr Kwarteng said economic growth was “not as high as it should be”, arguing this had “made it harder to pay for public services” and in turn led to higher taxes.
He said: “We need a new approach for a new era, focused on growth.
“Our aim, over the medium term, is to reach a trend rate of growth of 2.5%. And our plan is to expand the supply side of the economy through tax incentives and reform.”
He said this will deliver higher wages, greater opportunities and fund public services.
Mr Kwarteng added: “For too long in this country, we have indulged in a fight over redistribution. Now, we need to focus on growth, not just how we tax and spend.
“Today, we have cut stamp duty, we have allowed businesses to keep more of their own money to invest, to innovate, and to grow, we have cut income tax and national insurance for millions of workers, we are securing our place in a fiercely competitive global economy with lower rates of corporation tax and lower rates of personal tax.
“We promised to prioritise growth. We promised a new approach for a new era. We promised to release the enormous potential of this country. Our growth plan has delivered all those promises and more.”
Read more:
Stamp duty, energy bills and alcohol duty: The key mini-budget announcements
How much stamp duty will home buyers now pay?
Why financial markets have been spooked by the mini-budget
Labour’s shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves argued the chancellor’s statement was an “admission of 12 years of economic failure” by the government.
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Ms Reeves told MPs: “We have had six so-called plans for growth from the Conservatives since 2010… a litany of failure every single one of them.
“The prime minister and chancellor are like two desperate gamblers in a casino chasing a losing run.”
She added: “It is all based on an outdated ideology that says if we simply reward those who are already wealthy, the whole of society will benefit.
“They have decided to replace levelling up with trickle down.”
Lib Dem leader Sir Ed Davey said: “City bankers will be popping the champagne while struggling families worry about how they afford the weekly shop.
“It is not a plan, it’s a recipe for disaster.”
The chancellor’s statement also sharply divided opinion beyond Westminster.
CBI chief Tony Danker said: “Today is day one of a new UK growth approach. We must now use this opportunity to make it count and bring growth to every corner of the UK. Fifteen years of anaemic growth cannot be repeated.”
Shevaun Havilland of the British Chambers of Commerce (BCC), said: “Businesses will welcome many of the measures announced today that should boost economic growth, relieve cost pressures and encourage investment.”
But TUC general secretary Frances O’Grady said: “At the first opportunity, Liz Truss is holding down wages and lining the pockets of big corporations and City bankers.”
Rebecca McDonald, chief economist at the Joseph Rowntree Foundation said: “This is a budget that has wilfully ignored families struggling through a cost of living emergency and instead targeted its action at the richest.”
The chancellor has also faced criticism for refusing to publish an economic forecast by the independent Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) alongside the mini-budget, sparking claims he is avoiding scrutiny.
The lack of OBR data means there will be no independent analysis of whether the announcements breach the government’s existing budget rules or their impact on growth.
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Conservative chair of the Treasury Select Committee Mel Stride said it meant there was a “vast void” at the centre of the statement.
Responding, Mr Kwarteng said the OBR would produce a forecast “before the end of the calendar year”.
Government ‘betting the house’
Paul Johnson, from the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS), called the chancellor’s statement “quite extraordinary”.
He said: “It was like having an entirely new government.
“This was the biggest tax-cutting event since 1972, it is not very mini. It is half a century since we have seen tax cuts announced on this scale.”
The IFS said only those with incomes of over £155,000 will be net beneficiaries of tax policies announced by the Conservatives over the current Parliament, with the “vast majority of income tax payers paying more tax”.
In a scathing assessment, the think tank accused the government of “betting the house” by putting debt on an “unsustainable rising path”.
The growth plan has also been met with horror on financial markets, with the pound pummelling to a 37 year low as of Friday afternoon.
But the chancellor has rejected the suggestion his growth plan is a gamble.
‘A good day for the UK’
During a visit to Berkeley Modular Housing Factory in Ebbsfleet, Kent on Friday afternoon, he told reporters: “It’s not a gamble.
“What is a gamble is thinking that you can keep raising taxes and getting prosperity, which was clearly not working.”
The chancellor also insisted his tax cuts were “absolutely fair” said Friday was a “very good day for the UK”.
Asked if a fall in sterling is good for the economy he said: “I don’t comment on market movements but what is good for the economy is creating an environment where people can come and invest in the UK and that’s exactly what we’ve done.”
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