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BUDGET
FOCUSES ON INVESTING IN BRITAIN'S FUTURE
(22 March 2006)
The
Government's economic objective is to build a strong economy and
a fair society, where there is opportunity and security for all
, stated Chancellor Gordon Brown in his Budget Day speech. Among
the initiatives announced by the Chancellor were: reducing administrative
burdens for business, changes to Venture Capital Schemes, the launch
of Enterprise Capital Funds, establishment of Real Estate Investment
Trusts and new film tax incentives.
The
long-term decisions the Government has taken - giving independence
to the Bank of England, new fiscal rules and a reduction in debt
- have created a strong platform of economic stability.
In
recent years, the international community has been affected by geopolitical
uncertainty, rising oil prices, and large current account imbalances
and shifting exchange rates between the US, Asia and Europe. In
the UK, with low and stable inflation, interest rates set by the
Monetary Policy Committee to meet the Government's symmetric inflation
target, and fiscal policy supporting monetary policy over the cycle,
the UK economy is currently experiencing its longest unbroken expansion
since quarterly records began, with GDP now having grown for 54
consecutive quarters.
The
global economy is undergoing a major transformation, with far-reaching
and fundamental changes in technology, production and trading patterns.
Faster information flows and falling transport costs are breaking
geographical barriers to economic activity. This fast pace of change,
combined with emergence of rapidly industrialising economies such
as China and India and their integration into the global economy
presents new opportunities for the UK as well as new challenges.
The
Government is committed to locking in stability and investing in
the UK's future, enabling it to meet the challenges and rise to
the opportunities of the global economy. To respond to these global
challenges, this Budget sets out further reforms to create a world-class
environment for scientific research and development; to improve
the education and skills of the nation; to lock in the UK's track
record of attracting high levels of inward investment; to invest
in and reform public services; to tackle the global challenges of
climate change; and to secure fairness and opportunity for all.
MAINTAINING
MACROECONOMIC STABILITY
The
Government's long-term economic goal is to maintain macroeconomic
stability, ensuring the fiscal rules are met at all times and that
inflation remains low.
The
UK economy is currently experiencing its longest unbroken expansion
on record, with GDP now having grown for 54 consecutive quarters.
The domestic stability delivered by the Government's macroeconomic
framework, with volatility in the UK economy at historically low
levels and the lowest in the G7, puts the UK in a strong position
to respond to the global economic challenges of the next decade.
Overall,
economic developments since the 2005 Pre-Budget Report have been
as forecast. Economic growth has gradually increased momentum through
the latter stages of 2005 and into 2006. With the outturn for 2005
and the forecast for 2006 as expected at the time of the Pre-Budget
Report, the UK economy remains well placed for a pick-up in growth
to above trend rates later this year and into 2007, supported by
the continuing domestic stability delivered by the Government's
macroeconomic framework. GDP is forecast to grow by 2 to 2 1/2 per
cent in 2006, rising to above trend rates of 2 3/4 to 3 1/4 in both
2007 and 2008.
The
Budget 2006 projections for the public finances are broadly in line
with the 2005 Pre-Budget Report and show that the Government is
meeting its strict fiscal rules:
-
the current budget shows an average annual surplus as a percentage
of GDP over the current economic cycle, even using cautious assumptions,
ensuring the Government is meeting the golden rule. Beyond the
end of the current cycle the current budget clearly moves into
surplus; and
-
public sector net debt is projected to remain low and stable over
the forecast period, stabilising at a level below the 40 per cent
ceiling set in the sustainable investment rule.
MEETING
THE PRODUCTIVITY CHALLENGE
Productivity
growth underpins strong economic performance and sustained increases
in living standards. Raising productivity growth is critical to
meeting the opportunities and challenges of globalisation. Budget
2006 sets out the next steps the Government is taking to strengthen
the drivers of productivity growth, including:
*
advancing the goals of the ten-year Science and Innovation Investment
framework to maximise the impact of science funding, including
an intention to create a single health research fund of at least
£1 billion per year, to simplify radically institutional
research funding; to expand R&D support for mid-sized companies
and a package of measures to improve science teaching, raise the
quality of science lessons and entitle able pupils to study three
separate sciences at GCSE;
*
measures to reduce further burdens on business, including new
commitments from HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) to reduce the administrative
burden of the tax system; introducing the Hampton Review's principles
into law and a review of how the experiences of large businesses
can be taken into account in administering the tax system;
*
a comprehensive package of measures to enhance the UK's position
as a leading location for inward investment, developing an ambitious
strategy for marketing the UK:
- promoting London as a world's international centre for financial
and business services, with a new strategy to be developed and
implemented by a high level group representing the city's key
interests by summer 2006;
- establishing a new International Business Advisory Council comprising
some of the world's leading business people;
- a programme of organisational changes to UK Trade and Investment,
with the aim of a fundamental transformation of its effectiveness
in marketing the UK;
- strengthening the UK's reputation as one of the world's best
locations for higher education, by boosting support for international
students to the UK, and establishing three new University Partnership
Schemes;
*
building on the Government's commitment to raise skills levels
by investing in the reform of further education and training provision
and asking the Leitch Review of Skills to report specifically
on how skills and employment policy can better complement each
other;
*
boosting access to finance to enable early-stage companies with
real growth potential to bridge the equity gap and progress through
to market, announcing a further £50 million in 2006-07 and
£50 million in 2007-08 for the Enterprise Capital Funds
scheme; and
*
taking forward the Government's strategy for tackling the long-term
lack of supply and responsiveness of housing and property and
introducing Real Estate Investment Trusts to create greater flexibility
for investors.
Consultation
on next steps for science and innovation
Science
and innovation investment framework 2004-2014: next steps is published
today. Key announcements include:
-
to ensure the UK provides a world-class environment for health
R&D, the Government intends to create a single health research
fund of at least £1 billion;
-
radically simplifying the system for allocating institutional
research funding to universities;
-
improving the supply of scientists through raising the profile
of science in schools, improving the quality of science teachers
and increasing progression rates to science A-levels;
-
improving the efficiency of Research Councils, including consulting
on merging support for large facilities such as telescopes and
space programmes; and
-
enhancing the role of the Technology Strategy Board in promoting
business innovation, with plans for it to operate at arms length
from Government.
Enhancing
the SME Research and Development (R&D) tax credit
Following
discussion with business, the Government wishes to support better
the growth and R&D investment of firms with between 250 and
500 employees that are above the threshold for the SME tax credit.
Recognising the evidence that there are lower levels of innovation
in these mid-sized firms, compared to larger firms, the Chancellor
announces today the Government's intention to pursue one of the
key recommendations of the Cox review of creativity in business
- to extend additional support to these firms.
Further
details will be published by the end of the year, subject to the
outcome of state aids discussions with the European Commission.
Reducing
administrative burdens for business
Building
on the 2001 Inland Revenue Review of Links with Business and establishment
of the Business Tax Forum, the Chancellor has asked Sir David Varney
to lead a review of HMRC's links with large business to foster stronger
working relationships and greater understanding between large business
and HMRC in today's global economy. Sir David Varney will lead the
review, working with business representatives to identify opportunities
to improve further the extent to which the views and experiences
of large business are taken into account in the administration of
the tax system.
Research
undertaken by KPMG for HMRC shows that the burden of tax administration
in the UK, at around 0.41 per cent of GDP, compares very favourably
with the other countries - the Netherlands and Denmark - that have
used the same methodology. This is because the UK already benefits
from initiatives to reduce administrative burdens such as bringing
together responsibility for tax and national insurance contributions
into a single department, and having a high VAT threshold.
KPMG's
research has shown that 85 obligations relating to dealing with
forms and returns impose 85 per cent of total costs, but that there
is a large 'tail' of another 2607 obligations that, although they
only apply to a small number of businesses, collectively can cause
irritation and contribute to an impression that the tax system is
complex and difficult to understand. In line with the advice of
businesses that sat on an advisory board to the KPMG research, HMRC
will tackle both aspects of the burden on business, by:
-
reducing the burden on businesses of dealing with HMRC's forms
and returns by at least 10 per cent over five years;
-
reducing the burden of dealing with HMRC's audits and inspections
by 10 per cent over three years and at least 15 per cent over
five years; and
-
establishing a new Administrative Burden Advisory Board, chaired
by Teresa Graham, non-executive director of four businesses and
Deputy Chair of the Better Regulation Commission, to work with
HMRC on dealing with the complexity of the tax system. This will
bring a business perspective to analysis of the administrative
burdens of tax on business.
Over
the coming months, other Government departments will set out the
ways in which they are implementing the Hampton Review and reducing
regulatory burdens in their simplification plans. The Government
will then set stretching but achievable targets for reducing each
department's administrative burden over time. The Government is
also publishing today an initial draft of a Code of Practice to
entrench the Hampton enforcement principles in law.
Review
of structure of UK Trade Investment (UKTI)
The
Government announces its intention today to publish, before the
summer, a new five year strategy for a step-change in the Government's
drive to market the UK internationally.
In
order to deliver this new strategy, UKTI will undertake a programme
of organisational change to increase its effectiveness in marketing
the UK. UKTI's steps towards implementing the strategy include building
on the findings of the Asia Task Force, implementing an international
R&D programme and coordinating the delivery of a single strategy
to promote London as the world's leading centre for financial and
business services.
FURTHER
EDUCATION REFORM
Today's
Budget announces a programme of reform to prepare Further Education
colleges and training providers in England for more stretching ambitions
on skills. Further details of this reform programme will be published
in a White Paper on 27 March 2006.
The
Chancellor has also asked Lord Leitch, in the final phase of his
review Skills in the UK: the long term challenge, to report specifically
on how skills and employment policy can complement each other more
effectively in supporting labour market flexibility, better employment
outcomes and greater progression in work for those with skill needs.
VENTURE
CAPITAL SCHEMES
The
Government today announces a package of changes to improve the effectiveness
of the three tax-based venture capital schemes - the Venture Capital
Trust (VCT) scheme, the Enterprise Investment Scheme (EIS) and the
Corporate Venturing Scheme (CVS). This package includes a new rate
of 30 per cent income tax relief for investments in VCTs, an increase
on the 20 per cent rate to which the relief was due to return for
the 2006-07 tax year.
ENTERPRISE
CAPITAL FUNDS
The
Budget announces that the first two Enterprise Capital Funds (ECFs)
have been selected. ECFs will be commercially-managed funds and
will invest a mix of private and public sector capital in potentially
high growth small businesses affected by the equity gap. Government
will finalise the full list of the first pathfinder ECFs in the
next few months.
Based
on the success of the first stage of the ECF pathfinder in attracting
private sector involvement, the Government has decided to continue
with the pathfinder and is making a further £100 million available
for further ECFs over the next two years.
REAL
ESTATE INVESTMENT TRUSTS (UK-REITs)
The
Government today announces that it will bring forward legislation
to establish Real Estate Investment Trusts in the 2006 Finance Bill,
improving access to UK commercial and residential property investment
through more efficient and liquid markets.
Following
consultation with industry on draft legislation published in December
2005, the Budget announces a number of key changes, including:
-
a reduction in the required distribution rate to 90 per cent of
net profits to provide greater flexibility for companies to operate
within the regime; and
-
a reduction of the interest cover test to 1.25 on a pre-capital
allowances basis in line with industry's response.
To
meet the Government's objectives for UK-REIT legislation to be introduced
at no overall cost to the Exchequer, a conversion charge will be
levied on companies electing to join the new regime at a rate of
2 per cent of the gross market value of investment properties.
The
Government believes this package of measures, along with a significant
number of technical amendments published on the HMRC's website,
will enable the successful launch of Real Estate Investment Trusts
from 1 January 2007.
PROMOTING
REGIONAL ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE
Devolving
decision making: 3 - Meeting the regional economic challenge: The
importance of cities to regional growth, published today, sets out
the Government's analysis of the role that cities play in enhancing
regional economic performance and identifies the challenges for
building on cities recent economic performance.
Following
this analysis, Budget 2006 announces that the Government will review
the effectiveness and efficiency of economic development and regeneration
interventions across local areas, cities and regions. This will
be done in preparation for the 2007 Comprehensive Spending Review.
The review reflects the Government's commitment to enable cities
and regions to improve their economic performance to deliver full
employment and rising prosperity for all. It will be set within
the context of further devolving decision making to the regional
and local levels.
As
an important contribution to delivering efficiency and devolving
decision making, the Government has published today, The Review
of Government Offices. This provides for a more strategic, streamlined
role for the regional Government Office network.
The
Regional Development Agencies (RDAs) provided policy advice to contribute
to the development of Budget 2006. The Government is responding
in full to the RDAs' advice, including by announcing that the Government
will work with the RDAs to rationalise business support services.
The regions have also provided advice on their priorities within
long-term indicative funding allocations.
INCREASING
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY FOR ALL
The
Government's long-term goal is employment opportunity for all -
the modern definition of full employment. Delivering this requires
that everyone should be provided with the support they need to enable
them to find employment and develop skills. Budget 2006 sets out
the further steps the Government is taking towards its aim of employment
opportunity for all, including:
*
an extension of the support offered to lone parents through ensuring
that all lone parents who have claimed benefit for at least a
year will be required to attend a Work Focused Interview at least
every six months;
*
a strengthened, refocused, Fortnightly Job Review for Jobseeker's
Allowance claimants, from June 2006, to ensure that only those
claimants who are able to demonstrate that they have undertaken
their responsibilities to look for work are allowed to continue
their claim;
*
measures to reduce anomalies in, and further simplify, housing
benefit; and to tackle fraud and error in the housing benefit
system;
*
in response to the Women and Work Commission report, new funding
to:
- double the number of existing Skills Coaching pilots to 16 Jobcentre
Plus Districts with a specific focus on helping low skilled women
return to work;
- increase, by 50 per cent, the number of pilots delivering level
3 skills, with the additional pilot focused on women with low
skills;
- help Sector Skills Councils in industries with skills shortages
test new recruitment, training and career pathways for over 10,000
low skilled women;
*
publication of Employment opportunity for all: analysing labour
market trends in London, alongside this Budget, examining the
underlying reasons why employment rates are lower in London compared
to other parts of the country, as a basis for future policy action;
*
publication of the Welfare Reform Green Paper announcing national
roll out of the successful Pathways to Work pilot projects by
2008 for Incapacity Benefit claimants, and consulting on replacement
of the current system of incapacity benefits with a new Employment
and Support Allowance; and
*
following the Low Pay Commission's recommendations, the adult
rate of the National Minimum Wage will rise to £5.35 from
October 2006.
WORK
FOCUSED INTERVIEWS FOR LONE PARENTS
The
Government today announces that all lone parents will receive the
support offered through a Work Focused Interview (WFI) at least
every 6 months. WFIs are one-to-one discussions delivered through
Jobcentre Plus by skilled Personal Advisers, focusing on helping
the lone parent into work. They ensure that lone parents are fully
informed of the help and support available to them.
Independent
evaluation shows that take up of the New Deal for Lone Parents (NDLP)
rises by more than 14 percentage points among lone parents attending
a WFI, and that participation in NDLP doubles the chances of employment
compared to non-participants.
WOMEN
IN WORK COMMISSION
The
Women and Work Commission (WWC) was set up by the Prime Minister
in September 2004 to consider how to close the gender pay gap and
opportunities gap within a generation. The Commission's report Shaping
a fairer future was published at the end of February, and the Government
welcomes the broad range of recommendations and values the ambition
of closing the pay gap within a generation.
The
Budget announces tests for new incentives, advice and training to
help close the gender pay gap:
-
by doubling the number of existing Skills Coaching pilots to 16
Jobcentre Plus Districts with a specific focus on helping low
skilled women return to work;
- increasing, by 50 per cent, the number of pilots delivering
level 3 skills and focusing the additional pilot on women with
low skills; and
- helping Sector Skills Councils in industries with skills shortages,
to test new recruitment training and career pathways for over
10,000 low skilled women.
All
these pilots will begin in 2006-07 and continue into 2007-08.
BUILDING
A FAIRER SOCIETY
The
Government is committed to promoting fairness alongside flexibility
and enterprise, to ensure that everyone can take advantage of opportunities
to fulfil their potential. The Government's reforms of the welfare
state reflect its aims of eradicating child poverty, supporting
families to balance their work and family lives, promoting saving
and ensuring security for all in old age. The Government is also
committed to a modern and fair tax system that ensures that everyone
pays their fair share of tax. This Budget sets out the next steps
the Government is taking to support these aims, including:
*
announcing that from April 2008, every pensioner and disabled
person will have free off-peak national bus travel in England;
*
building on progress in reducing the number of children in poverty,
a commitment to increase the child element of the Child Tax Credit
at least in line with average earnings until the end of the Parliament;
*
enabling employers to support working parents with their childcare,
by raising the tax and national insurance contributions exemption
for employer-supported childcare to £55 per week and by
making available capital grants to help employers establish workplace
nurseries;
*
announcing that the payments into the Child Trust Fund accounts
at age seven will be £250 for all children, with £500
for children from lower-income families;
*
launching a review of policy for children and young people, supported
in this Budget by £10 million over two years to promote
youth engagement in their communities, sports and local media;
*
increasing the stamp duty land tax threshold to £125,000
from midnight tonight, exempting an additional 40,000 home buyers
each year;
*
increasing the inheritance tax threshold to £312,000 in
2008-09 and £325,000 in 2009-10, to continue to provide
a fair and targeted system;
*
establishing this Government's largest ever consultation with
the third sector, to be overseen by a cross-departmental ministerial
group; and
*
further reforms to modernise the tax system, (including investing
in high capacity online filing services) and a number of measures
to clamp down on tax fraud and avoidance.
CHILD
TAX CREDIT UPRATING
The
Government remains firmly committed to meeting its targets to reduce
child poverty and eradicate it by 2020. Since 1997, the number of
children in absolute poverty has more than halved, and over 1.8
million children have been lifted out of 'absolute' low income compared
to 1996-97, on a before housing costs basis.
Budget
2005 announced a commitment to increase the child element of Child
tax credit at least in line with average earnings up to and including
2007-08. Today the Chancellor announces that this commitment will
be extended to the end of this Parliament, providing a solid foundation
for meeting the target to halve child poverty by 2010.
THE
CHILD TRUST FUND
Under
the Child Trust Fund all children born since 1 September 2002 receive
at least £250 to invest in a long-term savings and investment
account, with children from families with lower incomes receiving
£500. Children, parents, family and friends are together able
to contribute up to £1,200 a year to each account and there
is no tax for them to pay on any interest or gains made on this
money.
To
help build savings and wealth for every child in the country, the
Chancellor announces in today's Budget that all children will receive
a further payment at age 7 of £250 with children from lower-income
families receiving £500. Eligibility will be similar to that
for the initial endowments and will be based on the child living
in the UK and being the subject of a Child Benefit award on the
child's seventh birthday. Children in families who qualify for full
Child Tax Credit with an income below the threshold on the child's
seventh birthday will qualify for the higher payment at age seven.
EMPLOYER
SUPPORTED CHILDCARE
To
encourage employers to engage with the important issue of childcare
and enable them to support working parents with their childcare
costs, the Government offers a tax and national insurance contributions
exemption for good quality, formal childcare contracted by the employer,
or paid for with childcare vouchers provided by the employer. To
enhance this support, Budget 2006 announces that, from 6 April 2006,
the tax and National Insurance Contributions exemption for employer-supported
childcare will be increased by 10 per cent, from £50 to £55
per week.
WORKPLACE
NURSERIES
Budget
2006 announces capital grants worth £8 million in each of
2006-07 and 2007-08 to help small and medium sized employers establish
workplace nurseries. The Government will be working with business
groups to decide best how to allocate this funding.
THE
THIRD SECTOR
HM
Treasury will undertake a review into the future role of the third
sector in social and economic regeneration. The review, overseen
by a cross-departmental ministerial group, will take a cross-cutting
approach to the long-term priorities for the sector. Campbell Robb,
Director of Public Policy at the National Council for Voluntary
Organisations, will play a leading advisory role in the review.
The review will be informed by the largest consultation ever undertaken
with the third sector, to be launched at a conference in May and
then taken to every region.
This
Budget announces that, working with the Active Communities Directorate
in the Home Office, the DTI's Social Enterprise Unit and the HMRC
Charities Unit, an Office of Charity and Third Sector Finance will
be established in HM Treasury, linking the work of HM Treasury across
the range of third sector issues to provide strategic coordinated
engagement. A third sector advisory panel, will be established to
advise the Office on third sector issues. The advisory panel will
include young volunteers, representatives of third sector umbrella
bodies and members of different faith communities.
YOUTH
VOLUNTEERING
The
Russell Commission report, published at Budget 2005, set out recommendations
to deliver a step change in the diversity, quality and quantity
of young people's volunteering, with an ambition of attracting one
million more young volunteers over five years. Budget 2005 announced
public investment for this work of up to £100 million, including
a fund available to match contributions from business.
This
Budget announces that over £10 million has been raised from
19 new corporate supporters - GCap, Edge, Premier League, BT, Emap,
The Vodafone UK Foundation, HSBC, BAA Communities Trust, ARK, RWE
npower, Channel 4, Diageo, HBOS Foundation, Sainsbury's, Barclays,
flextech television, JPMorganfoundations, Jack Petchey Foundation
and Norwich Union General Insurance - and the seven Founding Partner
companies - T-Mobile, ITV, KPMG, MTV, Tesco, Sky and The Hunter
Foundation.
YOUTH
OPPORTUNITY FUND COMPETITION
The
Budget announced today that there will be an additional £2
million available in 2006-07 for a national competition to celebrate
innovative projects run by young people, for young people, as part
of the Youth Opportunity Fund (YOF) and Youth Capital Fund (YCF).
The competition is intended to encourage, highlight and reward projects
which are particularly innovative in their design.
The
YOF and YCF were announced in the Youth Green Paper, Youth matters
in July 2005, and the 2005 Pre-Budget Report increased the funds
available so that an average Local Authority will have £500,000
over 2006/07 and 2007/08.
YOUTH
INVOLVEMENT IN MEDIA
In
addition there will be £6 million available over two years
to support opportunities for disadvantaged young people to get first
hand experience in a variety of media. The Government wants to encourage
disadvantaged young people to engage with their communities and
with issues that affect them, and through this measure will also
give young people the opportunity to enhance their skills.
FREE
NATIONWIDE BUS TRAVEL FOR PENSIONERS
Building
on the Budget 2005 announcement of free off peak local area bus
travel for those aged over 60, and all disabled people, in England
from April 2006, the Chancellor announced today the extension of
this to free off peak nationwide bus travel for all pensioners and
all disabled people, from April 2008.
MODERNISING
THE TAX SYSTEM
Measures
aimed at modernising the tax system to ensure it continues to keep
pace with developments in business practice and the global economy
were announced by the Chancellor today.
FILM
TAX
Final
details of the generous new film tax incentives announced in the
Pre-Budget Report are published today. The new scheme will come
into effect from 1 April, pending State Aid clearance. The Budget
also announces a further extension to the scope of the new reliefs.
The minimum UK spend threshold for qualifying films will be set
at 25 per cent to allow a wider range of films, including bi-lateral
and tri-lateral co-productions to benefit from the new reliefs.
SHARI'A
FINANCING
In
order to remove barriers to Muslims participating fully in the financial
system, the Government has taken steps since 2003 to enable Shari'a
compliant products across a number of areas including, for example,
on home finance, ISAs, Child Trust Funds and Stamp Duty Land Tax.
Building on the successful steps taken, the Government has today
announced a package of measures that will extend a level playing
field for tax to key forms of Shari'a compliant business finance.
Key measures are:
*
relief from multiple stamp duty land tax for all entities, including
companies, utilising Shari'a compliant mortgages;
* enabling diminishing musharaka (partnership finance) and ijara
wa' iqtina (hire purchase) products for asset purchases; and
* enabling wakala (agency) arrangements for investments and savings
accounts.
These
measures will ensure that London maintains its status as a leading
centre of Islamic Finance excellence and consultation will continue
to keep abreast of developments in this fast-developing market.
TAX
EXEMPTIONS FOR COMPUTERS & MOBILE PHONES
Many
employees have benefited from the tax exemption to get a computer
into their homes, but the Government now wishes to focus support
on groups with the poorest access to technology to meet the goals
set out in the Digital Strategy. As a result, the Government has
decided to remove the current tax exemptions for computers loaned
to employees and the tax exemption for mobile phones is also refocused
to ensure that it delivers on its objectives, by only allowing one
mobile phone available for private use tax-free per employee.
The
changes will take effect from 6 April and do not affect equipment
provided to employees solely for business purposes, under which
circumstances no tax or national insurance is due.
STAMP
DUTY LAND TAX
Stamp
Duty Land Tax (SDLT) relief for seeding unit trusts with property
will end, with effect from 2pm today. Unit trusts will now be treated
for SDLT purposes the same as other collective investment vehicles.
This will also prevent the relief being used to avoid SDLT on commercial
property transactions.
NORTH
SEA OIL TAX PRICING
Changes
to two areas of the existing oil valuation and pricing rules will
be introduced, with effect from 1 July 2006. These technical changes
will amend the existing rules, removing tax distortions that affect
commercial behaviour, and will ensure a level playing field for
all North Sea companies. The changes follow extensive discussions
with industry and build on the 2005 Pre-Budget Report announcement
on non-arms length transactions.
INTERNATIONAL
SHOPPING
To
support travellers' freedom to shop outside the EU, and following
action taken by the Government at Budget 2005, the Commission has
now issued a proposal to increase the tax and duty free allowance
on goods brought into the UK from outside the EU to £340 from
£145. The Government has written to the EU Presidency suggesting
that the limit be raised to £1000 by 2011.
TAX
REGIME FOR TRUSTS
Trusts
have a positive role to play in assisting people to manage their
affairs. Measures introduced by the Government over recent Budgets
have recognised this while continuing to ensure that trusts are
not used to achieve an unfair tax advantage. This Budget announces
that:
-
the inheritance tax exemptions that presently apply to some types
of trust are to be available only in certain prescribed circumstances.
This will prevent these trusts from being used to shelter wealth
from inheritance tax. The new rules will take effect from today
but there will be transitional arrangements for existing trusts.
-
the standard rate band for trusts will be doubled to £1,000
reducing the tax bill for 66,000 trusts and meaning that a total
of 30,000 trusts no longer have to submit tax returns each year.
This will take effect from 6 April.
REDUCED
RATE OF VAT FOR CONTRACEPTIVES
The
rate of VAT for condoms and other contraceptive products will be
reduced to 5 per cent, the lowest rate available under EU agreements,
with effect from 1 July. This supports broader Government measures
designed to improve sexual health.
DELIVERING
HIGH QUALITY PUBLIC SERVICES
The
Government's aim is to deliver world-class public services through
sustained investment matched by far-reaching reform. The 2004 Spending
Review set outcome-focused targets and spending plans to 2007-08
that built on the sustained increases in resources delivered in
previous Spending Reviews.
The
Government will be conducting a second Comprehensive Spending Review
(CSR) reporting in 2007. A decade on from the first CSR, the Review
will assess what further investments and reforms are needed to equip
the UK to respond to the global challenges of the decade ahead.
In preparation for the CSR, Budget 2006 announces:
*
plans for a national debate about how public services should respond
to the long-term challenges facing the UK;
*
a series of reviews that will inform the CSR in areas where cross
- departmental collaboration and innovative solutions are required
to meet these challenges;
*
further details of the next phase of the Government's value for
money programme, including progress on asset disposals and a review
of opportunities for transforming service delivery across government,
looking at how the channels through which services are delivered
can be made more efficient and responsive to the needs of users;
and
*
early spending settlements for the Department for Work and Pensions,
HM Revenue and Customs, Cabinet Office and HM Treasury which see
their Departmental Expenditure Limits fall by five per cent in
real terms over the CSR period, releasing over £1.8 billion
in total for re-investment in front-line public services.
The
Budget outlines further measures directing resources towards the
Government's priorities, including:
*
£585 million of additional resources over 2006-07 and 2007-08
to provide further support for personalised learning in schools
in England. Further, capital investment in schools will rise from
£6.4 billion in 2007-08 to £8.0 billion by 2010-11,
matching today's level of private sector per pupil capital investment;
*
£100 million to accelerate the recruitment of Police Community
Support Officers (PCSOs) together with firm spending plans for
the Home Office over the CSR period, which lock in the large real
increases in resources since 1999, providing the long term funding
certainty needed to lead the fight against crime and terrorism
and realise the benefits of police force restructuring and reform;
*
a commitment of £200 million of exchequer funds to ensure
elite athletes have the best chances of success in a British Olympics
in 2012; and
*
£800 million of provision for the Special Reserve in 2006-07
set aside from within existing public spending plans, to help
meet the costs of Iraq, Afghanistan and other international commitments.
2007
COMPREHENSIVE SPENDING REVIEW
Budget
2006 sets out further details of the Government's preparations for
the 2007 Comprehensive Spending Review (CSR). The first CSR in 1998
laid the foundations for the incoming Government's public services
vision, refocusing spending on its priorities in health, education,
crime and transport. A decade on, the 2007 CSR will identify what
further investments and reforms are needed to respond to the opportunities
and challenges of the decade ahead, such as globalisation, climate
change, an ageing society, global insecurity and technology.
Recognising
that every citizen, business and charity has a major stake in this,
the Budget announces plans for a national debate to inform the CSR,
together with the largest ever consultation with the third sector
on its role in the economic and social regeneration of Britain.
The Government's response to the long-term challenges will also
be informed by the reviews underway on key areas such as transport,
skills and energy.
The
CSR also marks the next phase of the Government's value for money
programme. To release the resources needed to meet future challenges,
the CSR will:
-
build on the success of the Gershon efficiency programme, with
greater engagement of front-line professionals to identify opportunities
for service improvements;
- explore ways to transform the delivery of services across government
to make them more efficient and responsive to the needs of users;
- undertake a zero-based review of existing spending to assess
its effectiveness in the context of a rapidly changing world;
and
- drive forward progress to meet the Government's target of £30
billion of asset sales by 2010. To this end, the Budget announces
plans for the sale of the Government's stake in Westinghouse,
the Tote and British Energy, together with proposals for the sale
and release of public spectrum.
The
Department for Work and Pensions, HM Revenue and Customs, Cabinet
Office and HM Treasury have already identified ambitious value for
money reforms over the CSR period that will enable them to continue
improving services within budgets that will fall by five per cent
per year in real terms in 2008-09, 2009-10 and 2010-11, releasing
£1.8 billion in total over these years for re-investment in
front-line services. To meet the transitional costs of transforming
these departments, the Government is setting aside a modernisation
fund of over £800 million. The Budget also announces firm
spending plans for the Home Office over the CSR period, locking
in the 75 per cent real terms increase in resources since 1997 and
providing the long-term funding certainty needed to lead the fight
against crime and terrorism. This settlement guarantees that the
Home Office will be able to retain the efficiency gains from its
ambitious value for money programme, including police reform, for
reinvestment to deliver further improvements in front-line policing.
MEASURES
TO SUPPOR THE OLYMPICS
The
Chancellor today announced a package of measures that would ensure
the benefits of London hosting the Olympics in 2012 are shared by
all of the UK. He confirmed that:
-
funding of £200 million between now and 2012 will be available
in support of elite athletes, alongside an ambition to raise a
further £100 million in commercial sponsorship. This is
in addition to the £300 million already committed from the
National Lottery. Elite Athletes will be fully funded in the run-up
to Beijing 2008;
- an additional £7 million for the National Sports Foundation
from April 2006 to fund an Olympic themed programme for children:
2012 Kids;
- additional funding of £2 million will be made available
to allow the Sporting Champions scheme to expand, from 2006-07;
and
- £6 million for a series of national school sports festivals
from 2006 until 2012.
EDUCATION
In
recognition of the important role that personalisation can play
in closing gaps in attainment Budget 2006 announces additional resources
of £220 million in 2006-07 and £365 million in 2007-08
to provide further support for personalisation and steps towards
the Government's ambition of increasing levels of funding in maintained
schools towards today's private sector day school levels. A significant
proportion of this funding will be targeted towards schools with
low attainment and high levels of deprivation.
This
funding will be paid directly to schools in England through a reformed
School Standards Grant and the former Leadership Incentive Grant,
increasing direct payments for an average primary school from £31,000
in 2005-06 to £39,500 in 2006-07 and £44,000 in 2007-08,
and for an average secondary school from £98,500 in 2005-06
to £154,000 in 2006-07 and £191,000 in 2007-08. Budget
2006 also announces further specific measures to support more personalisation
in schools:
- funding
for a nationwide pilot of 250 after school science clubs for small
groups of Key Stage 3 pupils with interest and potential in science,
supplementing the school's science curriculum; and
- additional revenue funding of £10 million over the next
two years to ensure that pupils benefiting from the scheme have
access to the internet.
POLICE
SUPPORT COMMUNITY OFFICERS
The
Chancellor today provided £100 million so that every area
in England and Wales will benefit from neighbourhood policing by
April 2007, a year ahead of the plan announced in the 2004 Spending
Review. This will bring the total number of Police Community Support
Officers in England and Wales to 16,000 by April 2007, and will
fund the development of a new service to publish local crime and
police performance data on a regular basis, building on the current
review of crime statistics.
PROTECTING
THE ENVIRONMENT
The
Government is committed to delivering a strong economy based not
just on high and stable levels of growth and employment but also
on high standards of environmental care. This Budget sets out the
next stage in the Government's strategy for tackling the global
challenge of climate change including:
*
encouraging energy efficiency in the business sector through an
increase in climate change levy (CCL) rate, in line with inflation,
from 1 April 2007;
*
further measures to improve household energy efficiency, including
an extra 250,000 installations of subsidised home insulation over
the next two years, funding for local authority-led publicity
and incentive schemes, trialling the use of 'smart' energy meters
and a new voluntary initiative with major retailers to reduce
the energy use of consumer electronics;
*
the development of a new National Institute of Energy Technologies
with the private sector, to better leverage the substantial public
sector funding of energy research;
*
further support for the development of alternative energy sources,
including an additional £50 million for microgeneration
technologies and the launch of a consultation document on the
barriers to large-scale commercial deployment in the UK of carbon
capture and storage;
*
detail on the Renewable Transport Fuel Obligation to increase
the use of biofuels - with the obligation set at 2.5 per cent
in 2008-09 and 3.75 per cent in 2009-10, and the biofuels duty
incentive maintained at 20 pence per litre in 2008-09;
*
reforms to vehicle excise duty (VED) to sharpen environmental
incentives including reducing the rate to zero for cars with the
very lowest carbon emissions and introducing a new top band for
the most polluting new cars. 50 per cent of cars will see their
VED frozen or reduced; and
*
the deferral to 1 September 2006 of the inflation-only increase
in main road fuel duties, reflecting continuing volatility in
the oil market; and the same increase of 1.25 pence per litre,
also from 1 September 2006, in duty for rebated fuels, maintaining
the differential with main fuel duty rates to support the Oils
Strategy.
The
Budget also reports on recent and forthcoming actions to tackle
other environmental challenges, including:
* confirmation that the standard rate of landfill tax will increase
by £3 per tonne to £21 per tonne from 1 April 2006;
*
an increase in the value of the landfill tax credit scheme to
£60 million a year, with a challenge to the private and
voluntary sector partners in the scheme to provide additional
opportunities for youth volunteering in environmental projects;
and
*
a freeze in the rate of aggregates levy.
CLIMATE
CHANGE & ENERGY EFFICIENCY
The
Chancellor today announces a range of measures aimed at helping
every sector of the economy to achieve our climate change goals
through improved energy efficiency.
Energy:
the Government recognises the importance of energy policy in supporting
sustainable growth. The Government believes that the UK has the
capacity to be a world leader in energy technologies and today announces:
-
a further £50 million to enable the installation of microgeneration
technologies, including micro wind turbines and solar heating,
in homes, schools, businesses, public buildings and, social and
local authority housing. This could provide funding for installations
in around 25,000 buildings;
- the launch of a consultation document on the barriers to wide-scale
deployment of carbon capture and storage in the UK, and the potential
role of economic incentives in addressing those barriers; and
- that the Energy Research Partnership, under the joint chairmanship
of Paul Golby, CEO of E.On UK, and Sir David King, the Government's
Chief Scientific Adviser, is today committing itself to raising
substantial sums of private investment to develop a new National
Institute of Energy Technology, which will be a 50:50 public:private
partnership. BP, EDF Energy, E.On and Shell have already announced
their intention to be involved.
Energy
efficiency for business: improving energy efficiency is an effective
way to lower emissions of carbon dioxide and can also help business
reduce their energy costs. The Budget today announces that:
-
Climate Change Levy (CCL) rates will increase in line with current
inflation from 1 April 2007, to ensure the UK continues to make
progress in tackling climate change. The Government is committed
to returning CCL revenue to business, discussing with business
the most effective way of supporting investment in energy efficiency
and the environment.
Energy
efficiency for households: households account for over a quarter
of UK energy consumption and carbon emissions. Since 1997, the Government
has introduced a package of measures to encourage investment in
energy efficiency for homes. In further support of this the Chancellor
today announces that British Gas, EDF, npower, PowerGen, and Scottish
and Southern Energy have agreed with the Government to carry out
between them an extra 250,000 subsidised installations of home insulation
over the next two years. This will bring forward annual carbon savings
of around 35,000 tonnes and annual household energy bill reductions
of around £20 million.
DELIVERING
A CLEAN & EFFICIENT TRANSPORT SYSTEM
Main
road fuel duties: in the 2005 Pre-Budget Report, the Government
announced a continuation of the freeze on main fuel duty rates in
response to continuing oil market volatility. This Budget announces
an inflation based increase for main fuel duties but, because of
continuing oil market volatility, the changes in rates will be deferred
until 1 September 2006.
Biofuels
and the Renewable Transport Fuel Obligation (RTFO): the Renewable
Transport Fuel Obligation (RTFO) is a mechanism requiring transport
fuel suppliers to ensure that a set percentage of their sales are
from a renewable source. The RTFO will be introduced in 2008-09,
with the obligation level set at 5 per cent in 2010-11.
The
level of obligation under RTFO will be 2.5 per cent in 2008-09 and
3.75 per cent in 2009-10. This will ensure significant growth in
biofuels prior to reaching 5 per cent in 2010/11. The Government
intends that the target should rise beyond 5 per cent after 2010-11,
so long as infrastructural requirements and fuel and vehicle technical
standards allow, and subject to the costs being acceptable to the
consumer.
Budget
2006 announces an extension of the duty incentive at 20ppl in 2008-09,
offering further certainty to the industry.
In
addition, the RTFO buy-out price - the price paid by parties who
fail to meet their obligation - will be set at 15 pence per litre
for 2008-09. The combination of duty incentive and buy-out price
is also guaranteed at 35 pence per litre for 2009-10 but will reduce
to 30 pence per litre in 2010-11.
Further
consultations on aspects of the design of the RTFO will be taken
forward by Department for Transport over the next 12 months.
Vehicle
Excise Duty (VED): to strengthen environmental incentives, the Government
announces further reforms to VED:
-
the introduction of a new higher band of Graduated VED (band G)
for the most polluting new cars (those above 225g of carbon dioxide
emissions per kilometre), set at £210 for petrol cars;
- the VED rate for the small number of cars with the very lowest
carbon emissions (band A) will be reduced to £0 to encourage
take up and assist the development of the low carbon car market;
- VED rates will also be reduced for band B by £35 and C
by £5, frozen for bands D and E, and increased by £25
for band F;
- rates for pre-2001 registered cars and light goods vehicles
in the lower band will be frozen with the higher band increased
by £5; and
- the reduced rate for alternative fuel cars will be extended
to include those cars manufactured to run on high blend bioethanol
(E85).
50
per cent of cars will see their VED rates frozen or reduced. The
number of motorists paying £100 or less will rise from 300,000
to 3 million.
Motorbike
rates and the standard rate for post-2001 light goods vehicles (LGV's)
will increased in line with inflation (with LGV's rounded to the
nearest £5), while HGV and bus VED will be frozen. All VED
changes will take effect from 23 March 2006.
New
rates of graduated VED can be found in PN 2 on rates and duties.
Company
car tax: to further promote environmentally friendly vehicles, Budget
2006 announces that the threshold for the minimum charge rate for
calculating benefit-in-kind from company cars will be reduced from
140g per kilometre to 135g per kilometre from 2008-09.
The
Budget also announces a new lower 10 per cent band for company cars
with CO2 of 120g per kilometre or less from 2008-09.
Aviation
and air passenger duty (APD): decisions on APD rates need to be
considered in the context of social and economic factors, particularly
the current volatile oil market. The Government today announces
APD will be frozen for 2006-07.
The
Government will continue to work to secure further progress in developing
an ETS for aviation and recognises the need to build the evidence
base further to inform development of the scheme. The Government
therefore announces today funding for an international scientific
conference to be held in the UK this summer that has a key focus
on the impact of aviation on climate. In addition, the Government
will be undertaking talks with other Member States to consider how
best to assist the Commission in taking forward work at European
level to inform the legislative proposal on aviation and climate
expected from the Commission by end 2006.
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