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Budget key points: All you need to know about Jeremy Hunt’s spring statement

Everything you need to know about the chancellor’s ‘Budget for growth’

Martina Bet
Wednesday 15 March 2023 10:49 EDT
Budget 2023: Pension lifetime allowance cap abolished

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Jeremy Hunt has unveiled his Spring Budget with plans to boost pensions, expand free childcare and cut duty on fuel and draft beer.

The chancellor also revealed he would add £11bn to Britain’s defence budget in the next five years and extended energy bill support for another three months.

Here are the key points:

No recession this year

The Chancellor said the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) now forecasts that the UK will not enter a technical recession this year and that the government “will meet the Prime Minister’s priorities to halve inflation, reduce debt and get the economy growing”.

Despite “continuing global instability”, Mr Hunt said, the OBR expects inflation in the UK will fall from 10.7% in the final quarter of last year to 2.9% by the end of 2023.

Energy help extended

The chancellor confirmed the energy price guarantee will be extended for another three months, and that households on prepayment meters will get help as their charges will be aligned with direct debit charges.

He announced he will provide a £63 million fund to “keep our public leisure centres and pools afloat” in response to high costs, and £100 million will be given to support thousands of charities and community organisations.

(PA)

Alcohol and tobacco

The chancellor also announced increased draught relief for pubs – a “Brexit pubs guarantee” which will see the duty on draught products in pubs up to 11p lower than the duty in supermarkets from August.

He confirmed fuel duty will remain frozen and a 5p reduction will be maintained for a further year.

The chancellor said the government will “uprate tobacco duty” and “freeze the gross gaming duty yield bands”.

Pensions changes were among the major announcements in the Budget
Pensions changes were among the major announcements in the Budget (Getty/iStock)

Defence budget and levelling up

Mr Hunt confirmed the government will add £11 billion to the defence budget over the next five years and another £30 million is being allocated for veterans.

There will be 12 new investment zones, and they will potentially be in the West Midlands, Greater Manchester, the North East, South Yorkshire, West Yorkshire, East Midlands, Teesside and Liverpool. There will also be at least one in each of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

Mr Hunt also announced a series of levelling-up and local transport-related funding pots.

Taxes

The chancellor confirmed the planned increase in corporation tax to 25 per cent will be going ahead, but announced a new policy of “full capital expensing” over the next three years, which will mean every pound invested in IT equipment, plant, or machinery can be deducted immediately from profits.

Mr Hunt said he will introduce a new tax credit for small and medium-sized firms that spend 40 per cent of their expenditure on research and development. Tax reliefs for film, TV and video gaming will also be extended, he said.

(PA)

Up to £20 billion will be allocated for the early development of carbon capture and storage.

Mr Hunt said that, subject to consultation, nuclear power will qualify for the same investment incentives as renewable energy and alongside that “will come more public investment”.

The chancellor announced an annual £1 million prize for AI research over the next 10 years, called the “Manchester Prize”.

Changes to benefits were announced in the Budget
Changes to benefits were announced in the Budget (Getty/iStock/The Independent)

Benefits changes

There will be the “biggest change to our welfare system in a decade”, Mr Hunt said, with reforms aimed at supporting more disabled people into work. The government will fund a new programme called “universal support” in England and Wales, which could help up to 50,000 people per year.

He said he will allocate £400 million for mental health and muscular skeletal support and there will also be a £3 million pilot to help people with special needs transition into the workplace.

The chancellor also revealed sanctions reforms aimed at getting people on universal credit benefits into work, but for those working low hours the government will increase the earnings threshold from the equivalent of 15 hours to 18 hours.

Mr Hunt also said he will assign an extra £10 million to the third sector for suicide prevention.

Parents will be offered more help with free childcare
Parents will be offered more help with free childcare (Getty/iStock)

Pensions

Mr Hunt announced he will abolish the lifetime allowance limit on pensions and that he will increase the pensions annual tax-free allowance from £40,000 to £60,000.

The chancellor announced a boost for childcare suppliers, with the Government piloting incentive payments of £600 for childminders joining the profession – £1,200 if they join through an agency.

Childcare benefits

Mr Hunt said he will also increase funding paid to nurseries providing free childcare under the hours offer by £204 million from this September, rising to £288 million next year.

The minimum staff-to-child ratio will change from 1:4 to 1:5 for two-year-olds in England, though this will remain optional, he said.

Mr Hunt also said he wants all schools to be able to offer wrap-around care on either side of the school day by September 2026.

He announced 30 hours of free childcare for all under-fives from the moment maternity care ends, where eligible.

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